What a cool idea! I hope they think of a less generic name, because as it stands there's going to be a lot of mindshare/SEO conflict with NFC Championship rings.
I hope they can use the success of this kickstarter to figure out manufacturing efficiencies that enable them to test out more form factors. Personally, I'm crazy about the idea of a wearable NFC device but I don't like the aesthetics of a ring: a wristband (or, ideally, something I can attach to the bottom of my watch face) would be much more preferable.
Agree'd on generic name, we spent hours umming and arring about this. I wanted to go with "McLear Torus" but most people didn't get the joke, so that got shot down, it's something as an engineering company we are wrestling with, we have a marketing company working with us working on solving this problem.
Agreed on diversifying into other physical products but that's not in our road map so we're releasing the NFC Inlays onto the market for people to make their own items :) You can even 3d print your own NFC Ring!
Disclaimer: I didn't post this thread but I'm the guy running this Kickstarter and trying to get NFC Rings into the hands of hackers to do beautiful and wonderful things.
Also worth noting one of the founders of this project is Matt Mullenweg, the creator of Wordpress.
Some cool things I made with the ring I haven't announced before but you guys might like..
* An NFC controlled Gun trigger (hold gun with ring in hand and you can fire it)
* Various hidden door locks (touch door in right place with ring and it opens)
A huge challenge I face right now is trying to use OpenCV Haarcascades to measure the width of ring fingers, I have a project up for it https://github.com/mclear/html5-measurer -- any input from CV guys would be great :) Also worth noting all of the software for the NFC Ring is under an Apache license.
Thanks @andrewchoi for the post! :) Appreciated!
Thanks Hacker News folks for the support and backing.
I'm heading out for some beers with my dad at 7pm(GMT) but when I'm back or tomorrow I'm happy to answer questions, in the mean time Tanya will be answering questions through Kickstarter.
This thing looks awesome. Thanks for making this happen!
I'm sorry to hear that the Galaxy S4 won't work with this. That's the phone I'm most likely to buy next. Could you say more about why they're incompatible?
The S4 has the NFC antenna in the battery this makes it unable to read small tags, the Alpha ring does work with it but that ring is only really suitable for larger chaps.
I bought a couple of tags for my phone new S4 this week. The issue I have right now is that the tags only seem to get read when my screen is on and unlocked which mean that I'm only one click away from running a command anyway, so for now, NFC tags combined with my phone seem less useful that I first thought.
The fact you have to have your screen on and unlocked is intentional and by design, otherwise there is plenty of potential attacks where NFC is used to exploit phones whilst it's in your pocket.
What about shaking hands with people? The video really didn't convince me it was secure. You use the bottom of your hand to, for instance, hold stuff - so what if someone passed you a phone configured to scoop up data?
I'm afraid I think that video just misrepresents how ISO14443A anti-collision works. Most reader devices (like phones, door locks, etc.) will select the tag with the best signal (usually = the closest) and deselect others during the anti-collision protocol. This /doesn't/ rule out a malicious reader selecting the other tag, subject to being able to power it.
I don't have a lot of experience with NFC, but there are replay attacks of NFC-based credit cards, e.g., the NFCProxy app discussed a few months ago[1].
Does the small size of the inlay in this ring prevent unintended reading of the information contained? (It sounds like a larger version is necessary for some phones to read it at all...)
This is a compelling idea for another authentication factor, provided there were no concerns about data leakage.
I cannot find any informations about size of data that can be stored in NFC Ring. I hope this is not one of this with 137 bytes.
Anybody knows the memory capacity of a tag?
2 is a "platform indicator", 0 is a generation number, and 3 is the code number for the memory size. 3 means 128 to 256 bytes. (0 is less than 64 bytes; 1 is 64-96 bytes; 2 is 96-128 bytes)
A NFC ring does seem like an interesting project, with some useful applications. I may back the project.
However, the project is only aiming to raise £30,000. Not saying it isn't a significant amount of money but with backers like Matt Mullenweg (according to a comment here), surely they can bankroll that themselves? I know starting up production is expensive and the MOQ is prohibitive. £30k is not that much money to start manufacturing, distribution, testing and so forth. The kickstarter seems to me to be essentially just validating that there is a market for a NFC ring.
The "what are we raising funds for" section also states different things, the video says MOQ is 100k (x2), while the text says 10k. It seems to me that if it is the former of the two, £30,000 is not going to get them very far. And, the company spent $8000[1] on an advert[2]. $8000 (~£5.2k) is quite a significant portion of those £30,000 they want. Lastly, shipping in September 2013 kind of suggests that they are about to start production/already started production.
Either they are expecting to raise way more than £30,000 or it is just an additional way to advertise the product and build hype. Nothing wrong with that per se, and the backers do get the ring at a discount, but I am personally not that willing to back them just for them to get extra publicity.
You are pretty much completely correct:
* Yes we are validating, this is normal (I explain this in my latest blog post on mclear.co.uk)
* The MOQ is 100k (well spotted on the 10k mistake, thanks!)
* I put most of my life savings into this project and I could of raised more but that would have meant losing more control
* UK kickstarters tend not to raise huge amounts so yes, we went in low.
Yea we want to build some hype, obviously we want as much attention as possible, we have 0 marketing budget left. I honestly don't see a better way to do this when you are all out of marketing budget and don't want to sacrifice more control?
This reminds me of Sun's Java Ring which could run Java on its own internal Java Virtual Machine. It worked through contact rather than wirelessly. It was given away for free to all attendees of the 1997 JavaWorld conference and I remember being very excited about it at the time. Maybe, like Oracle's 1996 Network Computer thin client, we're finally ready for this technology.
"When an iButton detects any intrusion, it erases its private keys leading to zeroization. With it zeroization capability and the private key, Java Ring is one of the least counterfeitable devices."
In this instance, NFC stands for Near Field Communications, a two-way RFID technology built into some cellphones [1].
This is not adequately explained in the Kickstarter, nor is it mentioned in anyone else's HN comments so far. That two-way RFID is implemented in commonly-used smartphones is a bit of tech trivia I didn't know until this article convinced me to Wikipedia [2] NFC.
In retrospect, I'm not sure why I even clicked on this -- to people in the US, an "NFC ring" is given to the winners of the NFC Championship football [3] [4] game [5].
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[ 1337 ms ] story [ 1997 ms ] threadI hope they can use the success of this kickstarter to figure out manufacturing efficiencies that enable them to test out more form factors. Personally, I'm crazy about the idea of a wearable NFC device but I don't like the aesthetics of a ring: a wristband (or, ideally, something I can attach to the bottom of my watch face) would be much more preferable.
Agreed on diversifying into other physical products but that's not in our road map so we're releasing the NFC Inlays onto the market for people to make their own items :) You can even 3d print your own NFC Ring!
Also worth noting one of the founders of this project is Matt Mullenweg, the creator of Wordpress.
Some cool things I made with the ring I haven't announced before but you guys might like..
* An NFC controlled Gun trigger (hold gun with ring in hand and you can fire it) * Various hidden door locks (touch door in right place with ring and it opens)
A huge challenge I face right now is trying to use OpenCV Haarcascades to measure the width of ring fingers, I have a project up for it https://github.com/mclear/html5-measurer -- any input from CV guys would be great :) Also worth noting all of the software for the NFC Ring is under an Apache license.
Thanks @andrewchoi for the post! :) Appreciated!
Thanks Hacker News folks for the support and backing.
I'm heading out for some beers with my dad at 7pm(GMT) but when I'm back or tomorrow I'm happy to answer questions, in the mean time Tanya will be answering questions through Kickstarter.
I'm sorry to hear that the Galaxy S4 won't work with this. That's the phone I'm most likely to buy next. Could you say more about why they're incompatible?
It is a different concept, but similar enough. After a couple of years still not available.
But using storage-only NFC tags as an authentication token? This is not a good idea.
Does the small size of the inlay in this ring prevent unintended reading of the information contained? (It sounds like a larger version is necessary for some phones to read it at all...)
This is a compelling idea for another authentication factor, provided there were no concerns about data leakage.
[1]https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5605499
EDIT: The "Privacy is Paramount" video explains how the ring solves this problem.
2 is a "platform indicator", 0 is a generation number, and 3 is the code number for the memory size. 3 means 128 to 256 bytes. (0 is less than 64 bytes; 1 is 64-96 bytes; 2 is 96-128 bytes)
(http://www.nxp.com/documents/short_data_sheet/NTAG203_SDS.pd...)
However, the project is only aiming to raise £30,000. Not saying it isn't a significant amount of money but with backers like Matt Mullenweg (according to a comment here), surely they can bankroll that themselves? I know starting up production is expensive and the MOQ is prohibitive. £30k is not that much money to start manufacturing, distribution, testing and so forth. The kickstarter seems to me to be essentially just validating that there is a market for a NFC ring.
The "what are we raising funds for" section also states different things, the video says MOQ is 100k (x2), while the text says 10k. It seems to me that if it is the former of the two, £30,000 is not going to get them very far. And, the company spent $8000[1] on an advert[2]. $8000 (~£5.2k) is quite a significant portion of those £30,000 they want. Lastly, shipping in September 2013 kind of suggests that they are about to start production/already started production.
Either they are expecting to raise way more than £30,000 or it is just an additional way to advertise the product and build hype. Nothing wrong with that per se, and the backers do get the ring at a discount, but I am personally not that willing to back them just for them to get extra publicity.
[1] http://www.reddit.com/r/Entrepreneur/comments/1ip44s/spent_8... [2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqvQ0pZhEBY
Yea we want to build some hype, obviously we want as much attention as possible, we have 0 marketing budget left. I honestly don't see a better way to do this when you are all out of marketing budget and don't want to sacrifice more control?
http://www.nngroup.com/articles/javaring-wearable-computer/ http://javaring.blogspot.co.uk/2008/11/advantages-of-using-j...
"When an iButton detects any intrusion, it erases its private keys leading to zeroization. With it zeroization capability and the private key, Java Ring is one of the least counterfeitable devices."
http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/17/geak-ring-nfc-finger/
The "unlock your smartphone" use case is underlined here, too.
Manufacturer's site (Chinese, can't read it myself): http://www.igeak.com/Ring
This is not adequately explained in the Kickstarter, nor is it mentioned in anyone else's HN comments so far. That two-way RFID is implemented in commonly-used smartphones is a bit of tech trivia I didn't know until this article convinced me to Wikipedia [2] NFC.
In retrospect, I'm not sure why I even clicked on this -- to people in the US, an "NFC ring" is given to the winners of the NFC Championship football [3] [4] game [5].
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near_field_communication
[2] If Google can be a verb, so can Wikipedia.
[3] If you're not from North America, odds are that the sport you call "football" is actually soccer.
[4] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5872981
[5] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NFC_Championship_Game