Advancing on Two Fronts
Smartcard issuance pushes forward with cloud solutions and significantly faster printing options
- By Robin Tandon
- Feb 01, 2019
The way that smart cards are issued
has changed dramatically
in the last several years with
the advent of cloud-based systems
that enable the entire process
to be managed and executed remotely,
and with printer/encoder breakthroughs that
significantly boost throughput, reliability
and energy efficiency. Government, corporate
and university customers have many
more options for improving their issuance
operations.
Moving to the Cloud
In the past, a PC had to be connected to a
printer so that someone could use it to create
an ID card. This included designing
the card, using the ID database to encode
data onto it, and then sending the card to a
printer. Now, the advent of true cloud-based
platforms enables the entire process to be
handled remotely.
Everything required for secure issuance is
in a centralized and integrated system, from
design and encoding to printing that can be
accessed by an administrator in a card office
at the main campus or any satellite facility
or other remote location. They can seamlessly
create new cards, read data on them,
issue replacements and manage print queues
using a tablet, laptop or any device with a
web interface.
The move to cloud-based model also improves
the user experience. It is no longer
necessary to require people to visit the main
card office and stand in long lines in order
to pick up an ID. Card printers can be deployed
anywhere to enable instant issuance
wherever it is needed including remote offices
and satellite campuses. Each printer becomes
a smart, secure, web-enabled edge device in
the Internet of Trusted Things (IoTT) and
each can take advantage of all platform
functionality.
The cloud model also improves security
and privacy protection through end-to-end,
banking-level encryption of all sensitive
data in transit or at rest. Digital certificates
are used to establish a trusted relationship
between the cloud and the issuance console,
and after each card is printed all personally
identifiable information (PII) disappears. As
an additional security measure, all encryption
keys are stored in tamper-proof hardware,
and the use of unique firmware with the
printers means they will only work with the
cloud-based issuance system software. Plus,
a card reader can be added to ensure the issuance
console cannot be used to release ID
card print jobs without presenting an authorized
card or credential for validation.
The cloud-based model also simplifies
for administrators, streamlining high-volume
card issuance management and delivery
while increasing control and security.
Administrators no longer must manage all
of the elements typically required for card
issuance, including software and other IT
resources. They also don’t have to maintain
printer software updates and security patches
since there is no longer the need for local
computers connected to printers, and they
eliminate the capital expenditures associated
with deploying printers in order to achieve a
best-in-class card issuance implementation.
Cloud-based issuance also creates new
economic models by enabling the entire ID
card issuance process to be delivered through
a service model that is billed in annual or
monthly installments. Hardware, software
and service can all be bundled into one offering
to cut multiple layers of program costs.
The service can include auto-replacement of
cards and other consumables when needed
and delivers all the benefits associated with
centralized control and visibility along with
distributed or batch printing. With a service
model, it is easier to scale the card office to
accommodate future technology capabilities
or support growing card volumes. This
is especially valuable during periods of peak
demand, enabling large batches of cards to
be produced and dispatched by commercial
printing bureaus.
Cloud issuance services also substantially
reduce the typical annual expenses associated
with card stock, laminates and ribbons.
Also reduced are the costs of service, maintenance
and hardware and software updates.
Cloud-based issuance services also cut
the staff time required for traditional issuance
and reordering supplies, as well as the
IT resources that would otherwise be required
to support the operation and periodic
replacement of obsolete equipment. Administrators
can convert their budget for ID card
issuance into an operational expense—it becomes
a service fee covering all ribbons, preprinted
cards and mag stripe encoding. This
reduces what previously were very unpredictable
costs associated with owning and managing
hardware and software, including the
costs of managing inventory and labor, and
potentially the capital expenditure related to
purchasing printers.
Cloud-based issuance services also increase reliability through enhanced
awareness of printer health and maintenance needs and all activity
down to the printer level, including the consumables status. As an
example, a service provider can predict when a printer will run out of
a consumable and drop-ship replacements to the customer in advance.
Another advantage of the cloud model is that it future-proofs
the card office, ensuring operations will be compatible with today’s
and tomorrow’s credential technology including mobile IDs that enable
users to carry ID cards on their smartphones. In the meantime,
though, physical cards aren’t going away any time soon and today’s
printers are rising to the challenge of faster throughput with improved
reliability and energy efficiency.
Breaking Speed and Efficiency Barriers
Achieving higher throughput has required new ways of looking at
traditional solutions, especially in the retransfer printer category. In
the past, film printing and card retransfer processes for these units
were separate, and it could take as long as three to four minutes before
the first card was printed. This also affected overall throughput,
restricting it to as little as 100 cards per hour. This all changed when
printers were re-engineered to enable simultaneous film printing and
card retransfer processes. Backed by a multi-tasking architecture with
larger memory than in the past, this approach enabled significantly
faster throughput speeds.
As an example, HID Global has reduced the time it takes to print
the first card to 60 seconds, or less than half that of printers using the
traditional approach. This cuts as much as 20 hours in average annual
wait times for printed and laminated cards while enabling record
overall throughput of up to 230 cards per hour. Another important
aspect of the latest architectures is that they eliminate the need for
continuous transfer roller heating, which improves reliability while
cutting energy usage to low GreenCircle certification levels. This can
save users thousands of dollars in annual energy costs for large projects
that use many printers.
Further savings are possible with today’s wasteless lamination solutions.
With wasteless lamination, the lamination patches that are
applied to cards for increased durability are attached to one another
in a continuous stream of material on a single roll. Through technology
that ensures precise placement, the need for an underlying carrier
film is eliminated. Once the supply roll has been depleted, all that
remains is a single empty core.
There also have also been advances in image quality and color
fidelity. Look for printers that offer true 600 dot-per-inch (DPI) resolution
and precision color panel registration for sharper text, crisper
barcode edges and more vibrant colors than are possible with other
products that use dithering techniques that can only approximate this
image quality.
Today’s secure issuance technology continues to advance, giving
users many more options across the entire process from design and
encoding to printing. Cloud-based platforms bring these elements
into a centralized and integrated system, and the
latest printers deliver additional benefits with
significantly faster throughput and other innovations
that increase reliability and both cost and
energy savings.
This article originally appeared in the January/February 2019 issue of Security Today.