Date:07/02/17
In Belgium, the company Newfusion decided to replace the usual electronic badges for the chips that are implanted in the arm.
Owners of new devices inside their bodies became agreed to this staff.
According to the publication, in Belgium this is the first time.
Microchips are now giving employees the opportunity to gain access to the office by the touch of the hand to the front transaxle, remove the lock from computers and other office equipment.
The size of the device, which employees implanted under the skin, same as a grain of rice. The cost is approximately 100 euros.
In Belgium, employees of the company implanted chips
Micro-device can perform the role of a badge: to open the door to the office, to allow use of office equipment.In Belgium, the company Newfusion decided to replace the usual electronic badges for the chips that are implanted in the arm.
Owners of new devices inside their bodies became agreed to this staff.
According to the publication, in Belgium this is the first time.
Microchips are now giving employees the opportunity to gain access to the office by the touch of the hand to the front transaxle, remove the lock from computers and other office equipment.
The size of the device, which employees implanted under the skin, same as a grain of rice. The cost is approximately 100 euros.
Views: 469
©ictnews.az. All rights reserved.Similar news
- Justin Timberlake takes stake in Facebook rival MySpace
- Wills and Kate to promote UK tech sector at Hollywood debate
- 35% of American Adults Own a Smartphone
- How does Azerbaijan use plastic cards?
- Imperial College London given £5.9m grant to research smart cities
- Search and Email Still the Most Popular Online Activities
- Nokia to ship Windows Phone in time for holiday sales
- Internet 'may be changing brains'
- Would-be iPhone buyers still face weeks-long waits
- Under pressure, China company scraps Steve Jobs doll
- Jobs was told anti-poaching idea "likely illegal"
- Angelic "Steve Jobs" loves Android in Taiwan TV ad
- Kinect for Windows gesture sensor launched by Microsoft
- Kindle-wielding Amazon dips toes into physical world
- Video game sales fall ahead of PlayStation Vita launch