Yes, but dosn't cyberflex e-gate, work as a cryptoflex in
ISO7somethoing/4 mode? And does cryptoflex support multipel accounts? As
I understan you can only have one extarnal key for each card, therfore
one account pr. card or one key for every account.
But as I said if I need the SDK kit to load the muscle applet to the
card, it gets to expensive. 'Cause i've seen the posts about
CFlexAccess32Loader.zip and loaderlibs.tgz that should work with 
Cyber flex 32K e-gate. Or am I'wrong?

>From readme:
2. Additional runtime requirements:
- CardEdge.bin (included in this loader package)
- Schlumberger Cyberflex Access Developer 32K card (supported)
or
- Schlumberger Cyberflex Access e-gate 32K card (supported)
- CAD + drivers installed (i.e. http://www.towitoko.de) << But this page
ends up at a firm called chipdrive. And is what CAD?! and it dosent
state what driver? is it the ifd driver that is in the e-gate driver
pack for linux / pscs-lite? 

Im a littel confused. Cause it would be nice to have a Javacard, as I'm
going off to learn java programming now. And It would be rather
expensive for me to order some SC and READER from the US if I couldn't
get it to work without the SDK Kit. It would be a waste of time and
money. So I need a good answhere.

Btw,
The RSAsecureID fobs look kinda cool and heavy security tool for logins,
I would like to test them some time in the near future. But for now i
want to learn about smartcards and Login via PAM in Linux via ssh and so
on with smartcards. 

Thanks,

Kevin


On Thu, 2004-06-24 at 19:45, Philip Edelbrock wrote:
> You might want to look at the Schlumberger e-gate cryptoflex cards with 
> the usb e-gate adapter (key fob type thing).  It's a reasonably cheap 
> solution and I found the documentation (although intimidating at first) 
> to be complete and easy to reference (it's a free downloadable PDF). 
> Keep in mind, this isn't a Java applet card.  I'm not sure you need such 
> a thing, though, if you are just using challenge/response.
> 
> Something off the smartcard topic, but may be more of what you want: 
> I've become interested in the RSA SecurID fobs:
> 
> http://www.rsasecurity.com/node.asp?id=1157
> 
> They have an internal clock and the display shows a hash of the current 
> time (changes each minute, I think).  You append your own personal pin 
> to the displayed number to authenticate with the server.  The server is 
> configured using a PAM module (or something similar for Windows) that is 
> entirely software driven.  So, any service (e.g. apache, ftp, ssh, 
> console login, etc.) that uses PAM to authenticate can use these things. 
>   Also, since they don't physically connect to a computer, there aren't 
> special drivers or hardware requirements.  And, it also makes it 
> possible for remote use on any platform.  I think the price is about $50 
> per fob for small quantities (10), which is not bad if you compare it to 
> the deployment of smartcards and readers (and extra IT/IS overhead for 
> configuring and programming).
> 
> Has anyone had experience with these and the PAM module they offer? 
> Just curious.
> 
> 
> Phil
> 
> Kevin Andre Vatn. wrote:
> > Hey, I'm a beginner with smart cards and my question is what smart card 
> > to buy and etc, I need exact type of card.[...]

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