Apple iPhone 6: The Next Student Campus Card?

SCOTTSDALE, AZ — Apple’s iPhone 6 could dramatically change the way colleges and universities process student campus card transactions, according to vendor-independent campus card business consultant Robert C. Huber, CMC, CPCM. For the past 50 years, colleges, universities, hospitals and corporate campuses have been issuing plastic cards and badges to their students and employees using a variety of technologies. New hardware and software in devices like the iPhone 6 are paving the way for the transition to digital — using smartphones as both a secure form of ID and payment processing.

Huber, who developed the “All-Campus Card” in 1985, combined many traditional campus applications (Dining Services, Library, Vending, Laundry, Copiers, Parking, Door Access) and consolidated them, along with a FLEXible spending account, all using a single ID card.

The non-patented “The All-Campus Card” concept revolutionized how academic, healthcare and corporate campuses deliver services and facilitate door access privileges worldwide.

Now, Huber envisions these same organizations, along with boarding schools and high schools, accepting user-provided mobile credentials, such as smartphones, in lieu of institution-issued physical ID cards.

“Since most students already have personal smartphones and managing their online accounts is something they already do everyday, providing their own 'virtual' Campus Card will most likely be preferred and even perceived as improved Customer Service,” suggests Huber.

“Although it took a few years for many of us to switch from paper tickets to e-tickets, the acceptance of smartphones by the TSA as valid passenger identification has been relatively smooth,” adds Huber. “In a similar manner, I expect to see a wave of institutions shifting their policies, operations and technologies to self-provided and self-managed credentials by the end of the decade," Huber predicts in his forthcoming 2015 Campus Card Industry Forecast.

The new Apple iPhone 6 includes several features which are similar to many state-of-the-art campus cards:

  • Apple Pay will allow users to process multiple forms of payments using their personal mobile credentials.
  • Encryption of payment card data and non-transmission of credit card numbers to merchants.
  • An internal Near-Field Communication (NFC) chip will wirelessly process transactions (similar to Bluetooth Smart) as a more secure payment technology than magnetic-stripe cards.

Apple’s introduction of this new technology via the iPhone 6 is a game-changer... one that Huber is now adding to his next Campus Card Industry Forecast. To view photos, articles, time lines, legacy card readers, videos and press releases displayed in the "Campus Card History Museum," visit www.AllCampusCard.com.

Featured

  • University of Kansas Opens $400M Football Stadium Reconstruction

    The University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kan., recently announced that the $400-million reconstruction of David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium is complete in time for the 2025 football season, according to a news release. The university partnered with Turner Construction Company on the project.

  • Pudu Robotics Launches AI-Powered, Large-Scale Floor Sweeper

    Pudu Robotics recently launched the newest member of its MT1 series of robotic floor sweepers, the PUDU MT1 Max, according to a news release. The AI-powered, 3D perception robotic sweeper was designed for use in large, complex cleaning environments both indoors and semi-outdoors, like parking garages and semi-open building atriums.

  • Three U.S. Universities Install Acre Security Access Control Platform

    Cloud-native physical and digital security solutions company Acre Security recently announced that it has deployed its access control platform at three major universities in the U.S., according to a news release. Acre partnered with Atrium Campus to provide coverage for more than 69,000 students at the University of Virginia (UVA), George Mason University, and Rockhurst University.

  • Image credit: O

    Strategic Campus Assessment: Moving Beyond Reactive Maintenance in Educational Facilities

    While campuses may appear stable on the surface, building systems naturally evolve over time, and proactive assessment can identify developing issues before they become expensive emergencies. The question isn't whether aging educational facilities need attention. It's how institutions can transition from costly reactive maintenance to strategic asset management in a way that protects both budgets and communities.

Digital Edition