Challenges in Managing High-end Laboratory Access
Biometric & Card-based access - reliable, secure, and tamper-resistant
Master-slave architecture - single control system, multiple endpoints
Offline compatibility - works without dependency on internet or expensive phones
Minimal IT intervention required
Real-time usage reports & remote blocking
Time-based guest access - control lab usage down to the hour
Biometric & Card-based access - reliable, secure, and tamper-resistant
Master-slave architecture - single control system, multiple endpoints
Offline compatibility - works without dependency on internet or expensive phones
Time-based guest access - control lab usage down to the hour
Minimal IT intervention required
Real-time usage reports & remote blocking
IIT Delhi faced complex access challenges with 16 doors across a high-value lab space.
They required:
Proven track record with institutions like IIT Delhi
Customizable architecture for different lab types
Scalable proprietary software developed in-house for flexible expansion
Designed to work in low-connectivity or high-sensitivity environments
Whether you’re managing a high-security government lab or an academic research facility, we offer a tailored high-tech solution to ensure secure, intelligent access control.
The “Assistance Control” project was inspired by the basic idea of the “Bologna Process”, a Pan-European collaboration which started in 1999, to adapt technology to provide a better quality of education that would allow improvement of the next generation of classroom teaching.
The best project finally chosen and tested involved students registered for classes with NFC phones, during the academic year 2011–2012 at “Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca, Campus Madrid” (UPSAM).
This resulted in the senior students at the School of Computer Engineering to certify 99.5% accuracy and ease of attendance that ensured continuous assessment without loss of instructional time allocated to this activity.
Source : Science Direct Volume 40 Issue 11, 1st September 2013, Pages 4478-4489