tech:

taffy

CMU Students Build Fingerprint-Based Payment System

PayTango

Four Carnegie Mellon University seniors have developed PayTango, a fingerprint-based identification and payment system.

PayTango pilot-tested its terminals in partnership with CMU’s Dining Services at one campus location in February. The company expanded to three dining locations in March and opened enrollment to all students signed up for a university meal plan or one of the flexible dollar programs.

PayTango is expanding to gyms, which could replace membership cards with the fingerprint technology. Within the next year, the PayTango team also hopes to launch on other college campuses and at a variety of retailers.

With majors ranging from information systems and human-computer interaction to industrial design, Brian Groudan , Kelly Lau-Kee , Umang Patel and Christian Reyes combined their expertise to launch PayTango, as an alternative to digging through backpacks, pockets and purses for their student identification and debit cards.

Brian Groudan: We believe you should be able to walk into any establishment and prove who you are without carrying anything — no apps, no cards.  

PayTango’s registration process takes about 20 seconds, says the PayTango team. Users place two fingers on the terminal’s fingerpad, swipe the card they want to register and type in a phone number. Any card with a magnetic stripe can be registered in the system, including credit, debit, gift, loyalty and identification cards.

On repeat visits, users place their fingers on the fingerpad to make a payment. The service is paid for through contracts with merchants, making it free for users.

PayTango is part of CMU’s Greenlighting Startups initiative, designed to speed CMU faculty and student innovations from the research lab to the marketplace.

The PayTango team applied to, and was accepted, at the Y Combinator startup accelerator in Mountain View, Calif.

[Image courtesy: PayTango]

Just in

Generative AI arrives in the gene editing world of CRISPR — NYT

New AI technology is generating blueprints for microscopic biological mechanisms that can edit your DNA, pointing to a future when scientists can battle illness and diseases with even greater precision and speed than they can today, writes Cade Metz.

Mark Zuckerberg says Meta will offer its virtual reality OS to hardware companies, creating iPhone versus Android dynamic — CNBC

Meta will partner with external hardware companies, including Lenovo, Microsoft and Asus, to build virtual reality headsets using the company’s Meta Horizon operating system, writes Kif Leswing. 

Windows 11 Start menu ads are now rolling out to everyone — The Verge

Microsoft is starting to enable ads inside the Start menu on Windows 11 for all users, writes Tom Warren.