The problem there is sensitivity. Children's fingerprints
can be quite densely compacted and getting a clear print
may be challenging to say the least. Basically I have been
asked to improve on the CHIPS program for child protection.
-----Original Message-----
From: Jonathan Hutchins [mailto:hutchins@tarcanfel.org]
Sent: Tuesday, January 11, 2005 10:42 AM
To: kclug@kclug.org
Subject: Re: Infrared scanners for recording fingerprints and Linux
On Tuesday 11 January 2005 10:33 am, Gerald Combs wrote:
Jonathan Hutchins wrote:
A conventional scanner would give you the flexability to take
fingerprints, palmprints, and/or footprints. That would
probably be a
better way to go. The fingerprint scanners I've seen are
mostly intended
to take a single, adult finger.
Does a conventional scanner have enough resolution and/or
contrast to
pick up the ridges in a fingerprint? Would it show all of
the loops,
arches, and whorls, or a picture of a finger?
I was thinking of taking a conventional print first, then
scanning that.
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