Originally posted by bobspud
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Reply to: Keyless car theft solved
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Previously on "Keyless car theft solved"
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Originally posted by Paddy View PostThe older Peugeot and Citroen had a PIN to punch in. The PIN would be sent to the fuel injector pump (not to the ECU). Three wrong tries would disable the car for 30 minutes. A temporary PIN could be setup for garage servicing etc
If the car was stolen by rowing it away, the fuel injector pump would need to be changed.
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Originally posted by AtW View PostIf they can have fingerprint reader in cheap iPad, why can't they have it in much more expensive car?
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I'd rather the thieves nicked my car without first coming into the house for the keys and giving me GBH, so this "relay" thing is all good.
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Originally posted by AtW View PostNope, in gated communal garage where wireless reception is terrible...
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Originally posted by AtW View PostIf they can have fingerprint reader in cheap iPad, why can't they have it in much more expensive car?
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Originally posted by AtW View PostIf they can have fingerprint reader in cheap iPad, why can't they have it in much more expensive car?
(It's like Microsoft wants Windows to be infected by viruses and malware, despite managing to convince most people it wants the opposite, so the user is more likely to want to upgrade their PC.)
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If they can have fingerprint reader in cheap iPad, why can't they have it in much more expensive car?
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The older Peugeot and Citroen had a PIN to punch in. The PIN would be sent to the fuel injector pump (not to the ECU). Three wrong tries would disable the car for 30 minutes. A temporary PIN could be setup for garage servicing etc
If the car was stolen by rowing it away, the fuel injector pump would need to be changed.
Leave a comment:
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Keyless car theft solved
"Quantum communication is a field of applied quantum physics closely related to quantum information processing and quantum teleportation. Its most interesting application is protecting information channels against eavesdropping by means of quantum cryptography."
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