Single entrance
Users normally authenticate at one fixed device. Independent local registration is often enough.
BioWavePass helps teams plan how users register, how palm feature templates move between authorised devices, and where palm vein matching actually happens.
For a multi-entrance site, the right palm vein offline deployment depends on whether users move between doors, floors or locations.
Users normally authenticate at one fixed device. Independent local registration is often enough.
Users may need access across several devices. A feature synchronisation workflow should be planned before rollout.
Deployment design should define local networks, authorised devices, data control and business-system integration.
In a pure local palm vein matching model, the server can help distribute feature templates, while each terminal still performs biometric comparison independently.
Palm feature template is generated during enrolment.
The customer-managed system sends templates to approved devices.
Offline authentication remains local to the device.
BioWavePass can support feature template transfer, but the selected firmware determines where the actual biometric comparison is performed.
The palm vein SDK provides biometric acquisition, feature extraction, template generation, verification, identification and integration interfaces.
The application team defines user accounts, permissions, registration workflows, multi-device feature synchronisation, access control, payment or attendance logic.
This solutions page is built around the search intent of buyers planning offline, multi-device palm vein recognition systems.
Share your entrance layout, number of terminals, user flow and matching model. We can help clarify whether users should register per terminal or use a customer-managed local synchronisation workflow.