04 March 2026

Showcasing Our Field-Ready Biometrics Range At MOSIP 2026

We're back from MOSIP 2026, and if last year's Manila was about asking the right questions, this year was about answering them, with hardware in hand.

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Access Computech participated as an exhibitor at MOSIP 2026 organised in Morocco, presenting our portfolio of MOSIP-certified biometric sensor solutions to a floor full of people doing some of the most important infrastructure work in the world: building national identity systems that actually work for real people, in real conditions.

What we brought to the floor

This year, we showcased our full range of MOSIP-certified biometric sensors, available across wired, integrated, and Bluetooth variants. Each of these has been built with one non-negotiable in mind: they have to work in the field, beyond just the lab cases.

Whether it's a wired terminal at a government enrollment centre, an integrated device embedded into a kiosk, or a Bluetooth sensor enabling mobile enrollment teams to reach remote communities, the common thread is compliance, reliability, and readiness.

MOSIP-certified and UIDAI L1-certified, our devices are built to slot into national identity programs without friction.

The conversations that mattered

The value of being at an event like MOSIP 2026 is in the conversations you have at the booth, at lunch, in the corridor between sessions.

We spoke with national ID program managers still in the architecture phase, system integrators navigating procurement decisions, and technical teams troubleshooting scale issues they hadn't anticipated.

The questions have evolved from last year. It's less "does this technology work?" and more "can it hold up at 50 million authentications a month, in a region with unreliable power, managed by teams who aren't biometric specialists?"

Those are the questions we've spent three decades preparing to answer. Our hardware runs daily across India's Aadhaar ecosystem. In ration shops, banking correspondents, healthcare access points, and remote enrollment camps. That isn't a case study. That's our operating reality.

What's changed, and what hasn't

The global conversation around biometric identity has shifted meaningfully. Open-source platforms like MOSIP have levelled the playing field for countries that previously had to choose between expensive proprietary systems or building from scratch. More governments are now building and they need hardware that meets the same standards.

What hasn't changed is the fundamental challenge: compliant, deployment-ready hardware remains the piece that determines whether a well-designed identity system actually delivers on the ground. Software can be updated remotely. A sensor that fails in the field can't be patched.

That's the gap we exist to close.

A sincere note of gratitude

To the MOSIP team, thank you for building a platform and a community that genuinely moves the needle on equitable digital identity.

If you'd like to explore our MOSIP-certified and UIDAI L1-certified biometric portfolio, we'd be glad to walk you through it. Drop us a message, we're always happy to talk about hardware.

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