On Sat, Feb 26, 2011 at 09:40:07PM -0500 Also sprach David Tomaschik:

I've recently received my smart card, but was wondering what the "best
practices" are, mainly from a physical standpoint.  When I use it in
my laptop reader, it sticks about 2" out of the side, and I have some
concern about this (i.e., getting damaged by being pushed into
something, etc.).  I am using the Authentication key on it for SSH,
and the normal signing & encryption operations, so I suppose I need it
when sending signed email and signing into a system.  Do most people
leave it in the computer most of the time, or just insert it as
needed?  This brings to mind: how many insertion cycles can these
cards handle?  Looking online, various smart cards are rated anywhere
from 10,000 to 250,000 insertions.  (At 10,000, as few as 10
insertions per day would net a 3 year lifetime.)


If you are concerned with the insertion-limited lifetime, and with other
possible kinds of damage to the smart card itself, perhaps you should
consider getting one of the versions with the SIM removal option.

Pop the chip out of the card and put it inside one of those USB tokens
that take them. Then the SIM itself is always (at least partially)
protected inside a casing, and the insertion problem is offloaded onto
the USB mechanism (which is more expendable). If the USB token fails
eventually, take the SIM out and put it in a new one; you may have been
using it for years by then, but your effective insertion count is 2.

As an added bonus, you may use your OpenPGP card on any computer with a
USB port, without needing a separate card reader available.

--
"Le hasard favorise l'esprit préparé."
                      --Louis Pasteur

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