SIM cards get even smaller with new nano-SIM from G&D

The new nano-SIM development will enable companies to create thinner devices and devote the size cut to improved performance

As is the way with most tech, SIM cards are poised to get even smaller than they are now. Gieseck & Devrient, the company responsible for the first commercial SIM card 20 years ago, is introducing a new product called the nano-SIM. The Munich-based tech group will be displaying the new SIM card at a trade show in Paris, November 15 to 17.

The Nano-SIM will be 30 times smaller than the micro-SIM cards used in the iPhone 4 and the recently launched 4S, and 60 times smaller than the 25mm x 15mm SIM cards used in many handsets today. The world’s smallest SIM will measure approximately 12mm x 9mm, and will have decreased in thickness by 15 percent—a technological feat the company is very proud of.

If the Nano-SIM is adopted, G&D says the drastic cut in size will affect many aspects of today’s mobile devices. Besides creating a new generation of smaller and thinner devices, nano-SIM frees up space which can be used to address memory issues or make batteries large which will definitely boosting performance.

“The invention of the SIM card remains a milestone in the history of G&D. With the nano-SIM, we have shown how this development can move closer to perfection,” said G&D Secure Devices head, Axel Deininger.

Worried about being left behind? The new SIM cards will be backward compatible with older device models by using an adapter. According to Giesecke & Devrient, we’ll probably begin to see companies (Apple?) implementing the technology into mobile devices as early as 2012.

This new development coincides with Apple’s interest in developing a smaller SIM card. Orange CEO Stephane Richard spoke earlier this year. about working with the Steve Jobs-founded company to standardize a new, smaller format of SIM.