denverpilot
Tied Down
Anyone really (remembering to) use it?
Anyone really (remembering to) use it?
Tried to input my Gander Mountain MasterCard to my new iPhone 6+ and was told something to the effect that my bank had not authorized ApplePay.
Comenity, I think.
I have used it in drive thrus a few times. The cashier struggles to try and get the CC machine with enough cable slack to hold it out the window. Very awkward. They need a reader on the drive thru window.
Now I just use a CC in the drive thru.
What happen when you lose your phone? Is that like losing you wallet now?
What happen when you lose your phone? Is that like losing you wallet now?
1) Using ApplePay requires your fingerprint.
2) Lose your phone and you can remote wipe it. Or just find it.
How good is the fingerprint scanner?
Is that easy to do?
So, for this to become reasonably functional for your average customer, a majority of retailers must acquire a scanner and whatever other hardware/software and connection is needed? ie if only 10% of retailers can be talked into accepting payment this way, I cannot see a huge advantage.
Would this only be available to iphone users? Proprietary connection hardware and protocols? No way to get a non i-device to work? Or maybe they will come out with a generic smartphone payment scanner?
As far as security, the YT vid on it seems to talk as if it's bulletproof. Would I be out of line here to suggest that within a month, someone will learn how to hack it and access our cards in a new way? Just seems silly to me that we could imagine a system being impenetrable, considering the cat and mouse game we have played and lost for so long.
One more company wanting to skim off the top of a transaction? No thanks. I'm back to using mostly cash. Credit/debit card swipe fees are causing a lot of the places I frequent to charge extra for using a card. Almost every gas station around here gives at least a $0.10/gal discount for using cash.
Here in Austin almost nobody charges extra for using a credit card.
I'm pretty sure when you sign up to accept most major credit cards you agreed that you cannot charge extra for them nor impose a minimum charge amount. Apparently one way around that is to just offer a discount for cash. A distinction without a difference!
I filled up at a gas station this morning offering a 10 cent discount for cash.
However, if I were to pay cash, I'd have to go inside and take time from their cashier, so I'm not sure that's entirely well thought out.
Seems to be a way to advertise gas prices to be 10 cents less that what thy actually are. Most people pay with a card.
Several places around here charge a fee if you use a card on purchases under $5.00. Almost every government agency charges more than $1 for using a card. Several places also just flat out charge you $1 for using a card. The cash discount where I filled up yesterday was 17 cents per gallon.
I filled up at a gas station this morning offering a 10 cent discount for cash.
However, if I were to pay cash, I'd have to go inside and take time from their cashier, so I'm not sure that's entirely well thought out.
Seems to be a way to advertise gas prices to be 10 cents less that what thy actually are. Most people pay with a card.
I cringe whenever I see my state involved in stupidity like this, even more so when we're the ones originating the idea...
http://gizmodo.com/one-missouri-lawmaker-wants-to-make-apple-pay-way-less-1681667709