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by glhaynes
5503 days ago
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But until it's essentially universal, that still shifts burden to the user: they have to look around and try to figure out whether this alternative payment method is accepted at this merchant. Why wouldn't they just whip out their credit card that they know is going to be accepted? EDIT: What I mean to say is: if credit-card-swiping were particularly onerous, I could see this easily taking off. But since it's not (at all!) and people are trying to replace it with something that seems equally-if-not-more burdensome, it's hard for me to see why this would catch on outside tech folks that mostly do it for the geekfactor. |
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- no paper receipts. Do I want my receipts? In an ideal world, of course, but in real-life that just means more paper junk. Receipts are also awfully easy to lose - making returns onerous. Imagine having an electronic receipt instead of juggling all of that paper!
- doubling up on loyalty cards and payment. Instead of swiping a loyalty card once, and then again for actual payment, a NFC transaction can potentially do both at once. This also reduces the number of cards I have to carry around dramatically. Bonus points if they can make this work with my library card (with the added bonus: if I'm late returning a book, they can just charge me).
- more fine-grained budgeting. Right now Mint knows if I spent $50 at Staples. It doesn't know what, though. An itemized electronic transaction record would tell my budgeting software that the $50 was spent on printer ink, instead of, say, a new gadget.
- immediate feedback without extensive POS modification. I've noticed some grocery store checkouts now have a secondary printer that spits out special offers to you (assuming you scan your frequent shopper card). This can be expanded upon greatly without modifying POS hardware - i.e., pushing promotions directly to your phone.