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Coffee & ITSO
On 17 Dec, 18:38, naked_draughtsman wrote: On Wed, 17 Dec 2008 03:43:57 -0800, Matthew Dickinson wrote: You can now buy coffee in London with an ITSO compatible card. see http://www.squidcard.com/coffeerepublic.html This card is also being adopted by GMPTE for their smartcard. I've had a pay pass enabled mastercard for some time now but I've not found anywhere that accepts it. According to Mastercard loads of places in London accept it though! I remember when Visa's "payWave" system launched last year (the first card being the all-in-one Barclaycard "OnePulse") there was talk of initial limited acceptance in a few places like shops in Canary Wharf. So I was rather surprised that, having seen a payWave terminal in a swanky newsagents in Canary Wharf, I then found one a few days later in a pretty rough-round-the-edges off licence in New Cross - and yes they said a few people had already paid that way. Incidentally, I assume that the Visa "payWave" and Mastercard "PayPass" systems are compatible, in that a payment terminal in a shop can handle both Mastercard and Visa cards? Regarding the original post - very interesting about the ITSO-based 'sQuid card', though I need to do a bit of reading to decipher everything that's going on here, what with the GMPTE agreement to trial it and also Bolton council's involvement. And as Neil has already said, in a sense this is similar to what Visa payWave offers (as well as Mastercard PayPass) - and I'm sure there are coffee establishments that accept those RFID cards. That said I haven't yet come across a payWave or PayPass card that is prepaid - i.e. one that you can top-up (as you now can with a few prepaid debit cards) - at the moment the payWave and PayPass cards are being offered by to the higher-ish-end of the market. The sQuidcard people appear to hope that they can tap in to a far wider market than that, e.g. kids. Lastly there were once plans for London's Oyster card to act as an e- money system as well (i.e. to enable holders to buy low value items not just pay for fares), but these got shelved back in 2006 - here's an article about the plan being ditched... http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/05...tcard_shelved/ The aforementioned piece doesn't however touch on the issues of TfL effectively having to act as a bank and the burden of the associated regulation that would ensue if this plan was to go ahead, which I have read elsewhere was a significant factor in the plans being dropped. Given the possible security issues that now surround the MiFare Classic smartcard (which Oyster uses), this is perhaps just as well. Anyway, when it comes to buying low value items (apart from local fares where Oyster is a boon), I've never had any particular issues with using cash! From Mondex onwards, cashless payment systems for small purchases seems to have been regarded as the holy grail (see all the notions of cashless payment by mobile or 'm-payments') - I wonder if it isn't just technology desperately looking for a use... |
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