Beyond Google Wallet: A look at the competition
- 21 September, 2011 00:02
- Comments
Google Wallet is finally here, allowing Sprint Nexus S users to pay with their smartphones at select retailers in New York and San Francisco.
The launch makes Google Wallet the first major NFC mobile payment system to be embedded in a smartphone in the United States, but it certainly won't be the last. Other smartphone makers, wireless carriers, and credit card companies are looking to launch their own mobile payment services, setting up a possible showdown over who gets to handle your retail transactions.
Here's a look at who else wants to get in on the NFC craze:
Isis
Isis is the name for an alliance between AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon Wireless, announced 10 months ago. In August, an Isis spokesman told Bloomberg that the service is on track for a mid-2012 launch, but wouldn't comment on a rumor that carriers had invested $100 million dollars in the joint venture. The alliance is now soliciting merchants to install payment terminals that will accept payments from Visa, Mastercard, Discover and American Express. Isis hasn't announced any specific smartphones that will support the service.
Visa
The credit card giant has been taking baby steps toward NFC payments with its payWave system, which previously allowed contactless smartphone payments through a special microSD card or a clunky iPhone case. (Transit riders in New York and New Jersey can already try this system out.) Today, Visa announced that payWave will work with Google Wallet, but the company has bigger ambitions. Ultimately, Visa wants its system to work with any smartphone, any wireless carrier, and any financial institution.
Apple iWallet
The on-again, off-again rumors of NFC payment capabilities in the Apple's next iPhone have been floating around since January, but solid details are hard to find. If the iPhone 5 supports mobile payments, it will surely shift the NFC business into overdrive. As it stands, we don't even know when the iPhone 5 will launch.
RIM NFC and Windows Phone rumors
Research in Motion and Microsoft have plans for NFC that are vague at best. RIM's latest Blackberry Bold is NFC-equipped, but carriers are reportedly blocking the capabilities with software. Microsoft was rumored to be working on NFC for Windows Phones earlier this year, but the company hasn't announced any details yet.
Follow Jared on Facebook, Twitter or Google+ for even more tech news and commentary.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- Google Wallet: A Hands-On in the Real World : PCWorld
- Google Wallet Prepares to Launch: What You Need to Know : PCWorld
- Mobile Providers Form New Digital Wallet Venture : PCWorld Business Center
- AT&T-Verizon-T Mobile Sets $100 Million for Google Fight: Tech - Bloomberg
- iPhone Case Lets You Pay With Your Visa Card : PCWorld
- Transit riders
- More on Mobile « Visa’s Blog – Visa Viewpoints
- iPhone 5: No NFC, No Easy iWallet : PCWorld
- iPhone 5 May Get iWallet NFC Functions After All : PCWorld
- iPhone 5 Part of AT&T's 'Busy October,' Says Report : PCWorld
- RIM BlackBerry Bold 9900: A Video Look at NFC on RIM's Newest Smartphone : PCWorld
- Exclusive: AT&T Shooting Down BlackBerry 9900's NFC? : TechnoBuffalo
- Microsoft To Add NFC to Windows Phone 7, Says Report : PCWorld
- Incompatible Browser : Facebook
- Jared Newman - Google+
- OVUM Report: Governance Risk and Compliance-- GRC usage and buying trends in the ANZ markets
- Top Reasons to Implement an SOA Governance Strategy: A List for IT Executives
- Securing SOA and Web Services with Oracle Enterprise Gateway
- Thin provisioning on the HP P6000 EVA
- SOA Best Practices and Design Patterns
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Google Jumps Into Social Bookmarks Game
-
NBN build gaining momentum daily: Quigley
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Monday Grok: Will Siri crack the walls of GOOG?
-
Collaborative software delivery: Managing today’s complex environment to improve software quality
IBM Rational Team Concert software can help simplify, automate and govern the delivery process. Based on the open standards Jazz platform, it offers a lean collaborative application life cycle management (ALM) solution with integrated planning, work-item tracking, version control, build management and reporting. -
Oracle x86 Rack Servers Optimized for Rapid Deployments and Operational Efficiency
Business-critical and mission-critical workloads demanding applications and databases require stable and secure environments. When these types of workloads are deployed on x86 servers, the need to ensure business continuity, maximum uptime, and consistent processing means that IT managers and business unit managers are looking at enterprise x86 servers in a new way: They realize that the business depends on these servers and that x86 server platforms for the enterprise are no longer expendable, as they might have been when servers were dedicated to a single application or when they were deployed as small Web servers that could be easily taken offline and replaced. -
NetScaler 2048-bit SSL performance advantage
Citrix® NetScaler® provides advanced layer 4-7 traffic management and load balancing. Like other leading Application Delivery Controllers (ADCs), NetScaler can offload computationally expensive SSL processing responsibilities from web and application servers to speed the delivery of SSL-protected applications. Learn more.
















Comments
Post new comment