Bickering Blocks US Mobile Phone Payments 267
theodp writes "Imagine a technology that lets you pay for products just by waving your cellphone over a reader. You wouldn't have to if you lived in Japan, where people have been using it for the last five years to pay for everything from train tickets to groceries to candy in vending machines. While nearly everyone who's tried it has liked this form of payment, consumers in the United States won't be able to wave-and-pay anytime soon: The companies that must work together to give the technology to the masses can't agree on how to split the resulting revenue."
Can you pay me now? (Score:4, Funny)
Hell, I'd be happy to just get cell phone COVERAGE in a lot of the US.
Sheldon
Re:Maybe it's just me (Score:3, Funny)
In Soviet Russia... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Maybe it's just me (Score:3, Funny)
Cash! (Score:5, Funny)
I've used cold hard cash, and that's neatest.
It's light, portable, needs no batteries and isn't subject to arbitrary restrictions or revocations. No devices or readers are needed. You don't need a "credit rating" to use it. And I can pay for pretty much anything, except those services which require me to spend extra cash on an alternative transaction medium.
Cash. Is. King.
Candy?! (Score:2, Funny)
>> candy in vending machines
Sure, some of the rubber has fruity flavour but calling them candy?
Re:Maybe it's just me (Score:3, Funny)
Because I keep my credit cards in my wallet. my cellphone in my breast pocket. it's far easier for me to wave my phone than get out my wallet.
and most of you youngins' have your cellphone in your hands already sending , "WTF?" "OMG!!" and "BRB BFF!!!" to everyone you know every 6 seconds so having micropayments in your phone that is already in your hands is even more convenient.
BRB, I need to twitter this!
Re:Maybe it's just me (Score:5, Funny)
If the performance of the composite were equal or better, you might have me as a customer, but for now, I'll pick and choose.
Then I might interest you with a toaster running BSD.
Think about it: you put some toasts in, go back to your computer, then when the toast is ready your computer says [record a female friend of yours saying this:] "your toast is ready".
It's also a cheap DMZ-able web server in its own right: no need to buy a different box to host your blog out of security concerns.
[be warned though: if someone roots the box, they might run "sysctl dev.heater.enable=1; sysctl dev.heater.temp = F451" and set your house on fire.]