Stories Tagged as
Mobile payments
The numbers for October 6, 2014
by
Tony Wagner
Oct 6, 2014
HP, bitcoin and more numbers we're watching today.
Marriage of convenience becomes divorce of necessity
Sep 30, 2014
EBay announced that it’s going to split with PayPal.
Mobile payments app offers a window on intimacy
by
Molly Wood
Jul 28, 2014
A new payments app allows for a close look at the how and who of spending.
The world of alternative currencies
by
Adriene Hill
Jul 12, 2013
Are we moving towards leaving our cash and credit cards at home?
Which mobile payment service is right for you?
by
Adriene Hill
Jul 11, 2013
There's a lot of ways to pay for things these days without using cash. Credit and debit cards are the biggest, but mobile payments might be the next big thing.
Lack of banking options leads to mobile phone payments in Africa
by
Molly Wood
May 29, 2013
In some cases, a dearth of infrastructure can actually lead to innovation. No where is this more true than in the developing world.
Groupon enters the mobile payment arena
by
Queena Kim
Sep 19, 2012
If you're not intimately familiar with the term "mobile payments," get ready to start hearing it a lot more. Basically, it means "paying for something with a smartphone." Right now some of the big players are Google and a company called Square. But today there's news Groupon is getting in on it.
For public good, not for profit.
Walmart, Target join the mobile payments race
Aug 15, 2012
Big retailers join the race to develop payment systems for mobile phones. But will consumers pay with smartphones instead of credit cards?
Major retailers team up for mobile payment plan
Aug 15, 2012
We've got news this morning that a group of major retailers, including Walmart, Target and 7-Eleven, are teaming up to create their own network for mobile payments. It's one more way for stores to draw you closer -- and get a jump on outsiders, like Google.
Is Starbucks moving toward a cashless future?
by
Queena Kim
Aug 8, 2012
Mobile payment firm Square will begin processing all credit and debit transactions at Starbucks. Could it signal the beginning of the end of cash?