Gaps exist in NFC technology
2010 is the date many seem to target as when near field communication will begin to take off. Until then, chipmakers may not see a lot of demand for the new microprocessors, according to EETimes.com
There are also issues with software and administrative matters surrounding NFC, the report states. There need to be more card reader subsystems, integrations tools and application software. There also needs to be software that supports backend-billing services.
EETimes.com will release a full report in May. A preliminary report is available here.
NFC Forum announces competition winners
The NFC Forum, a Wakefield, Mass.-based non-profit advocating the use of near field communication trechnology, announced the winners of its Touching the Future: NFC Forum Global Competition.
In the competition, developers in a commercial track vied for the honor of having their solutions named “The Best NFC Service of the Year 2008,” while a Research Track recognized “The Most Innovative NFC Research Project of the Year 2008.”
The first-place winner in the Commercial Track is VingCard Elsafe of Norway for its “Signature RFID by VingCard - Electronic Lock for Hotels.” This product enables hotel guests with NFC-enabled phones to bypass the check-in process and unlock their hotel rooms using the phones.
NFC causing increasing interest in mobile coupons and ticketing
UK-based Juniper Research released a study that predicts retailers will have issued almost 3 billion mobile coupons to customers by 2011. The study also predicts that mobile ticketing will become more popular over the next few years, with 2.6 billion tickets worth $87 billion, delivered by 2011.
The study attributed the increased interest in mobile coupons and ticketing to new NFC technologies. The technology is cheaper for vendors than using paper tickets, and mobil coupons are showing a higher conversion rate and added security.
Read the full story here.
DnB Nor and Telenor to form mobile payments unit
Norwegian banking group DnB Nor and local telco Telenor have revealed plans to establish a new mobile payments program. The new mobile payments system, called Trusted Service Manager (TSM) Nordic, will be a subsidiary of Doorstep.
The move comes at the same time as a public trial of near field communications (NFC)-based contactless mobile payments technology by DnB Nor, Telenor and MasterCard.
The new company will distribute and maintain payment cards and tickets in handsets on behalf of issuers and in cooperation with mobile operators.
The pilot will use MasterCard’s PayPass contactless technology, which will enable customers to pay for low-value purchases at certain retailers in Oslo’s city center by tapping their handsets on a specially-equipped terminal. Customers are also able to pay for and store travel tickets using their handsets.
Checks may be endangered species in Western Europe
The demise of checks in western Europe is set to accelerate over the next few years, with around 60% of retailers no longer accepting them by 2015 as electronic cards and mobile payments gain in popularity, according to research commissioned by Visa. The Center for Retail Research - which surveyed more than 300 retailers in France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and the UK - found the weighted average of retailers in these countries that do not accept checks in 2008 is 20.3%.
Contactless payments could have the biggest impact over the next few years, with phone-enabled payments expected to be accepted by 32.7%, contactless cards by 26.4% and keyfobs or tags by 19.1%.
ViVOpay enables contactless payments for kiosk systems
ViVOtech is extending its ViVOpay line of contactless readers into the kiosk market by introducing the ViVOpay Kiosk contactless payment module. The new technology is certified to work with all major contactless payment programs and allow third-party Kiosk host systems to accept contactless payments without requiring lengthy and costly compliance re-certifications.
“Contactless payments and ticketing systems are experiencing rapid growth worldwide, prompting kiosk manufacturers and operators to look for solutions that can be easily integrated with new and existing systems,” said Mohammad Khan, ViVOtech President and Founder. ‚”The ViVOpay Kiosk module enables payment solution providers in transportation, retail, parking and other industries to now accept contactless and NFC mobile payments at their unattended Kiosks with minimal effort.”
New Parrot PARTY Black Edition speakers, equipped with NFC
The new Parrot PARTY Black Edition Bluetooth speaker is now going to be offered with NFC capabilities. The speakers will have six watts of power, a 5-button user interface, eight hours of battery life and an auxiliary input.
Henri Seydoux, founder and CEO of Parrot commented, “The added value lies in the fact that NFC is fast and easy to use, while guaranteeing a high level of security.”
The PARTY Black Edition also has two audio effects developed by Parrot. Stereo Widening, gives the music a surround sound effect and Virtual SuperBass reinforces the bass frequencies. The speakers can be paired easily with any Bluetooth device including mobile phones, MP3 players, PCs or Macs.
Quick boarding with the touch of a finger
By combining fingerprint recognition from Precise Biometrics on SIM cards and automated boarding gates from IER, the companies aim to solve the challenge of offering passengers efficient travel while demands on aviation security is increasing. The new IER SpeedBoarding Gates with fingerprint technology from Precise Biometrics are currently being launched at the Passenger Terminal Expo in Amsterdam.
One lane in the SpeedBoarding Gate offers fingerprint recognition in combination with a frequent flyer’s card or a registered traveler card, using a mobile phone with NFC functionality. The biometric solution is based on Precise Match-on-Card, enabling fingerprints to be both stored and matched inside a SIM card in a mobile phone.
Orange delays NFC launch
Mobile operator Orange is postponing its commercial NFC launch by several months, according to CardLine Global.
Orange was going to begin commercial rollout of the service during the first quarter of 2008, but technical problems with the infrastructure among retailers, transit operators and other service providers have set it back.
Strategy Analytics: Challenges Limit NFC in 2008
Boston-based Strategy Analytics reports that Near Field Communication in mobile handsets is likely to remain limited to the trial phase in 2008, despite support from all quarters of the industry. The shortfall is attributed to the slow build-out. Details may be found in, “Enabling Technologies: NFC Penetrates 1 in 5 Handset Shipments by 2012.”
David Kerr, vice president of Global Wireless Practice, stated, “Unlike other Personal Area Networks technologies such as Bluetooth, the success of NFC in handsets is reliant on the ecosystem and the monetization opportunities present for all participants in this value chain. For NFC to be a commercially viable solution, we need to move from isolated field trials to a more open approach as in the most recent trials from Nokia, NXP and VISA.”
