Curious, what's good about pay-with-mobile device? Never have felt compelled to to try it. Also seems like Google can't figure it out.
"Google Payment app No. 3 (Google Pay) is being shut down in favor of Google Payment app No. 4 (Google Wallet). "
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/06/google-shuts-down-the-google-pay-app/
@walterbays Are there other features of it beyond the payment action? E.g. accounting or (anything).
@b4cks4w Supposedly the wallet lets you also store concert tickets, plane tickets, transit passes, driver's license.
@walterbays see that kind of thing would be cool. Sounds a bit like the octopus card in Hong Kong.
https://www.octopus.com.hk/en/consumer/octopus-cards/about/index.html
@b4cks4w I used it before for boarding passes because Gmail saw the documents in mail and offered to store them to wallet. I just had to click okay. Of course I also downloaded the PDF just in case, not trusting that there'd be network connection at TSA screening, or that Google would be smart enough to cache data. Turned out not to be needed.
@b4cks4w I set it up because one of my credit cards was offering 5% cash back for a quarter for using it. Since then, I've accidentally gone shopping with my phone and without my wallet once and used it then. I have not found any other advantage: pulling a piece of plastic out of my wallet is easier for me.
@b4cks4w I have no idea, but I absolutely refuse to use it because it moves even more under the umbrella of being controlled by Big Tech.
They're trying to (and in trying have largely succeeded) become all-consuming omnipresent/omniscient megaconglomerates with control over all your data - and it's not too much of a stretch to imagine them trying to control much more than data.
Something about that doesn't sit right with me. Probably because it's dystopian horses***.
@b4cks4w That's just Google being Google. Every successful product must be terminated and replaced. Often with something better, often with something worse.
I find phone payment more convenient than digging out a credit card, and trying half a dozen different ways to tap, insert, or swipe it until I find what works.