2010年10月29日星期五

Dynamics Introduces Redemption

Dynamics, a provider of next-generation payment devices, has introduced its Redemption payment device in a card form-factor.

In a release dated Oct. 5, the Company said the payment card with the option for in-store point redemption is another Payments 2.0 application built on Dynamics' Card 2.0 technology. Redemption allows consumers to pay at the point of sale with credit or request to redeem their reward points or cash rewards toward the purchase of any item at any merchant. TAG Heuer Watches The company is demonstrating the payment device at FinovateFall 2010.

Redemption has been in trials with a small number of Citi credit card customers since May 2010. Citi expects to expand the trial with select U.S. credit card customers this November.

Terry O'Neil, Executive Vice President at Citi Cards, said, "Citi is committed to bringing innovative solutions to market that provide our customers with greater choice, control and flexibility to help them better manage their money. Today we are announcing a consumer trial program that will use Dynamics' technology to put the power of choice in the customer's hands, with the simple press of a button. By piloting this technology, we've essentially created a new way for consumers to redeem their reward points. With the simple press of a button and swipe of their Citi card, consumers can choose to use their points toward their purchase."

"Citi is at the forefront of embracing and executing new technologies that bring extreme value to consumers," said Jeff Mullen, CEO of Dynamics. "Never before has an issuer brought this type of capability to market, one that allows consumers to MLB jerseys choose at the point-of-sale to use points that they've earned."

Redemption will work at any merchant where magnetic stripe readers are used. The face of the device is printed with a single credit account number and includes two buttons with associated light sources. A user can choose whether to use points or use credit at the point of sale by pressing the appropriate button. The card will then visually indicate the selection by turning ON the light source associated with the selected option. The magnetic-stripe information associated with the payment option is then written to the Electronic Stripe. The card can then be swiped at any magnetic stripe reader and the information is then received and processed by Citi.

"We created a device with a very elegant user interface that offers consumers a very natural, yet functional, experience," said Mullen.

In September, Dynamics unveiled two other Payments 2.0 applications: MultiAccount and Hidden. MultiAccount is directed to the convenience-oriented consumer and includes multiple payment accounts on a single card. A user simply presses a button associated with a particular payment account to activate the card. Hidden is directed to the security-conscious consumer and includes five buttons on the face of a card with a portion of the cardholder's account number hidden by a paper-thin display. A user must use the buttons to enter a personal unlocking code in order to display the hidden numbers to activate the card.

Dynamics' Payments 2.0 applications are all built on its Card 2.0 technology platform. Card 2.0 is a computing platform in a payment card form factor. The device includes the Electronic Stripe. The Electronic Stripe can be read at any existing point-of-sale magnetic stripe reader. The device itself can change any bit of information on this programmable stripe at any given time. The technology does not require any change to the 60 million 1970s-era magneReplica Watches
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