Apple Pay Has a Siri Problem (theverge.com)
An anonymous reader writes: Katherine Boehret of The Verge reports multiple issues -- systematic, as well as general unawareness among vendors -- with Apple Pay. Citing instances from her own experience, she noted issues when using Apple Pay at McDonald's, Pret A Manger, and New York City cabs. From her report, "If I buy something at one of the wrong registers, the cashier must log out of it and log on at the right register before re-entering my purchase so I can use Apple Pay. This has happened at least a dozen times." She adds, "When a tool like Apple Pay works, it's like magic. You lift your phone, use fingerprint recognition to confirm the purchase, and walk away. The Wallet app in iOS shows you a list of your recent transactions, and adding credit cards is a simple process. But if Apple Pay fails enough times or isn't accepted at enough places, people forget it exists or think it's not worth trying to use. It's a lot like Siri in that way: too many failed attempts and you'll never open it again -- at least not on purpose."
I use Apple Pay on a daily basis. I've used it in NYC cabs and all of the same restaurants referenced in the article. Seems like clickbait to me.
Apple Pay is just Apple's name for NFC. Look for the NFC Logo
Also called MasterCard PayPass, Android Pay, Visa Pay Wave or Discover Zip.
Samsung Pay is a bit different, in addition to NFC they bought a company that fakes a magnetic swipe meaning it can be used with any old magnetic reader.
Almost every place I've tried to use touch to pay works (And I don't even use my cell phone). Most places have had the readers since ~2010 and I remember McDonalds having them since ~2007ish.
It's handy to take my wallet out of my pocket, tap the screen and continue on. If any store you go into has a newer screen the reader is behind the screen, older payment kiosks have a little ''dish' looking part on the top.