The Asian Age

Apple Pay brings us closer to wallet- free days

- ANICK JESDANUN

If there ever comes a day I can ditch my wallet and use my phone to pay for everything, I’ll look back to my first purchase through Apple Pay: a Big Mac and medium fries for $ 5.44. That wallet-free day won’t be coming for a while, if ever, but Apple’s new payments system brings us much closer.

There were a few unexpected steps setting up Apple Pay on Monday, and the employee at a local McDonald’s looked befuddled as I stood there after waving an iPhone 6 over the wireless reader in front of the cash register. The transactio­n hadn’t gone through, so she was waiting for me to pay. I thought I had, but I had pressed the phone’s fingerprin­t ID sensor too hard, getting me out of the transactio­n instead of authorisin­g it.

Apple Pay will take getting used to — for consumers and merchants alike. These aren’t insurmount­able hurdles. The biggest difficulty is general acceptance, and Apple has managed to boost interest in mobile payments in a way Google and other rivals haven’t been able to for years.

EASY TO SET UP

Apple Inc. has the advantage of having millions of credit cards on file for its iTunes and app stores. Getting started was a matter of going to the Passbook app or “Passbook & Apple Pay” in the phone’s settings. After choosing the option to add a card, I tapped “Use Card on File with iTunes.” I then entered the three- digit security code from the back of my card.

You can have multiple cards on file. You can manually type in the details, but that’s boring. Instead, just use the phone’s camera to scan the card. I tried it with six different cards, and Apple Pay got the number right each time. In a few cases, it got the expiration date, too. The scanning doesn’t work as well in dark settings. Unfortunat­ely, the phone’s flashlight turns off when you try to scan the card with the camera. So wait for good lighting — and know you have to do this just once for each card. Once scanned, the image is deleted, as is your card number. Instead, for increased security, you get a substitute number that’s unique to the device. A hacker who gets that number won’t be able to use it without physical possession of your phone. One warning: It’s possible your card won’t work with Apple Pay. Not all banks support it, and even if the bank does, it might exclude some types of cards such as corporate or prepaid accounts. But Apple Pay works with most cards from leading US banks. The broad acceptance is one reason many people believe mobile payment is for real this time.

USING IT IN STORES

About two dozen retail chains are accepting Apple Pay at launch, and others are planning to do so by the end of the year. I was able to buy lunch at McDonald’s on the third attempt. I tapped on the sensor too hard the first time. The second time, I moved the phone away from the reader as I was still authentica­ting the transactio­n. The phone told me to bring it closer.

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