According to manufacturers of smartphones, it's time for PayPal to attack Apple.
As you already know, a few days ago, Apple unveiled the iPhone 6 , iPhone 6 Plus and Apple during his keynote Watch in San Francisco. But apart from these new devices, the other product that has done a great deal about him, it's Apple Pay.
For those who do not follow , it is a payment system using NFC (new for Apple) and Touch ID, fingerprint scanner that was introduced with the iPhone 5 S last year.
Apple Pay allows you to make payments in nearly 220,000 stores across the United States as well as online payments.
Of course, the launch of this new service does not make everyone happy. We fully understand that companies like Square and PayPal do not be excited. The latter has already reacted.
For example, following the launch of Apple Pay, Rob Skinner, manager at PayPal, told our colleagues at TechRadar:
He also added:
In addition, PayPal has also decided to attack Apple Pay a full-page New York Times, with a new ad where you can read:
This time, it is a reference to the incident that took place a few days after the Apple keynote. Rather intimate photos (including selfies) celebrities have fuitées on canvas. And these were stolen from iCloud.
But anyway, Apple will launch Pay necessarily benefit consumers to the extent that it will force other departments to dig and innovate.
As you already know, a few days ago, Apple unveiled the iPhone 6 , iPhone 6 Plus and Apple during his keynote Watch in San Francisco. But apart from these new devices, the other product that has done a great deal about him, it's Apple Pay.
For those who do not follow , it is a payment system using NFC (new for Apple) and Touch ID, fingerprint scanner that was introduced with the iPhone 5 S last year.
Apple Pay allows you to make payments in nearly 220,000 stores across the United States as well as online payments.
Of course, the launch of this new service does not make everyone happy. We fully understand that companies like Square and PayPal do not be excited. The latter has already reacted.
For example, following the launch of Apple Pay, Rob Skinner, manager at PayPal, told our colleagues at TechRadar:
"No one can challenge Apple's reputation, but the payments is a difficult sector"
He also added:
"It's much more difficult to make payments to maintain a functional live video stream" (referring to the live streaming of the keynote that Apple has done a lot of dissatisfied)
In addition, PayPal has also decided to attack Apple Pay a full-page New York Times, with a new ad where you can read:
"We the people want our money is safer than our selfies. PayPal protects people's savings. "
This time, it is a reference to the incident that took place a few days after the Apple keynote. Rather intimate photos (including selfies) celebrities have fuitées on canvas. And these were stolen from iCloud.
But anyway, Apple will launch Pay necessarily benefit consumers to the extent that it will force other departments to dig and innovate.