Thumbs up to NFC in London trial

January 27, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Uncategorized

Oyster NFC mobile O2 Thumbs up to NFC in London trialGuardian reported, Passengers on London Underground could be using their mobile phones to get through the ticket barriers and even pay for their lunch within the next two years, after a successful trial of technology in the capital by O2 and .

The integrated Oyster and a card into a handset and gave it to 500 testers who spent six months using the phone as a mobile .

From Nokia’s press release:
  • 78% want to use contactless services on their mobile phone
  • Nine out of ten trialists were happy using NFC technology on a mobile phone
  • Interest in having Oyster on their mobile phones was particularly strong with 89% of trialists saying they were interested in taking this up
  • Over two-thirds of trialists also said that they would be interested in having the payWave feature on their mobile in the future.
  • Having Oyster on their mobile phone actually increased trialists use of . One in five (22%) trialists using Pay as You Go Oyster reported that they increased the number of they made on during the trial.
  • Overall, almost 50,000 tube took place using the O2 during the six month trial.
  • 67% said that they found it more convenient to use than a standard .
  • 87% said that availability of the service would be likely to influence their purchase of a new mobile phone.
From Guardian again, In Japan, such phones have been in use for more than four years. The network has been using the technology since 2001 and millions of cards have been issued. But the technology used in Japan is based on Sony’s FeliCa , which is different from that used in the O2 trial and by for the .
Philip , at , said mobile had fallen down in the past because of the number of people needed to make any system viable.
“It requires cooperation, not just between handset manufacturers and network operators but third parties such as Visa or Mastercard and banks and retailers. To reach critical mass you really need to have at least three of the big operators to be involved or there is not enough in it for the likes of or Nokia,” said .
Several of the UK’s five mobile phone networks are understood to be interested in mobile .
“There does seem to be consumer demand for it, people are saying they want to carry less stuff around with them,” said .
The results of the O2 trial show that people like using a mobile phone to do more than send texts and talk.

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