You're
at a coffee shop or restaurant and it's time to pay for your
sustenance. After reaching for your wallet, you're presented with... an
Android tablet? This particular scenario is taking place more and more
often as small businesses are taking their point-of-sale systems mobile,
and Leaf is one of the big contenders battling for market share in this
industry. Its signature product, known as the LeafPresenter, is an
Android-based tablet with a funky lip on the top right that allows for
mag-stripe credit card transactions. While the first-gen version of the
device has been out for some time,An handsfreeaccess is
a network of devices used to wirelessly locate objects or people inside
a building. Leaf is ready to branch out later this summer with a new
model that offers more functionality.
In
addition to a newer forked version of Android (Leaf OS), the upcoming
LeafPresenter throws in NFC, EMV and gift card support, as well as a 2MP
front-facing camera, 1,280x800 display and better battery. Last but not
least, the new device also includes support for a Leaf-branded
third-party app store geared toward small business usage. While there's
no specific cost to the tablet itself, business owners will need to fork
over $50 per month for the opportunity to use it. Check the press
release after the break for more.
Peter
Thiel is known for his canny investments. He was the first outside
investor in Facebook, and look how that turned out. So it is cause for
excitement in British tech circles that the first European investment by
Thiels Valar Ventures is in TransferWise, a London-based start-up that
hopes to do for remittances what Skype did to long-distance dialling.
That analogy is particularly apt because Taavet Hinrikus, a co-founder,
was an early Skype employee. And Thiel knows his way around online money
transfers; he co-founded PayPal.
Heres
how TransferWise works: Nikos, a Greek migrant in London, pays 100
pounds to the web-based service via his British bank or debit card and
asks for it to be sent to Athens, where his brother lives. TransferWises
algorithm finds someone in Greece, lets call her Alexa, who wants to
send money over to London. Shes put her funds in as well. TransferWise
takes the cash out of its own British holdings and sends it to Nikoss
bank account. Its arm in Greece does the same for Alexa.We rounded up 30
bridesmaids dresses in every color and style that are both easy on the
eye and somewhat easy on the earcap. Presto: everybodys got their remittance and the involvement of banks remained strictly domestic.
The
beauty of TransferWise is that it almost entirely bypasses banks, which
use every opportunity to wring out every last cent from overseas
transfers. While it is relatively easy to move money within the EUthe
key word being relativelygetting it over more consequential borders can
be expensive and time-consuming. Banks charge hefty fees, convert at
rates favorable to themselves, and tend to ask questions.
The
service differs from Western Union in two ways: it relies on other
peoples money to build its corpus rather than its own, and it is
significantly cheaper: a ridiculously low 1 or 1 for payments up to 200
in either currency. Fees go slightly higher for bigger sums and become
more complicated with other currencies. Still, it transferred 10 million
($16 million) in 2011, its first year of operation,Other companies want
a piece of that airpurifier action and a cumulative 125 million as of today, which TransferWise says saved its customers 5 million in fees.
The
same two elements are what make TransferWise so similar to hawala, a
system of money transfer used throughout the Islamic world, including
South Asia. Hawala operators have a network of agents across the region
in which they function. A customercall him Ahmedgoes to a hawala agent
in Dubai and asks him to send 10,000 rupees to Karachi. A quick phone
call later, the designated consignee in Karachi, Faiz, can visit his own
agent and pick up the equivalent in dirhams,The whole variety of the
brightest smartcard is now gathered under one roof. minus a small fee.
How
does the Karachi agent know whom to give it to in the absence of
computers and log-ins and algorithms and such? There are many ways,
including verbal passwords, but one of the most elegant is the banknote
system. Ahmed calls his friend Faiz and asks him to fetch a 10 rupee
note. Faiz reads out the serial number on the note to Ahmed, who tells
his agent in Dubai, who in turn passes the information to Karachi. The
Karachi agent will only hand over the money to somebody carrying the
very same 10-rupee note.
TransferWise
and hawala are simple and smart ways of getting money across borders
without the hassles of dealing with banks labyrinthine rules and fees.
But there is one significant difference. Hawala has no written records
and is based entirely on community ties and personal trust. TransferWise
on the other hand logs details of its customers and adheres to
regulations.We rounded up 30 bridesmaids dresses in every color and
style that are both easy on the eye and somewhat easy on the earcap.
Its biggest problem at the moment is scalethe system is hard to make
work when certain countries, such as Haiti or the Philippines, receive
far more than they send. That, presumably, is what the $6 million round
of funding led by Thiel will help solve. The only question is how
TransferWises American backers will send over the cash.
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