Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Mobile
  3. Legacy Archives

Google plans mobile-payment tests in NYC, San Francisco

Add as a preferred source on Google

ISIS NFC sales transactions drawing (Nov 2010)Google will soon begin to test a plan that allows customers in New York City and San Francisco to make payments using their only mobile phones, reports Bloomberg.

According to “two people familiar with the project,” Google will finance the instillation of “thousands” of enabled cash-register systems from VeriFone Systems Inc. at select retail locations. These registers would accept payments from cell phones equipped with near-field-communication (NFC) technology. The sources say Google plans to launch the plan within four months.

Recommended Videos

NFC technology allows users to simply tap their cell phone on the NFC register to pay for products or services. It serves as an alternative to cash or credit cards. According to Bloomberg, Google’s NFC service “may combine a consumer’s financial account information, gift-card balances, store loyalty cards and coupon subscriptions on a single NFC chip on a phone.”

Google’s plans coincide with increased use of NFC technology in general. Deutsche Telekom announced at this year’s Mobile World Congress that it will begin to roll out NFC-based “mobile wallet” technology throughout Europe this year, and will expand the technology’s implementation to the United States in 2012, through its subsidiary wireless company T-Mobile USA.

If Google brings its NFC plan to fruition, it could face stiff competition from competing systems backed by a variety of companies, including those of eBay, PayPal and ISIS, which is supported by AT&T and Verizon Wireless.

Of course, for any NFC plan to work, customers must have NFC-enabled phones at their disposal. The Nexus S and Galaxy II smartphones from Samsung are among the few NFC-capable devices currently available in the US. Blackberry-maker Research In Motion has said it will begin implementing the technology into its devices as soon as possible. Apple says it will not include NFC technology in the upcoming iPhone 5.

Andrew Couts
Features Editor for Digital Trends, Andrew Couts covers a wide swath of consumer technology topics, with particular focus on…
How to restore deleted or missing contacts on your iPhone
Lost your iPhone contacts? Here's how to get them back in minutes!
iPhone in hand showing restore contacts page

At some point, we all stopped memorizing phone numbers. It happened gradually, and now most of us can barely recall two or three phone numbers off the top of our heads. So when your iPhone contacts vanish, whether after a software update or an accidental delete, it can feel like a minor crisis.

Thankfully, if you act fast, you can easily restore deleted contacts on your iPhone. So, before you start texting people asking for their numbers again, try these methods to get your contacts back. These methods will work on all latest iPhone models.

Read more
The best Google Pixel deals of 2026: big savings on Google’s AI phones
The home screen on the Google Pixel 8 Pro.

Google's Pixel 10 lineup has been out for a bit, and if you've been on the fence about switching to Android's gold standard, current discounts across Amazon make this the best time to buy. We're seeing up to 26% off across the entire Pixel family, including phones and accessories.

Why buy a Pixel right now?
Google has always built the Pixel line around one idea: the smartest possible Android experience. With the Pixel 10 series, that philosophy gets a significant upgrade thanks to deep Gemini AI integration: Google's most capable AI assistant to date. It handles everything from real-time call screening and live translation to on-device photo editing and natural-language search, and it does so more seamlessly than any other Android on the market.
Add in Google's reputation for exceptional cameras, clean software, and the longest OS update commitments of any Android manufacturer, and the Pixel 10 lineup makes a compelling case for itself even at full price. At these discounted prices, it's a genuinely hard argument to beat.
Quick comparison

Read more
The best tutoring apps and websites
Screenshot of student studying

Whether you're thinking of learning a new language, looking for homework help, need a hand with your research paper, or could use a quick review for your upcoming SATs, a skilled tutor can help with all of the above. No longer limited to office hours or library meet-ups, online tutoring services are evolving and improving. In 2025, AI-powered study tools, mobile-first platforms, and expanded access to tutors around the world, students are able to get expert help anytime, anywhere.

Today's learners expect more than just flexibility. They want tutoring that's fast, focused, and delivers results. This shift has led to a new generation of tutoring platforms that combine on-demand help with real-time trackable progress.

Read more