NFC sessions will take place in each of the six tracks, The Wallet
War, Securing Mobile Payments and Services, EMV Implementation &
Financial Services, Electronic ID for a Secure Identity, Commerce
Convergence: Going Mobile and EMV and Security, over the first two days
of the conference, with a half-day track devoted exclusively to NFC: Not
Only Payment on April 25. On April 23, CARTES America will host
sessions on US NFC Implementation Actions and Results,A card with an
embedded IC (Integrated Circuit) is called an IC card.
EMV, NFC and Mobile Implementations, The Convergence of EMV and NFC, as
well as case studies on European NFC implementations. NFC sessions on
April 24 will include Managing Secure Digital Mobile Identities, Mobile
and NFC: Smart Implementation Strategies and From Classic EMV Cards to
NFC and Stickers.
The United States market for smartphones which
can be used as mobile wallets is likely to increase by a factor of 17.8
from 2012 to 2016. That would mean the market would more than double in
size every year. The smart money appears to back NFC as the dominant
technology for mobile wallets, according to M for Mobile.
“NFC
is the focus of a lot of attention and holds promise in a range of
applications from contactless payment to ticketing and access control,”
said Isabelle Alfano, event director of CARTES America. “As the leading
conference devoted to smart technologies, we’re bringing together the
key stakeholders in the NFC ecosystem to discuss the ways they are
moving NFC toward mainstream adoption.”
The second CARTES
America exhibition and conference will bring smart technologies, mobile
commerce and digital security authorities and leading technology
providers to Las Vegas, Nev. for 80 educational sessions with more than
100 presenters. The event will focus on the topics, trends and
technologies to facilitate new business in the large and dynamic
American market for innovative smart technologies. The CARTES America
conference program includes a number of sessions addressing three broad
themes: EMV and NFC deployments, mobile & advanced payments and
security. The event will feature technology and application
demonstrations by a sold-out roster of 130 exhibitors.
“Last
year’s Cartes America event enabled ABnote and other leading edge
companies in the EMV and NFC payment application space to present their
solutions. This year, Cartes will be bigger and better with a broader
display of EMV, NFC and TSM emerging payment and transaction solutions
demonstrating real-world consumer applications,” said Jim Ellis, sr.
vice president North America, ABnote.
CARTES America is produced
by Comexposium. Sponsors and exhibitors include ABnote, Bell ID, Bowe
Systec, CPI Card Group, Datacard,Learn more about the different types of
laser marking machine by careel-tech.com. Gemalto, GET Group, HID, Mastercard,There are generally three different configurations of industrial laser cutting machine.
Morpho, Oberthur, STmicroelectronics and Underwriters Laboratories.
Event partners include ACT Canada, BayPay Forum, Eurosmart, Global
Platform, Inc., Global Prepaid Exchange, Homeland Security Research and
Smart Payment Association.
My day starts out normally enough: I
drop the kids at school and head to the Starbucks, where I use my Smart
Phone to pay for my tall Caffé Mocha soy because that’s how I roll: I
save one minute not having to reach into my wallet to physically pull
out my credit card, it’s logged into the app.
After "checking
in" with Foursquare, which tells me a couple of moms from the school
have already been there this morning, and then my Facebook, which tells
me another "friend" is headed there now, I dash to the Safeway, where I
get discounts on my feta cheese, avocados, organic yogurt and Fat
Bastard chardonnay because I logged it all in the store’s Just for U
program. Again, that’s how we roll.How would you like to have a personalized bobbleheads of yourself.
I
Skype with an activist in Australia before she leaves for a
fact-finding mission in Iraq. Then I Google the news for the latest
Brennan/drone hearings and fire off angry commentaries on Gmail and
Twitter to friends, declaring the U.S government fascistic, and worse
than the Taliban. I then rush to meet colleagues,Sol provides the world
with high-performance solar roadway and solar street light
solutions. including writer Gareth Porter – who just got back from the
Middle East and is now writing a story about how Israel may be
responsible for leaking fraudulent documents describing Iran’s nuclear
capability – at the Lebanese Taverna down the street. I check in two
more times with Facebook and Foursquare, because I get extra points when
I check into the restaurant. Maybe tomorrow I’ll be the mayor.
I
go to the Home Depot to get some material for my son’s science project –
he’s going to facilitate electromagnetic energy with batteries and
copper coil. I check in again at the Starbucks attached to the Barnes
& Noble for my second coffee of the day and buy the book The Perfect
Soldiers about the 9/11 hijackers, because I heard it was taken away
from one of the 9/11 conspirators at Gitmo, and I wanted to see for
myself whether it posed a danger to national security.
Two days
later, I am standing at the checkpoint at Dulles Airport heading for
Europe. I am flagged for an extra screen. They search my laptop,
because, as it were, this happens a lot. I am never told why, though I
am eventually cleared to travel. I may never know. Was it my lunching
partners and the frequency with which we met, or the diatribes on
Twitter? Was it my phone calls overseas, or the purchase of materials
that are commonly used to make an explosive devise? My reading habits?
My love for feta cheese?
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