Posts tagged rf-sim

Weeny SIM Wi-Fi hotspot is here! But why?

From the register article here

MWC Another attempt to add value to the diminutive GSM SIM sees Sagem Orga squeezing an entire Wi-Fi hotspot into a SIM card – we’re just not sure why.

SIMFi, as the product has been named, is a normal SIM card usable in any handset, but it also packs 802.11 Wi-Fi that can enable any 3G handset to operate as a hotspot sharing its connectivity with nearby Wi-Fi-enabled devices – assuming a network operator decides to deploy it.

The concept isn’t particularly complicated: the SIM Toolkit allows an application running on the SIM to establish a network connection via the handset, and 802.11 can be packed into a SIM which can hide an antenna in the plastic surround and draw enough power from the handset to host the host-spot. All the SIM application has to do is bridge between the two networks, and provide some text-based user control via the standard SIM Toolkit menu commands.

Technically there are issues packing the radio inside a mobile phone, and Sagem should be congratulated for achieving that; though one has to ask if anyone really wants such a thing, and (more importantly) if any network operator will sign up to distribute it.

Western network operators have been lamentably slow in realising the potential of the SIM. In Europe only Orange has even made a token effort: trying to deploy high-capacity SIMs in France, despite the SIM manufacturers trying every trick in the book to add value to what has become a commoditised product.

We’ve seen gigabytes of flash memory, high-speed connections, GPS receivers, accelerometers, automated back-ups and even short-range radios all embedded in SIMs. But operators are very wary of anything which drives up the price – as one executive told your correspondent: “Add a dollar to the cost of a SIM, and you’ve just spent $10m.”

That assumes, of course, that every SIM is upgraded, but today’s yoof are much more comfortable with SIMs than the middle-aged management running our mobile networks. China Mobile’s new proximity-payment systems, based on RF SIM, will be sold to customers who are expected to drop it into their handsets and remember if they’ve upgraded or not.

With MobilePay signed up to distribute RF SIMs in the USA, perhaps network operators will wake up to the fact that upgrading one SIM doesn’t mean upgrading them all, but even if they do we’re still not convinced that a Wi-Fi hotspot is the ideal application to be squeezed into a SIM.

China Mobile goes big on proximity payments

from The Register

WuMart first to sign up for electro-wallet SIM

China Mobile has launched a proximity payment service based on RF SIM technology, and with China Telecom announcing trials the standard is probably unstoppable.

RF SIMs are now available to Chinese customers prepared to shell out ¥150 (around £15) for one, according to Alibaba.com.

The SIM drops into any existing handset, and provides an electronic purse capable of holding cash and/or loyalty points, along with wireless connectivity (at 2.4GHz) for interaction with stores and banks, including more than 300 branches of supermarket chain WuMart.

This deployment follows China Mobile’s announcement that it had ordered three million of the SIMs, with a view to wide scale deployment.

China Telecom, meanwhile, will be trialling the technology with 1000 users in Shanghai according to Near Field Communications world – equipping 200 tills with the necessary kit to accept RF SIM payments and allowing punters to spend up to ¥1000 (£94) per transaction.

An RF SIM can interact with the user through text-based menus as specified by the SIM Toolkit standard, though a smartphone application could provide a better interface if desired.

But all is not lost for competing-technology Near Field Communications (NFC) as those two companies only account for a mere 550 million subscribers (fewer than ten per cent of those being with China Telecom). China Unicom is, apparently, still planning to use NFC when it gets round to deploying a service for its 125 million subscribers.

The NFC Forum has been busy signing cooperative-marketing deals with the GSMA and the Smart Card Alliance, not to mention EMVCo (owners of the secure payment card standards).

NFC’s advantage is that it works when the phone battery is dead, and it’s compatible with existing ticketing systems such as London’s Oyster card. But the price it pays is cooperation from handset manufacturers who have to built in the technology, and without a decent push from operators no one except Nokia has shown any great interest – and Nokia’s only interested ‘cos it holds some patents in the area.

Working when the phone’s dead is nice, but sharing a technology with hundreds of millions of Chinese is even nicer. Operators will like not having to ask manufacturers for favours, and most of us keep our phones charged anyway these days, so it probably won’t be long before we see RF SIMs popping up in the west too. ®

China Mobile offers ‘cellphone wallet’ in Beijing

China Mobile Beijing branch signed an agreement with WuMart Stores Inc. to launch a cellphone shopping payment service on February 6.

According to the deal, 20 million China Mobile users in Beijing can do shopping under 500 yuan ($73) with cellphones in over 300 outlets of WuMart and MerryMart under WuMart Group.

Paying with cellphones is an e-wallet service based on RFID launched by China Mobile. Inserted a RFID-SIM card, a cellphone can pay at POS of the supermarkets. Users can recharge their e-wallets in an exclusive account at the cashier of those supermarkets, on the Internet or through SMS.

Users can choose on China Mobile website or from over 30,000 goods in the supermarkets for their point exchange gift. Members of WuMart can also charge their cellphones by using the annual shopping points.

Now, China Mobile Beijing branch is also under negotiation with relevant departments to involve public transportation into its cellphone service.

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