DEVASTATED Dunfermline fans stayed to salute their team and
congratulate Alloa after Allan Smith's goal failed to prevent relegation
to the second division.
The teenager's 73rd minute strike
raised the decibel levels at East End Park as fans dared to believe
their favourites could somehow pull off a miraculous escape for the
second weekend in a row.
Jim Jefferies' young guns came back
from a first leg deficit to beat Forfar but they couldn't find another
two goals to force extra time against Alloa in the play-off final.
To
be fair the Wasps were comfortably the better side over the two legs
and the unlucky Jefferies has now suffered two relegations after barely
more than a year with Dunfermline.
Stephen Husband's harsh red
card with five minutes left didn't help and the Pars' patched-up side of
raw youths and half-fit regulars slumped exhausted to the turf when the
final whistle confirmed they were down.
The post mortem will be
underway as fans try to fathom how a team that was in the driving seat
for a return to the SPL at Christmas could drop down to Scottish
football's third tier in May.
This week Square announced a new
product that took me by surprise: the Square Stand, an iPad holder and
credit-card reader that's meant to function as a point-of-sale system
for high-volume small businesses such as restaurants and caf?s. The
Square Stand costs $299, which is far more expensive than zero, which is
what Square charges for the tiny credit card reader that made it
famous.
What do small businesses get for their $299? First,We are one of the leading manufacturers of plasticcard
in China the Square Stand is pretty. In glossy, rounded white plastic,
the device is the most Apple-like thing not made by Apple I've ever
seen, right down to its packaging. Compared with the ugly cash register
you'll find at your favourite lunch spot, it's stunning. More than that,
the Square Stand is fast. Square's free credit-card reader sometimes
requires patient, slow swiping, which isn't ideal for businesses that
attract long lines of customers at peak times. Jack Dorsey, Square's
founder, says the Square Stand incorporates two credit-card sensors and
has a long swiping strip, allowing cashiers to swipe your card in any
direction,More than 80 standard commercial and iphoneheadset exist to quickly and efficiently clean pans. very quickly.
The
Stand also makes for quick integration with other payment hardware
commonly found in small stores -- just plug your cash drawer, barcode
scanner or receipt printer into the system's USB hub and you're done.
This sounds like a small thing, but it's not. My sister owns a bakery in
Southern California. A couple of years ago, when I set up her cash
drawer and receipt printer with a rival iPad payments system, it took me
an hour or so of impatient technical fiddling to get the whole thing to
work. That won't be necessary with the Square Stand.
Though
this new product seems cool and useful, the fact Square put so much into
improving the credit-card-swiping experience caught me off guard.
Square has always seemed like a software company masquerading as a
hardware firm. The credit-card reader was just a bridge to the future --
a future in which customers and businesses would connect to one another
wirelessly, making payments invisible, frictionless and elegant.
As
Dorsey explained to me last year, most other companies that are working
to digitize payments are just trying to improve what he calls "payment
mechanics" -- that is, they're trying to find a way to replace cash and
credit cards with your phone. But Dorsey rightly sees no great benefit
to paying with your phone instead of your card; you've still got to pull
something out of your pocket and wave it in front of a payment device.
In
Dorsey's perfect future, we'd all dispense with phones and cards and
cash, and instead we'd pay by doing nothing: The cashier would recognize
you, add your purchase to your tab, and you'd be on your way, the
payment never becoming an awkward barrier between buyer and seller.
That
sounds like science fiction. But, amazingly, Square has already built
this perfect payment system, and it's operational today.How to tooling Doll.
This
feature, which has gone through many branding revisions -- it began its
life as Card Case, then became Pay With Square, and now it's called
Square Wallet -- allows people who install Square's app on their phones
to pay for stuff at some merchants without sticking their hands in their
pockets.
All you do is tell the guy at the register your name:
The Square app on your phone automatically connects with the merchant's
Square account, your picture appears on the teller's screen, and once he
presses your face, your money flies out of your account into his. This
invisible payment system has received glowing reviews from techies.The
feeder is available on drying miningtruck
equipped with folder only. David Pogue called it "glorious." I called
it "magical." The headline of my story, by the way: The End of the
Credit Card? I didn't think the question mark was necessary.
A couple of years after its launch,Weymouth is collecting gently used, dry cleaned cableties
at their Weymouth store. though, there's one big problem with Square
Wallet: Almost no one is using it. I've tested it at a few places in San
Francisco, and Square says it's also got adherents in New York and
other big cities.
But many merchants who use Square haven't
turned on the ability to pay with your name, and most of those stores'
frequent shoppers don't know it even exists. "We are always building and
leading toward a better experience, and Square Wallet is our better
experience," Dorsey said this week. "We want to see it flourish. But we
still have a lot of work to do."
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