Google may be soon drop a bombshell on the mobile commerce world as a report surfaced Thursday the company is preparing to launch a physical credit card.
Dubbed the "Google Wallet card," this piece of plastic is for those times users can't tap and pay.
It will work just like a regular credit card anywhere major credit and debit cards are accepted.
The news comes from an anonymous tipster who gave Android Police the heads up that he had already received a confirmation email for his card.
Cut up the others
According to the Google Wallet cards set-up instructions, users can add credit and debit cards to the Google Wallet app, then use any of them to make purhcases by using the Google Wallet card.
All users need to do their Wallet card and their default card in the Google Wallet app will be charged.
Whenever users want to swap the card, they can simply select a different card through the app.
All cards - except Google's - can stay at home.
The card can be ordered through the Google Wallet app and sent to recipients' addresses, as was the case with the tipster who will receive an email when the card is in the mail.
Access to exclusive offers is also available and deals are instantly redeemable. If the card is lost, all a user needs to do is cancel their Google Wallet card - not every card they own.
Big surprises
This may very well be the service Google recently opened sign ups for, though the "next version of Google Wallet" seemingly suggested the app would soon open to more devices, including iOS products.
However, it could all be part of a huge Google scheme to conquer the mobile (and beyond) commerce world.
While a physical card steals the lede, other new features are reportedly on the way as well.
A "Wallet Balance" feature looks like it will let users deposit and withdraw funds while a person-to-person money transfer feature is also coming.
There's also compelling evidence a transit card is part of the new Google Wallet package.
Whether the card and new features will extend beyond the U.S. isn't yet clear, but all this could make carrier approval obsolete for everything but tap payments.
A Wallet card would let owners of iOS and Windows Phone devices utilize a non-NFC version of the Google Wallet app, too.
TechRadar has reached out to Google for comment and will update this story if and when the company responds.
Source : techradar[dot]com
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