Skip to main content

Ultrasonic payment service Zoosh bridges NFC gaps

zooshThere’s been a lot of buzz around near-field communication (NFC) revolutionizing the way we pay for things by turning your mobile phone into a mobile wallet or mobile payment device. The problem is that only a few phones, such as the Google Nexus S or Nokia’s Astound, have the specialized chip built in them. A company called Naratte has found a way around the problem by using ultrasound tones and your phones existing microphone and speaker to do the same thing as NFC but less exclusive.

Naratte’s Zoosh service is sort of like the way Shopkick works. Shopkick allows retailers to beam coupons onto customers’ phones at stores through inaudible sounds that get picked up by a cell phone’s microphone. Zoosh similarly uses the microphone and speaker to send and receive inaudible sound frequencies that contain data. Just like Shopkick, no data connection required, no GPS and no NFC.

Zoosh would deliver this data over a short range like the NFC and companies would have to buy a low-cost add-on with microphone and speaker for store’s POS PCs. However, for consumers it would be as easy as creating a simple app; and Zoosh is designed to also work with smartphones like Android or iPhone devices. Besides phone to POS payments, Zoosh will enable phone-to-phone payments and the ability to beam digital coupons to a POS system. Friends, relatives, drug dealers won’t have to worry about not having cash in their wallets anymore.

So far, the Sunnyvale, California based Narrate already has a partner in Sparkbase, a company that makes white label loyalty and stored value programs (a digital wallet service).

The CEO of Sparkbase Doug Hardman, said, “we see rising demand from both merchants and consumers for a robust loyalty platform that integrates both at the point of sale and the mobile device. Quite simply, we don’t have to wait for 2012 or beyond for mobile to terminal transactions. The technology is here, in people’s phones and on merchant’s terminals right now. We only have to activate it.”

Jeff Hughes
Former Digital Trends Contributor
I'm a SF Bay Area-based writer/ninja that loves anything geek, tech, comic, social media or gaming-related.
Best refurbished iPhone deals: Get an iPhone 14 for $513
An iPhone 13 in white color option.

The Apple iPhone is one of the best phones on the market, and because of it they don’t often come cheap. There are some great iPhone deals out there, but it’s rare to find significant discounts on newer models without having to commit to a longterm contract with a carrier, and it’s even less frequent you come across one of the best iPhones with a major price drop. This is where shopping refurbished can come in handy. Refurbished iPhones — for the most part — will come backed with a functionality guarantee or extended return window, making refurbished iPhones as safe of a purchase as shopping new. There are a lot of refurbished iPhone models seeing great price drops right now, which is why we’ve done the heavy lifting of rounding up all of the best refurbished iPhone deals. You’ll find them below, as well as some information on which refurbished iPhone might be best for you.
iPhone XR -- from $136

A refurbished model but one that's unlocked and comes with a full one-year warranty, the Apple iPhone XR is still pretty stylish for its age. It has a large 6.1-inch LCD screen with 1,792 x 828 resolution with Liquid Retina technology ensuring it looks super sharp. Powered by the A12 Bionic chip, it's starting to show its age but still has potential. There's also a 12MP back camera that can shoot 4K videos while the front-facing camera is 7MP and ideal for selfie-taking.

Read more
The best iPads in 2024: the 5 best ones you should buy
The backs of Apple's iPad Air and iPad Pro, with the tablets place on a table.

Apple's iPad is undoubtedly one of the most popular tablets on the market right now. There are several different models to choose from, but no matter which one you go with, you'll be getting one of the best tablets out there. Still, Apple provides an abundance of choice here, and with so many different versions — and almost annual updates — it can be tricky to know which one is the best to get.

All of Apple's iPads are pretty great, and they're each designed with a slightly different audience in mind, so it's hard to pick a single one as "the best." That's why we've broken this list down by categories; after all, there's an ideal iPad for nearly every situation. Whether you're looking for the best overall iPad, the best iPad on a budget, something in the middle of the pack, or even the best small iPad, we've got you covered.

Read more
Apple is about to do the unthinkable to its iPads
A person holding the iPad Air 4.

Earlier today, Apple announced that new iPads are coming this May. In my eyes, this seems to be “The Chosen One” generation. We’re likely getting an OLED display, a better keyboard (hopefully), and a chip ready to chomp the AI dinner. This gadget shall finally fill the techno-digital void in my life. At last.

Or maybe I am just trying to blindly convince myself to splurge over a thousand dollars for a machine that is “still not a Mac” and “can never be a fully fleshed out workstation.” But hey, people are spending $3,500 on a headset that gives them a headache and $700 for an AI thingamajig that can’t quite figure out what it really wants to do.

Read more