PayPal to add mobile payment features, hopes to redefine how we shop (till we drop)

Like the side ponytail craze of the ’80s, the newest trend is turning out to be the mobile wallet — especially as major players like Google, MasterCard, Verizon, Discover and now PayPal board the bandwagon. Our old buddy — best known for its love affair with eBay (and ripping our own Darren Murph off a solid two large) — has plans to implement new payment features primarily for (but not limited to) mobile. On the to-do list are things like QR / barcode scans, hyper local deals, fast checkout via NFC, etc. The company is adamant that it’s not “just shoving a credit card on a phone,” but rather planning to change the whole shopping experience. We’ll know more when PayPal releases more details in early October, and when it launches the pilot product sometime later this year. Until then, check out the semi-cryptic video while brushing up on old episodes of SuperMarket Sweep after the break.

Continue reading PayPal to add mobile payment features, hopes to redefine how we shop (till we drop)

PayPal to add mobile payment features, hopes to redefine how we shop (till we drop) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Sep 2011 21:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePayPal Blog  | Email this | Comments

Nike unveils the 2011 MAG shoe, to auction off 1500 pairs of the coolest kicks in Hill Valley for charity

You remember the first time you saw Back to the Future II, don’t you? We all dreamed of a world filled with hoverboards and self-lacing shoes, and now Nike’s made the latter a reality… sort of. Marty McFly’s favorite high tops are now called the 2011 Nike MAGs and look just like the kicks in the movie, though it appears that you’ll have to lace ’em up the old-fashioned way. They’ll only be on sale during a ten-day period starting tonight at 8:30PM Pacific Standard Time, and no amount of flux-capacitation can score you a pair if you miss that window. 150 sets of shoes will be auctioned on eBay’s Fashion Vault each day (sorry, US bidders only), and all the net proceeds will go to The Michael J. Fox Foundation to further Parkinson’s research. Not only that, all the money made will be doubled through matching contributions. Nice job, Nike, now about those hoverboards…

Continue reading Nike unveils the 2011 MAG shoe, to auction off 1500 pairs of the coolest kicks in Hill Valley for charity

Nike unveils the 2011 MAG shoe, to auction off 1500 pairs of the coolest kicks in Hill Valley for charity originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Sep 2011 17:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceNike  | Email this | Comments

World’s only turbine-powered Batmobile up for sale on eBay, recession hits Bruce Wayne, too

Remember that Boeing-powered Batmobile we ran across last month? Well friends, it could be yours via eBay auction in about a week. Currently, the highest bid is you can buy it now for $620,000 — which would be enough to cover the cost of several cars not fit for the Caped Crusader. However, none of those come equipped with a helicopter turbine, now do they? Putsch Racing reminds interested parties that the mean machine is street registered in the US, so you can roll like the Dark Knight without fear of the police pursuing you. An iPad loaded with digital avionics helps you monitor the jet engine, and you can use your choice of three fuel sources to power the thing: Jet A, kerosene, or diesel. Hey now, we never said it was environmentally friendly. If you, like Jay-Z, are “planking on a million,” check out the detailed auction shots below and bid on Batman’s ride yourself.

World’s only turbine-powered Batmobile up for sale on eBay, recession hits Bruce Wayne, too originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Aug 2011 08:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Motofinity  |  sourceeBay  | Email this | Comments

Alleged HP TouchPad running Android appears, can be yours on eBay (update: and another one!)

In an extraordinarily convenient turn of events, one buyer of a firesale-priced HP TouchPad at Best Buy a couple of days ago claims his came out of the box with an extra special treat — it’s running Android, 2.2 to be exact. A possible explanation for the existence of this unicorn tablet can be seen in the two YouTube videos posted of the device so far, where it flashes a Qualcomm Innovation Center (Quic) logo which suggests it could be some kind of development project that slipped into retail. We queried Qualcomm about this TouchPad’s provenance ourselves and received only a “We have no comment on the video” in return, so the decision to believe that it’s real or a particularly well executed hoax is yours. Now, you can be the first to solve this riddle since the owner has put it up for sale on eBay. Need another potential perk? How about the ability to snag a TouchPad-running-Android bounty posted by HacknMod that’s up to $2,150 as of this posting. Relevant links are below, including the initial Reddit post, both videos and the auction, so while our credit cards will remain securely in our wallets those who are more trusting — or just can’t believe that anyone would would be dumb enough to try and sell a fake — can put a bid in if they so choose.

Update: Apparently one of our own commenters, Shahzeb Jiwani, has come into possession of a similar device. Luckily for us, he’s chosen to make a ROM dump available over on RootzWiki, so check out his video after the break or head over to the thread there as they try and find out how to make this work on everyone else’s $99 tablet.

[Thanks, David & Dennis]

Continue reading Alleged HP TouchPad running Android appears, can be yours on eBay (update: and another one!)

Alleged HP TouchPad running Android appears, can be yours on eBay (update: and another one!) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Aug 2011 10:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceReddit, eBay, YouTube (1), (2), RootzWiki  | Email this | Comments

Sellers Can’t Leave Negative Feedback on eBay

This article was written on May 20, 2008 by CyberNet.

ebay negative feedback.png

eBay has really got their work cutout for themselves this time. They have decided, as expected, that it’s time to block sellers from leaving neutral or negative feedback for buyers. Oh, and to make matters even worse they are now counting neutral feedback left by buyers as a negative when calculating the feedback score, which is sure to drop the score of many sellers. A lot of sellers have turned the other cheek when eBay has jacked up their fees, but I think this move could very well be the tipping point.

I was reading through the eBay forum and sellers are already complaining about the negative feedback they are receiving. One instance in particular occurred from a new member who was going around purchasing things at random, and then instantly leaving negative feedback. That member was obviously suspended from eBay, and the negative feedbacks were removed, but this is the type of nonsense that sellers will now have to deal with. Plus there’s always the possibility of extortion, but eBay supposedly has that under control:

If a buyer uses the threat of negative Feedback to demand more than what was promised in the item description (e.g. wants overnight delivery but only paid for standard delivery) the seller should immediately report the buyer to eBay.

If there is clear evidence of extortion eBay will take action typically on a first offense. If a buyer shows a pattern of malicious behavior, eBay will most likely suspend the buyer. If we suspend the buyer, any negative or neutral Feedback the buyer has left for sellers will be removed.

I’m not a huge fan of what they’re doing here, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see a large number of sellers looking for other alternatives.

eBay Feedback Changes Details [via Download Squad]

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

Related Posts:


3G MacBook Pro auction pulled, MagSafe antenna detailed

Remember the prototype MacBook Pro on eBay that included a SIM card slot and retractable antenna? Bids for the laptop had reached an eye-watering $70,000 before, inevitably, Apple blocked the auction. Now the seller has posted more images of the device, revealing the antenna was held in place with two magnets — a MagSafe-like connection that would come away if it was knocked or caught. No news as to what the seller intends to do with the machine now, maybe clutch it to their chest and cry themselves to sleep having missed out on a small fortune. Past the break you can stare mournfully at another new image of the prototype – free of charge.

Continue reading 3G MacBook Pro auction pulled, MagSafe antenna detailed

3G MacBook Pro auction pulled, MagSafe antenna detailed originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Aug 2011 16:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceMacRumors  | Email this | Comments

Prototype MacBook Pro with Rabbit-Ear Antenna Shows Up on Ebay

Mbp3g

Remember your first cellphone? If you’re old enough, that memory will include a pull-out antenna of some kind, a vestigial RF tail whose genes were passed down from walkie-talkies and field radios of old. And it seems that Apple, presumably before building its multi-zillion-dollar antenna lab, was also experimenting with pop-up antennae on its old MacBook Pros.

Here’s a photo of a heretofore secret prototype MacBook Pro with built-in 3G, up for sale on Ebay and currently requiring a bid of over $11,000 to win the auction. Externally, the Santa Rosa-based MacBook Pro looks like any other pre-unibody MBP, apart from a small slide-out rabbit ear in the top right corner of the lid. This extends to give better reception to the soldered-on SIM circuit board within. The inside is also full of prototype gear, from the red motherboard to the “evaluation” optical drive (going on the optical drives in the current MacBook Airs, I guess it failed the evaluation [**rimshot**]).

Interesting is the amount of polish that has gone into hardware which was destined never to see the comfort of an Apple Store display table. Not only is that antenna a perfect match for the lid, but the SIM card slot has a very professional-looking home in the battery bay (just like a cellphone).

If (and probably when) the MacBook Air gets a 3G radio, the antenna is much more likely to be sitting behind a plastic RF window like that in the iPad 3G, and the SIM will probably have a little pop-out drawer, also like the iPad 3G (and iPhone). Which probably only makes this glimpse inside Apple’s secret design lab all the more interesting.

Unreleased PROTOTYPE Apple Macbook Pro 15″ With 3G [Ebay via TUAW]

See Also:


Military lightning gun parts sold on eBay, probably built in someone’s garage

Lightning gun parts

We’re not sure where to start with this one. It’s, in a word, unbelievable. Technologist Cody Oliver was digging through eBay for parts to build a robot car that Elon Musk could drive around Burning Man, when he came across surplus equipment from defense contractors Omnitech Robotics and Ionatron. The components were originally from the military’s Joint Improvised Explosive Device Neutralizers, or JINs — remote-controlled lightning guns designed to disable IEDs. But, the story quickly goes from interesting to terrifying. Oliver soon discovered the weapons were cobbled together largely from off-the-shelf parts, including a Linksys router with the serial numbers scraped off, and lacked even basic security. The now retired JINs were controlled over a standard 802.11 WiFi signal, with the encryption turned off — leaving the multimillion dollar devices vulnerable to insurgents. Ultimately the parts were deemed unfit for even Musk’s RC art car. You can read all of the horrifying details at the source link.

[Thanks, Chris]

[Image credit: Cody Oliver]

Military lightning gun parts sold on eBay, probably built in someone’s garage originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Aug 2011 20:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceWired  | Email this | Comments

Nintendo 3DS Panda dev model hits Canadian eBay, reminds US how little the dollar is worth

Have $1,929 Canadian dollars to spare? You can swap those loonies for 2,000 all-American greenbacks, or the current bid on a Nintendo 3DS Panda development model, rounding out its final 24 hours on eBay’s Canadian auction site. This “like new” device won’t be playing retail 3DS or DS cartridges, but it will grant you access to a variety of development functions. The $2,000 current bid is more than a hair higher than the dev hardware’s unconfirmed original price of $324, but if you’re desperate to rank among the few gamers that rock 3DS dev hardware, logic probably won’t reign supreme when it comes time to hit that bid now button.

[Thanks, Julien]

Nintendo 3DS Panda dev model hits Canadian eBay, reminds US how little the dollar is worth originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Aug 2011 16:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceeBay  | Email this | Comments

CyberNotes: How to Buy and Sell Digital Goods with Zipidee

This article was written on October 20, 2007 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Weekend Website

Today’s Weekend Website is a site called Zipidee which is known as “The Digi-Good Marketplace.” It joins in to compete among other sites that are similar such as Lulu, e-Junkie, Payloadz, and more. This online marketplace is geared equally towards both those who want to sell, and those who want to buy.

–What is Zipidee–

Zipidee is like the eBay of digital goods. It’s a place where people can go to buy or sell videos, music, eBooks, ringtones, wallpaper, and more.  They  launched into private beta back in July, but more recently launched to the public just this week on October 15th.

zipidee2

–Publish, Protect, Promote, Profit–

Publish, protect, promote, and profit are the four main things that are involved if you decide to sell on Zipidee.  Before anyone starts selling on the site, you’ll obviously have to register and create an account.  From there you’ll be free to start the process of selling. Unlike eBay which just about anybody could use, Zipidee isn’t for everybody.  If you’re an independent musician, a filmmaker, a software developer, etc., you could sell your digital goods online and benefit from everything that this site has to offer.

Publish is the first step because you have to have something to sell before you can do anything else.  And because this is the selling ground for original digital goods, it’ll take creating a product before you move on. You must have the legal rights to digitally distribute the content that you’re selling. You have the choice to allow people to buy or rent.

zipidee

The next step is protect.  Everybody who uses Zipidee has the option to choose whether or not they want to add DRM to their content. They don’t have to, but if they do, they can download Zipidee’s Digital Rights Management software to make the process simple and protect their work. Zipidee says they don’t promote either option so it’s really up to you if you want it or not.

Promoting is another part of how the whole process works.  Once you’re ready to sell your digital goods, you’ll want to promote them so that there’s a better chance that they will sell. To help market, you’ll be able to create a “virtual store” where people can come to shop.

Profit – Of course the whole point of this service is to profit and make money for both you and them.  You set the price which means you then ultimately determine how much you can make. There’s a lot to the whole process of making a profit, so we’ll dedicate a section just for it below.

–Making $$ from Zipidee–

Before you decide to use the service, you need to take into consideration the money you could potentially gain, but also the money that you’ll pay out to Zipidee for using their service.

  • Currently they’re not charging for people to list items, but in the future there will be a $1.00 per uploaded media charge.
  • Anytime something sells, they take 20% of the purchase once PayPal costs have been paid
  • Note: PayPal is their “official method” for transferring funds between sellers and buyers. They say in the future they intend to offer other options of payment as well.

Should you make over $50, you’ll receive a payment.  If during one month you don’t meet the $50 limit, you’ll have to wait until you do before you can receive any payment.  All payments are made to a PayPal account which means you have to have one to use this service.

–Buying Content–

While selling items here certainly isn’t for everybody, buying content is.  Just go to the site and do a search for what you’re looking for.  Another great idea is to just browse through some of the different categories like business, education, music, health and fitness, and more to see if there’s anything that piques your interest. It’s super easy to use, and has a simple interface. If you’re familiar with the eBay process, you should have no trouble understanding and using Zipidee.

They’ve set up their site so that anybody can start browsing the content. What’s especially helpful are the “top picks,” “new additions,” and “top sellers” which they display on the homepage so that you have someplace to start.

zipidee1

–Wrapping it up–

Zipidee certainly isn’t the only service like this to exist, but since when is there only one service per concept? They’re off to a pretty good start, and the sellers seem to price everything really reasonably. The only downside that I really see to the service at the moment is that its name really has nothing to do with the service that they offer which means they’ll have to spend a good amount of effort marketing and gathering up a group of dedicated users. The whole concept behind Zipidee definitely is interesting, and I recommend checking out their marketplace.

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

Related Posts: