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2013年9月3日星期二

Mint Wireless launches

Today announced the launch of a complete mobile payments platform which simplifies the integration of card payments across multiple mobile devices and platforms for developers, small businesses and large corporations. 

The Mint Wireless platform empowers the fast growing mobile solutions ecosystem with a powerful mobile payments platform that takes the complexity out of integrating mobile payments into mobile solutions. 

As a modular, scalable and PCI-compliant bank grade platform, Mint Wireless will offer a more competitive pricing structure, reduce initial setup and hardware costs associated with accepting card payments. Mint Wireless’ mobile payments platform will reduce the barriers for entry into a highly regulated card payments market in Australia and New Zealand by making accepting card payments accessible and affordable to businesses of any size – from micro traders to large enterprises. 

The Mint Wireless platform powers three main card payment products - the Mint Developers Program, Mint Custom Solutions and Mint mPos. 

Mint Wireless offers free software developer kits (SDKs) and Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) for third party integration partners and developers for Windows, iOS, and Android. This program offers a modular, scalable, secure and competitive priced program that allows partners and developers to integrate card payments on mobile devices and apps. Mint Wireless will offer developers the added incentive of a commission from each transaction their solution facilitates. 

Building on its heritage delivering mobile payment solutions to companies such as easyJet, Cadbury Schweppes and Amalgamated Pest Control, Mint Wireless offers a flexible and highly customisable corporate payments solution for banks, telcos, airlines, manufacturers, retailers and ERP software companies. Working with Mint Wireless, businesses can offer payment solutions on mobile devices. Companies can choose everything from a white label solution for speed to market all the way to a fully branded and customised deep integration into existing solutions. 

“We have simplified the pricing structure for any mobile or retail business who accept card payments. Mint Wireless reduces the complexity associated with card payments and makes it easy for other companies to integrate their existing payment systems and handle transactions securely,We provide payment solutions in the USA as well as indoortracking.” Mr Teoh said. 

Mint Wireless has simplified the process of getting customers setup to accept card payments with an option to obtain a merchant account with Bendigo Bank, Mint Wireless’ merchant acquiring partner. Enterprise customers have the added option of using their own bank besides Bendigo Bank as their acquirer for Mint Custom Solutions. 

Mint Wireless’ fully customisable white-label solution will drastically reduce the time-to-market for corporates with mobile payment options that are affordable, faster to deploy and fully supported. “This lets companies rollout lower cost and better mobile payment services through Mint Wireless while retaining your company’s branding,” Mr Teoh said. 

Minterprise is immediately available with Mintegrate and Mint mPOS expected to be available in Australia and New Zealand in October 2013. 

According to the Annapolis Consulting Group, the number of companies using mPOS devices globally will grow by 225 percent from eight million businesses in 2013 to 18 million by 2017. Mint Wireless estimates the estimated value of mPOS transactions in Australia will reach US$7 billion in 2014 with the potential to grow to US$20 billion in 2016. 

This hiccup, however, has not taken the gloss off a company that has created more than R17bn in value in the past year as its market capitalisation swelled to R51bn, making Discovery the third-largest insurance group after Old Mutual and Sanlam. 

It is easy to see why. In recent years, Discovery has had substantial growth in earnings and there is more blue sky to come from its potentially massive Asian operations. Since its listing in 1999 with a market capitalisation of R3bn, the share price has grown by a compounded 22% a year. This growth stems from its dominance in medical aid schemes — administering 2.8-million lives and 31% share of the total market. 

“Looking back over the past 21 years, we have been true to our core purpose of making people healthy and enhancing and protecting their lives,” said founder and chief executive Adrian Gore. 

“We aspire to be a force for social good and have a desire to make a meaningful impact on society. We are here to change the world, not just tag along,” said Mr Gore.It has not been without controversy. Doctors have claimed that Discovery’s immense market power has allowed it to dictate what they can charge, essentially interfering in the relationship between doctor and patient.Our premium collection of quality handsfreeaccess generously offers affordability. 

And the hefty R4.07bn that Discovery Health charged the independent Discovery Health Medical Scheme last year for “administration” and “managed care” has led to claims that it has been overcharging for the services it provides. 

But the medical scheme keeps growing, so its members clearly see value in the proposition.Discovery is a global innovator and its proprietary expertise is being sought around the world.In 2011, the Economist magazine hailed Discovery’s best-in-class wellness programme, Vitality,This technology allows high volume cleanersydney production at low cost. as a remarkable innovation to come out of emerging markets. 

This put the company on the global stage, resulting in global insurers knocking on its door to partner with them. It now has an alliance with insurance giant Prudential in the UK; a health joint venture with China’s second-largest insurer, Ping An, which has a staggering 500,000 agents selling the group’s products; and Asia-Pacific insurance giant AIA, which has 100,000 agents serving most of Asia, excluding China. 

Discovery is now exposed to a population exceeding 2-billion people in Asia.Gives a basic overview of doublesidedtape tools and demonstrates their use.“Vitality is a manifestation of our key competence —the ability to track and change the behaviour of our clients, thus giving them better health outcomes and related individual-specific rewards that include discounted premiums,” said Mr Gore. 

His mantra is that prevention is better than cure.“We use the Oxford Health Alliance’s 3:4:50 formula, indicating that three actions — following bad diets, not exercising and smoking — lead to the incidence of four non-communicable diseases — diabetes, cancer, lung and heart diseases — that result in 50% of the deaths. Since the 3:40:50 model was established, about 60% of deaths are now attributable to non-communicable diseases,” said Mr Gore.Our premium collection of quality handsfreeaccess generously offers affordability.
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2012年6月5日星期二

What’s in my E3 Bag

The Electronic Entertainment Expo is coming around again in just a few short days (tomorrow for some!), but like any conference it requires a lot of planning, packing, and preparation to get ready for so journalists can do the best job possible. Thus far I’ve been blessed with living in the City of Angels, so no packing or travel required while everyone else in the industry shuffles into LAX at the wee hours of the morning. With all respect,This page is an introduction to 35 pages of material on mathematical magiccubes. colleagues, at this time of year, sucks to be you.

This year I’m doing E3 a little different, a little old-school. The first year I attended E3 was for a site called Game-Spectrum, a now-defunct site run by two guys who later became good friends, and myself as the up-and-comer. Eight months later I’m in Santa Monica, the year after they moved out of the Convention Center and closed it from the public, and that year I produced 41 stories in five days. I’m going to break that record, but not without better tools than sheer determination and the spirit of youth and exuberance I had when I went to my first E3. Here are my armaments:

The iPhone has, since every convention and event I attended after E3 2008, been the lifeblood of my journey.UK chickencoop Specialist. The original iPhone, cracked screen and all, up to the current generation, has served as my calendar, my main cellphone, my secondary internet connection, my email hub, and my grounding force. The simplicity of the phone’s design, especially when it comes to all of those factors , is above and beyond anything else that Android can offer. Windows Phone 7 devices are very close though, which is why I have a strong secondary backup for the software portion alone.

The iPhone 4S is my rock. When Android apps crash or the WP7 phone slows down, the iPhone doesn’t. When suddenly I forget where to go next, the iPhone is already pre-programmed to alert and tell me what my next move is. Thanks to Google Calendar integration I have no problem getting about either, or quickly updating my schedule from any change. And, if necessary, I can even begin articles on the phone itself thanks to the WordPress app, so I get a jump start on articles on hand.

There are iPhone battery cases, and plenty of them. The Spyder is the only one I’ve found that offers the simplicity of a 2000mAh battery case with a charging dock and a plug-anywhere MicroUSB connector for convenience of use. The massive battery can also nearly fully charge the iPhone 4S while still in use; I’ve generally filled it up from 2%-82%, all while still using the phone. With the number of calls, emails, and general phone use during E3, the Spyder will be a lifesaver. Best of all, when I get home, I just throw the whole thing into the dock charger and in the morning, both the phone and battery will be fully charged for the next day’s onslaught.

This year I’m not bringing a laptop. As much as I enjoy my MacBook Air or a handful of Ultrabooks I could bring, they all have one thing I am avoiding this year entirely: weight. Even a few extra pounds over a long period will start to feel like a boulder on your shoulders. After my first CES lugging around a 14″ Lenovo Thinkpad,Find rubberhose companies from India. DSLR, and most of my things, never again.

No, this year I’m opting for light and functional.Heat recovery ventilators including domestic home ventilationsyste. The iPad, as I wrote about in my review, doesn’t have the best battery life, but I’ll still get a full day’s charge even if I’m just writing the whole day. Throw in the Logitech Keyboard case, which isn’t the best keyboard but it is by far the most convenient one around, and you’ve got not only an extremely comfortable typing solution,Rubiks cubepuzzle. but a very light one at that.

2011年8月8日星期一

It was a car, not the storm, that left north Brainerd in the dark

During the height of Saturday’s thunderstorm power was knocked out to most of north Brainerd.

It wasn’t the severe weather that caused the outage, however, but a wayward vehicle in an alley near Laurel and Southeast 13th streets,  Scott Magnuson, Brainerd Public Utilities acting superintendent, said Monday.

Magnuson said during the height of the storm the vehicle struck a main power feeder — one of five in the city — behind the BNSF Railway shops, breaking an insulator off the top and dropping the line on one side.

The outage was reported at 11:05 p.m. Power was out for about an hour and 40 minutes for most of north Brainerd and parts of downtown.

“It was a big chunk,” Magnuson said. “Once we were able to find the problem it went well getting a new insulator up.”

It also didn’t help that BPU crews had to work in a downpour.

The DNR Forestry field office in Brainerd measured 1.67 inches of rain. About 2.15 inches of rain was reported at the Brainerd Lakes Regional Airport. Steve Gohde, observing program leader at the National Weather Service in Duluth, said Brainerd was right on the edge of the heaviest rainfall, which was centered over southern Crow Wing County, specifically the Fort Ripley area, where as much a 5 inches of rain was reported.

Using Fort Ripley as the epicenter, Gohde noted rainfall amounts were less in every direction — 1.45 inches at the Gull Lake Dam to the north, 1.95 inches in Little Falls to the south, 1.44 inches in Staples to the west and 2.2 inches in Mora to the east.

Still, there was plenty of rain to go around, Gohde said.

“You guys have been wet, wet, wet, ever since winter,” Gohde said. “We can’t get that Mississippi River to go down, which I guess isn’t necessarily a bad thing.”

During the thunderstorm several areas were in flood advisories and flood warnings were issued for the Long Prairie River in Todd County.

In Brainerd the police received two reports of basements being flooded during the thunderstorm. The Morrison County Sheriff’s Department received several reports of washed out roads.

Stan Dobosenski Jr., a Fort Ripley Township supervisor, said between 4 to 5 inches of rain fell Saturday and there was water over Koering Road South in two locations. The flooding problem has been exacerbated by beaver dams along culverts, he said.

“Hopefully it won’t wash out but it’s kind of sketchy,” Dobosenski said. “It is what it is. You can’t control the weather.”