“Imagine a future where you can do just about anything simply by waving your hand: making purchases, taking the subway or letting yourself in at the office. In China, Tencent is already doing it. … While the technology itself is not new — companies such as Amazon have had their own offerings for years — Tencent wants to be the company that finally makes it mainstream” “Perhaps no other company in China knows more about catering to the masses than Tencent. It owns WeChat, the ubiquitous Chinese platform that has come to be known as a “super-app,” used for everything from social networking to ordering groceries to digital payments. .. Now it’s betting on Weixin Palm Payment, a biometric system launched in May for users of Weixin Pay, WeChat’s sister app. The service is only available within mainland China. The software allows users to ditch their smartphones or transit cards when hopping on a Beijing subway line, for example, by hovering their hands over a sensor. Infrared cameras then analyze the individual palm prints and unique patterns of veins under the skin, allowing each user to be identified and payment to be processed within seconds. .. Tencent’s iteration is contactless, as .. Amazon .. launched its own palm scanning payment service in 2020, letting users connect their palm prints to credit cards to buy items at the company’s cashier-free stores. Fujitsu, the Japanese tech giant, has also long offered a contact-free system for a different purpose: cybersecurity. The company’s PalmSecure service allows users to scan their hands to authenticate online accounts, instead of using passwords.” The technology is already in use within defined environments. “For example, Tencent staff are using the system to enter corporate canteens for lunch, saving them the hassle of running back to their desks if they forget their security passes. … The technology is also gradually being rolled out externally. In the southern Chinese province of Guangdong, more than 1,500 7-Eleven stores have rolled it out.” CNN’s article: https://lnkd.in/d8Hj6JZq #payments #identity #privacy #contactless #biometrics Nafis Alam Nicolas Pinto Sam Boboev Anna Maj Dr. Debashis Dutta Sanjeev Kumar
Event Ticketing Systems
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Experienced probably the most seamless public travel payment mechanism recently in the Netherlands, where you just need to tap in and tap out with your bank credit or debit card without any prior registration, and you get charged for the journey instantly. This is now rolled out in most European cities, and it is very helpful for tourists, who stand around confused at ticketing stations all the time! It even supports Apple Pay and Google Wallet. This eliminates the entire ticketing infrastructure required to issue and validate tickets by letting the payment solution handle the entire process. Residents can tie their bank card to their digital travel card for local benefits and continue to use the bank card. This is a great example of a fintech solution consolidating multiple processes seamlessly. Something maybe for even Sri Lanka to consider to digitize our public transport by leapfrogging to a payment-based travel solution, without building any costly ticketing infrastructure, something for LankaPay to think about! #payments #fintech #travel #applepay
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A ticket to ride.. The Future of Travel: Geospatial Technology and the Rise of Location-Based Ticketing Imagine a world where you never have to worry about buying the right train ticket again. Ok I know this does not sound like much of a problem, but then how well do you know the UK’s now mostly nationalised Railway system… No more fumbling for change, wrestling with a complex app, or trying to figure out which fare is the cheapest for your journey. This isn't a distant dream—it's a potential application of geospatial technology, and it's being trialled in the UK right now. Geospatial technology uses data related to a specific location, combining it with real-time information like GPS. This is the same tech that powers your favourite navigation apps, from Google Maps to Waze. However, its potential extends far beyond simply getting you from point A to point B. The UK government's recent trial of location-based ticketing is a perfect example of this. Backed by nearly £1 million in government funding, the trial is happening in the Midlands and North, on East Midlands Railway and Northern trains. The system uses a location-based app that tracks a passenger's journey using GPS. As you travel, the app intelligently calculates the best fare for you, automatically charging your account at the end of the day. This approach offers a significant upgrade from traditional paper tickets and even modern mobile tickets that use QR codes. It eliminates the need to pre-book, making travel more flexible and spontaneous. For ticket inspections or passing through barriers, the app generates a unique barcode. This is a game-changer for the daily commuter and the occasional traveller alike, as it ensures you always pay the optimal price without the hassle of guesswork. While this technology has already been tested in Switzerland, Denmark, and Scotland, its implementation in England marks a significant step forward. It showcases how geospatial technology can be leveraged to modernise our transport systems, improve the passenger experience, and even encourage more people to use public transport. As the world becomes increasingly connected, we can expect to see more innovative applications of geospatial technology, from smart urban planning to logistics and supply chain management. The rail trial in the UK is just the beginning of a new era of seamless, intelligent travel. Oh and by the way is not called GeoTrainTicket ;-)
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🚇 300ms vs. 30s: When Every Second Counts, NFC Wins Over UPI Every Time 🚀 I get asked this question all the time when talking about transit payments in India. Fair question. UPI has been transformative — 15+ billion transactions a month, powering everything from chai stalls to e-commerce. It's India's biggest fintech success story. ➡️ But here's something that surprised me: At MTC Chennai, 98% of fare collection is still cash. Not because commuters don't have UPI. Not because they don't know how to use it. These are urban office-goers, rising middle class, smartphone users who order food, pay bills, and shop online — all via UPI. So why cash for their daily commute? Because context matters. - On a crowded bus during rush hour: - Pulling out your phone is a hassle - Opening an app, scanning a QR, waiting for confirmation takes 20-30 seconds - Network delays cause failed transactions - It's stressful when you're already stressed from the commute And it's not just passengers. Conductors told us: - "Generating QRs for 50+ people, waiting for each person to scan and pay, dealing with failures — it's too much. Better I take cash and reconcile later." But when we asked them about NCMC contactless cards? - "This solves everything. I enter the route, they tap the card, payment done. Even faster than cash." 🚨 That's the insight: UPI optimized for flexibility. Transit needs speed and reliability. London doesn't use QR codes for the Tube. Hong Kong's Octopus Card isn't app-based. Singapore's EZ-Link isn't UPI. Why? Because when you're moving millions of people daily, every second at the gate matters. Contactless cards process in under 300 milliseconds. No apps. No screens. No thinking. India has 200+ million daily public transit users. The opportunity isn't to add another payment option — it's to build the right payment experience for the right context. That's why we're building Orbit Wallet — a simple powerful Rupay powered Orbit NCMC Card to make urban mobility truly seamless. Sometimes the best solution isn't the most flexible one. It's the one that fits the moment. few pics from my travel in Mumbai and Chennai #UrbanMobility #Fintech #NCMC #PublicTransport #ProductThinking #OrbitWallet #UPI #Payments #DigitalIndia #Startups #VCs #mumbaimetro3
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Indian Railways has embarked on a modernization drive to bring *metro-style access systems to suburban train travel*, starting with a pilot at 12 major stations across Mumbai and Gujarat. This marks a major shift toward structured, high-tech passenger management within India’s busy railway system. Key Pilot Locations The pilot project covers 12 stations: 1. Mumbai: Bandra Terminus, Borivali, and Andheri 2. Gujarat: Nine high-footfall stations under the Western Railways division. 1. Features of the New System Automated entry and exit gates: Only ticketed passengers allowed into the platform area, minimizing fare evasion. 2. QR-code and digital ticketing: Passengers can scan e-tickets or printouts at the gates for seamless access. 3. Dedicated security screening zones: Entry points will include integrated scanning and security checks, similar to metro operations. 4. Elevated concourse decks: Multi-functional elevated decks to host ticket counters, waiting areas, and security booths, helping decongest platform levels. 5. Organized commuter flow: Controlled gates will regulate entry and exit, reducing crowding during peak hours. 6. Objectives and Expected Benefits Enhanced commuter safety: Controlled access ensures better monitoring and lower risk of unauthorized entry. 7. Reduced fare evasion: Automated ticket validation drastically limits loss from ticketless travel. 8. Improved crowd management: Streamlined movement helps prevent overcrowding, especially during rush hours. 9. Station modernization: Introduces metro-like discipline to a 150-year-old suburban system that moves millions daily. 10. Accessibility and comfort: Elevated decks ease foot traffic, improving travel for women, seniors, and differently abled commuters. Broader Impact Officials aim to use this pilot as a blueprint for wider implementation across India’s dense suburban and intercity networks. The project aligns with the railway’s long-term vision of digitally integrated, safety-first public transport. Success could lead to future innovations like common mobility cards, unified ticketing, and AI-based footfall analytics. According to railway officials, the move is as transformative as the introduction of air-conditioned local trains—ushering in a new commuter culture focused on convenience, safety, and efficiency
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SEOUL, Sept. 7 (Korea Bizwire) — The Seoul Metropolitan Government on Wednesday introduced a tagless fare payment system at 12 subway stations on the Ui-Sinseol Light Rail Transit (excluding Bomun Station) in collaboration with transportation card issuer Tmoney Co. This marks the world’s first introduction of a tagless system in a subway network. The term ‘tagless’ refers to a system that enables passengers to pass through subway ticket gates without the need to tag transportation cards. An antenna device positioned above the ticket gate receives passenger information via Bluetooth and automatically processes payments. To pass through the tagless gate, passengers must first install the Mobile T-Money application and then activate the tagless system and Bluetooth.
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🚇💳 The Silent Revolution: Redefining Automated Fare Collection (AFC) The landscape of urban mobility is no longer just about moving people from point A to B, but rather about the seamless integration of data, identity and finance. #AFC is transitioning from back office necessity to the literal 'Operating System' of smart cities. For transport authorities and technology providers the shift is clear: we are moving away from proprietary, 'walled garden' systems toward open, #Cloud-native ecosystems. Here are the three technical pillars redefining the industry this year. 1. 💳 Account-Based Ticketing (ABT) The legacy model of storing value on a physical card (Card-Based) is rapidly being phased out in favour of Account-Based Ticketing (#ABT). In this architecture, the 'intelligence' resides in the back office. ● Tokenization: whether a rider taps a phone, a wearable or a physical #EMV card, the system treats it as a secure token linked to a central account. ● Fare Capping & Equity: ABT allows for sophisticated, real-time best-fare calculations. Dynamic fare capping has become a baseline requirement, ensuring that patrons who cannot afford monthly passes upfront still benefit from the lowest possible rates through daily or weekly caps. 2. 🛜 The Rise of 'Be-In/Be-Out' (BIBO) We are witnessing the decline of the 'tap' itself. While Check-In/Check-Out (#CICO) with #NFC remains the global standard, 2026 marks the commercial scaling of Be-In/Be-Out (#BIBO) systems. Using Bluetooth Low Energy (#BLE) and Ultra-Wideband (#UWB), sensors in the station or on the vehicle detect a patron's smartphone automatically; this enables: 🖐🏾 Hands-Free Transit: no more fumbling for wallets, the fare is calculated and deducted based on proximity and duration of stay. 📊 Precision Analytics: high-fidelity data on passenger flow and station crowding allows operators to adjust frequency in real-time. 3. Biometrics and the Invisible Payment Biometric AFC, specifically facial and palm recognition, has moved beyond pilot phases in major Asian and Middle Eastern hubs. The technical challenge in 2026 isn't recognition speed (which is now sub-300ms) but Privacy-Enhancing Technologies (PETs). Modern systems use Edge #AI to convert biometric data into irreversible mathematical hashes locally, ensuring that raw images are never stored or transmitted. This 'Face-as-a-Fare' model is the ultimate end-game for frictionless travel, turning human identity into the ultimate transit credential. The bottom line: in 2026, the most successful AFC systems are those built on Open APIs. As Mobility-as-a-Service (#MaaS) matures, your transport fare must talk to bike-share apps, ride-hailing platforms and even EV charging stations. The goal is no longer just to collect fares, it's about creating a unified, invisible layer of trust that powers modern cities. #PublicTransport #Planning #SmartCities #Technology #FareCollection #Future #DigitalTransformation
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Public transport in the Maldives didn’t always work for everyone. Most people had to pay for buses and ferries in cash. Tourists needed local currency just to move from one place to another. And transport operators didn’t have much visibility on how many people were using their services or when. To change this, the Maldives launched Raajje Transport Link (RTL), a national transport network connecting buses and ferries across the country. As part of this project, they partnered with QMastercard and the Bank of Maldives to introduce a new contactless payment system called the “open-loop payments” This system allows people to pay directly on buses and ferries using any contactless bank card, not just local ones. And If someone does not have a bank card, they can use a prepaid card or directly buy tickets online through the RTL mobile app. And the result was great… → Digital transactions increased by 72% across the transport network. → Commuters now board faster without waiting in line for tickets, reducing congestion at busy terminals. → Tourists no longer need to deal with currency exchange or search for cash machines. → Operators finally have real-time data about passenger flows, peak travel times, and route performance. And this helps them adjust schedules and improve the overall service experience. Beyond the numbers, this project showed that when payment systems remove small daily barriers, adoption comes naturally. People don’t need to be convinced to use digital payments, they just need systems that fit how they live and move. And for me, this case study is a good reminder that financial inclusion doesn’t always start with banking products or apps. Sometimes it starts with something as basic as making it easier to pay for a bus ride. Keep following Ash Kalra for payment and banking case studies every Sunday. #payments #fintech #transport #inclusion #smartcities
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5 years ago. Cash. Cards. Closed loop. Yes, not long ago, paying for transit felt harder than the journey itself. Cash slowed everything down. Ticket vending machines created friction. Every region had its own system. Its own rule. Its own barriers. We built fare collection systems around agencies. Not around people. Today. A tap. A gate opens. A train arrives. A small moment that says a lot about how mobility is changing. The same tap you use for coffee... started working at the fare gate. Here’s what that shift revealed: 🔹At first, contactless payments were a pilot. An experiment. An innovation – promising but still uncertain. 🔹Today, across cities and continents, millions of riders tap a bank card or mobile wallet every single day to move through transport networks. 10M+ contactless journeys (taps) in Washington D.C. 50M+ taps in Boston Metro 200M+ trips in Brisbane Area 3,800M+ taps in New York City Area. And many more across cities worldwide. No card to buy. No ticket machines. No fares to calculate. Just Tap. Go. Ride. Same credential. Different systems. Different cities. One experience. ✨ The best fare collection system simplifies payment decisions. When innovation truly works, it fades into the background. That is the moment when innovation becomes infrastructure. ✨Contactless and open payments are no longer experiments layered onto legacy ticketing systems. They are becoming foundational to modern mobility. They didn’t just improve fare collection. They redefined it. From ticketing ➡️ access. From systems ➡️ ecosystems. From contactless ➡️ connected. So, what’s next? Read my breakdown of what that shift means, how transit is moving from fragmented systems to integrated connected mobility infrastructure, how we rethink access and ticketing interoperability, and what it means for agencies next. 👇 https://lnkd.in/g4qm3ETx Cubic Transportation Systems Metropolitan Transportation Authority Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) MBTA Translink_QLD #PublicTransit #PublicTransport #ContactlessPayments #OpenPayments
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I'm looking forward to visiting Edinburgh in the coming weeks, as the city is taking a pragmatic leap toward fare simplification, and I want to test it! A new tap-on, tap-off contactless payment system is being introduced on trams and integrated with Lothian Buses. No more paper tickets. No separate travel cards. Just a bank card or mobile wallet, and you're in. This is more than a tech upgrade. It’s a deliberate move toward equitable, user-centric mobility. Daily and weekly caps will prevent overpayment. Tourists and occasional riders will finally get fare parity without navigating local ticketing quirks. The contrast with cities still clinging to cash-only options or proprietary fare media couldn’t be starker. The takeaway? Open-loop isn’t just a trend, it’s becoming the baseline for modern transit systems. There’s an opportunity here for other urban networks: cut friction, build trust, and focus on experience over enforcement. #UrbanMobility #PublicTransport #ContactlessPayments #MaaS #MobilityInnovation #TransitStrategy
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