Key Challenges and Issues facing the Near Field Communications - the future of m-payments? An analysis and forecast for NFC applications and markets 2009-2014

* Reuters is not responsible for the content in this press release.

Mon Mar 30, 2009 11:26am EDT

NEW YORK--(Business Wire)--
Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its
catalogue. 

Near Field Communications - the future of m-payments? An analysis and forecast
for NFC applications and markets 2009-2014

http://www.reportlinker.com/p0109867/Near-Field-Communications---the-future-of-m-payments-An-analysis-and-forecast-for-NFC-applications-and-markets-2009-2014.html

Near Field Communication (NFC) has changed the technological environment for the
mobile communication and mobile payments. The technology has proven its
potential to lead as the m-payments market in the future. A consistent amount of
efforts have been made on the development on the NFC to increase the number of
its applications, and also their scope. The technology has now started to move
into commercial phase. 

This unique report analyses the NFC technology at three stages: the development
and standardisation process that the NFC has undergone since its inception in
the market; the current NFC market status - where the technology stands now
including its applications and markets? - and its future growth trends - where
the industry sees NFC in the next five years - you need to know this
information, and this report delivers all the answers to you in one easy to read
format. Although the industry currently faces some obstacles in terms of
availability of the required infrastructure, i.e. NFC mobile phones, the NFC
technology has time and again proven the potential for its commercial success in
the industrial projects and consumer surveys. The industry now foresees big
commercial rollouts globally. Are you ready for that commercial rollout? 

The report explores a whole of range of opportunities available to the
stakeholders in the NFC ecosystem. NFC has been tested and has potential for the
mass-adoption in almost all segments of m-payments such as m-ticketing,
m-banking, m-commerce and m-trade. While the m-payments are projected to reach
the critical mass, NFC for its compatibility with the existing infrastructure is
well placed to leverage the already available m-payment technologies for its
robust future growth. 2007 and 2008 have seen many developments on the NFC
technology - removing developmental obstacles - identified in the trials - in
its way to commercial launch and harmonising it in relation to existing
contactless technologies and infrastructure. A number of related contactless
technologies development institutions and bodies have developed specifications
and protocols for the NFC to incorporate their solutions into the NFC ecosystem.
This 100+ page report highlights these developments at two separate stages:
giving an outline of the important industrial projects, trials and consumers
surveys and outlining the month-wise latest developments on the NFC in the years
2008 and 2009. NFC and contactless payment ecosystem NFC is the latest but most
promising of the short range contactless payment technologies. The technology
particularly has huge potential for fast adaptability as an m-payment solution
by the industry and consumes alike. The advantage that the NFC has over other
technologies is that it 'build (s) on existing communications infrastructure and
user behaviour.' Thus NFC has a central role on a mobile phone, it can work
side-by-side with the existing contactless technologies, either as a standalone
technology or in a collaborative environment, while leveraging the existing
infrastructure. 

The technology has capability to communicate directly with different devices or
indirectly i.e. in Bluetooth pairing. 

The technology relates to

* contactless cards 
* SIM-based solutions 
* Bluetooth-led communication 
* Felica 
* IrDA standards 
* NFC mobile phones 
* RFID 
* Contactless readers, writers, tags and coupons 
* mobile based payment solutions 
* mWallet 
* Single Wireless Protocol etc

Any latest news?

The UK banking group Barclays in January 2009 announced plans to replace its
entire fleet of debit cards with new ones featuring NFC contactless-payment
functionality. From March 2009 onwards, any replacement cards issued by the bank
will come embedded with NFC chips, enabling users to pay for goods under. The
bank estimates its entire debit card estate will be contactless by the end of
2011. 

Why you should buy this report

This 100+ page NFC report is:

* An analysis of different m-payment technologies and the technological
environment in which they work 
* A detail analysis of the NFC technology - how it works, NFC ecosystem and
discussions on the technology related topics 
* The report analyses how the technology works on mobile phone, NFC mobile
ecosystem, building of the NFC mobile ecosystem and opportunities available to
different stakeholders 
* It covers potential applications and markets of the NFC technology 
* It analyses the NFC case as an m-payment solution and potential sectors of the
NFC application in the m-payments market 
* It is an analysis of the development, standardisation that has taken place on
NFC since its inception, available protocols and standards, for example. It also
discusses the issues such as security and threats related to the NFC use. 
* The report covers the important NFC industrial projects, trials and consumers
surveys conducted over past few years 
* It highlights the latest developments that have taken place on NFC in the last
couple of years. 
* Opinions, views and quotes from leading figures from the industry 
* Conclusion and forecast of the NFC applications and markets including future
growth trends Who should buy this report? Directors, VP and Senior managers at
business such as: Mobile/ Cellular carriers and operators Banks and credit card
companies Financial services providers Handset manufacturers Manufacturers of
SIM related services Mobile handset security providers M-ticketing providers
Brands looking to tap into the mobile audience Public and private transport
agencies Manufacturers of NFC allied services i.e. readers, writers and tags

Table of content 

1. Executive summary 

E1. NFC - future of m-payments? - an analysis and forecast of NFC applications
and markets, 2009-2014 E2.Applications of NFC and its potential markets E3.NFC
commercial launch: an opportunity in waiting E4. The scope of this report - an
overview of each chapter E5. NFC future growth trends 

1. M-payment technologies 

1.1. M-payments 

1.2. Phone call types of m-payment 

1.3. SMS payment technology 

1.4. Mobile browsing payment technologies 1.4.1. WAP (wireless application
protocol) 1.4.2. Java MIDP (mobile information device profile) 1.5. Mobile
payment services technologies 1.5.1. Bluetooth 1.5.2. IrDA (infrared data
association) 1.5.3. FeliCa (felicity card) 1.5.4. Barcode scanning 1.5.5.
MobileWallet - the card in phone technologies 1.6. SIM related m-payment
technologies 1.6.1. RFID (radio frequency identification) 1.6.2. NFC (near field
communication) 

2. NFC- an introduction 

2.1.What is NFC? 

2.2.How the technology works? 

2.3.The technological aspect of NFC: what does it evolve around? 

2.4.NFC vs Bluetooth 

2.5.NFC vs Biometrics 

2.6.The NFC services: an overview 

2.7.NFC in m-payments 

2.8.NFC ecosystem 

2.8.1.NFC ecosystem: entrepreneurs and developers 

2.8.2.Merchants and services providers 

2.8.3.Mobile telephone operators 

2.8.4.The consumers 

3. NFC on mobile phone 

3.1. NFC mobile services 

3.1.1. Positioning and functionality of NFC on mobile devices 

3.2. NFC services on mobile phone 

3.2.1. Interactivity 

3.2.2. Report multi-application management 

3.2.3. Remote user management 

3.3. Areas of NFC mobile phone applications 

3.3.1. NFC services: transport and travelling 

3.3.1.1. Access, ticketing, activiation and legitimacy 

3.3.1.2. Boarding and alighting 

3.3.1.3. Tickets purchase and top-ups 

3.3.1.4. Access toinformation and location-based services 

3.3.2. NFC in retail sector 

3.3.2.1. Payment for access to products and services 

3.3.2.2. Security, validation and identification 

3.3.2.3. Offers, packages and discounts 

3.3.3. NFC mobile couponing 

3.4. NFC mobile ecosystem - a new market place? 

3.4.1. Modeling NFC mobile ecosystem 

3.4.1.1. NFC mobile ecosystem: service provisioning 

3.4.1.2. Mobile network provision 

3.4.1.3. Trusted service manager 

3.5. Key players in NFC mobile ecosystem 

3.5.1. Customers/end-users 

3.5.2. Chipset manufacturers 

3.5.3. Mobile handset manufacturers 

3.5.4. Component and tag manufacturers 

3.6. Building successful NFC mobile ecosystem 

3.6.1. Building NFC mobile system: MNOs 

3.6.2. Service providers 

3.7. NFC mobile framework 

3.7.1. Functionalities of NFC mobile phones 

3.7.1.1. Application execution environment 

3.7.1.2. Trusted execution environment 

3.7.1.3. NFC stacks and controller 

3.7.2. NFC mobile phone back-end server system 

3.7.3. NFC Target 

3.8. NFC-equipped mobile phones and devices 

3.8.1. GSMA for more NFC mobile phones 

4.NFC applications and markets 

4.1.NFC applications 

4.2.Potential key areas of initial applications of NFC 

4.2.1.P2P (pee-to-peer) 

4.2.1.1.Active mode of communication 

4.2.1.3.P2P applications - the Hagenberg study 

4.2.2. NFC as service initiator 

4.2.3. NFC application in m-payments 

4.3.NFC smar poster 

4.4. SMS application 

4.5.NFC in Bluetooth pairing 

4.6. NFC markets 

4.6.1. NFC-led m-payments 

4.6.2. M-marketing,advertising and location-based services 

4.6.3. Connectivity 

4.6.4. NFC in maximising other platforms and devices 

4.7. NFC in healthcare and medical services 

4.7.1. Potential NFC applications in healthcare 

4.7.2. NFC in biomedicine and telemedicine 

4.7.2.1. The field of wearable sensors 

4.7.2.2. The field of implanted medical sensors 

4.7.2.3. The field of implanted stimulators 

4.7.2.4. The field of implanted actuators 

4.7.3. NFC in healthcare and safety concerns 

4.7.3.1. What about interference robustness? 

4.8. NFC in education 

5. NFC - a case for m-payments 

5.1.NFC-led m-payments 

5.2. Potential m-payment applications and markets for NFC 

5.3. GSMA NFC `pay-buy-mobile` project 

5.3.1. Pay-buy-mobile initiative: GSMA`s global projects 

5.3.2. GSMA`s collaboration with EU payments council 

5.3.3. GSMA backs NFC standards adoption 

5.3.4. GSMA for more NFC-enabled handsets 

5.4. NFC m-payment applications and consumer markets 

5.4.1. Digital media content access 

5.4.2. M-ticketing: transport, sports and social events 

5.4.3. Retail sector 

5.4.4. Information services 

5.5. M-banking 

5.5.1. NFC-led m-banking - a case study from Citibank 

5.5.2. NFC-led m-banking: the Barclays leads in UK 

5.5.2.1. Barclays contactless card 

5.5.2.2. Barclays `wave and pay` for London cabs 

5.5.2.3. Barclays` stake in NFC London trial 

5.5.3. The Australian NFC-led m-banking trials 

5.6. NFC in mWallet - the card in phone technology 

5.6.1. VISA`s m-payment initiative 

5.6.1. VISA`s m-payment solutions for Nokia and Google 

5.7. NFC and MasterCard`s m-payment programme 

5.7.1. MasterCard PayPass: how it works 

5.8. NFC in m-remittance and funds disbursement 

6. NFC: development, standardisation and security 

6.1. NFC since approval as an ISO/IEC standard 

6.2. NFC protocols 

6.2.1. Passive communication mode 

6.2.2. Active communication mode 

6.2.3.ISO 14443 Type A Mifare 

6.2.4. ISO 14443 Type B 

6.2.5. Felica 

6.2.6. ISO 15693 

6.2.7. Contactless Reader/validator 

6.2.8. Contactless cards 

6.2.9. Contactless mobile phones 

6.3. NFC specifications 

6.3.1. Data Exchange Format Technical Specification 

6.3.1. Record Type Definition Technical Specifications 

6.3.2. NFC Text RTD Technical Specification 

6.3.3. NFC URI RTD Technical Specification 

6.3.4. NFC Smart Poster RTD Technical Specification 

6.3.5. NFC Generic Control RTD Technical Specification 

6.4. Reference application technical specifications 

6.4.1. NFC Forum Connection Handover Technical Specification 

6.4.2. NFC Forum tag type technical specifications 

6.4.3. NFC Forum type 1 tag operation specification 

6.4.4. NFC Forum type 2 tag operation specification 

6.4.5. NFC Forum type 3 tag operation specification 

6.4.6. NFC Forum type 4 tag operation specification 

6.5. NFC development and standardisation bodies 

6.5.1. NFC development - Nokia takes the lead 

6.5.2. NFC Forum 

6.5.3. The GSM Association 

6.5.4. GSMA`s NFC mobile initiative 

6.5.5. StoLPaN - the European NFC programme 

6.5.6. The European Telecommunications Standards Institute 

6.5.6. The GlobalPlatform 

6.5.7. EMV protocol in NFC 

6.5.8. SmartCard Alliance adopts NFC 

6.6 NFC security: threats and recommended solutions 

6.6.1. Eavesdropping 

6.6.2. Data corruption 

6.6.3. Data modification 

6.6.4. Data insertion 

6.6.5. Man-in-the-middle-attack 

6.6.6. Secure channel for NFC 

6.6.7. NFC specific key agreement 

7. NFC trials and consumer surveys 

7.1 Trials by GSMA under `pay-buy-mobile` initiative 

7.1.1. GSMA initiative: trials in pipeline 

7.2. NFC trials in UK 

7.2.1. O2 NFC trial 

7.2.3. NFC-enabled SIMs for UK soccer club 

7.2. 4. O2 NFC wristband at music festival 

7.2.5. M-tickets on London buses 

7.2.6. Consumer survey by Aberdeen Group 

7.2.7. Ingenico trial in UK, Ireland 

7.2.8. O2 test beds for NFC 

7.2.9. NFC at London Olympics 

7.2.10. MasterCard PayPass in UK 

7.2.11. RFID-led luggage tracking 

7.2.12. Barclays` `wave-and-pay` for London taxis 

7.2.13. VISA 'tap and go' 

7.2.14. Bath University NFC pilot 

7.3. Trials in US 

7.3.1. Sprint's BART NFC 

7.3.2. US NFC consumer survey 

7.3.3. Philips Arena trial in Atlanta 

7.3.4. 'WirelessWallet' consumer trial 

7.3.5. VISA`s coupon pilot in California 

7.4. VISA`s NFC pilots 

7.4.1. VISA`s NFC pilot in Europe 

7.4.2. Visa trials in Brazil, Canada and Malaysia 

7.4.3. Visa credit card demo 

7.4.4. Nokia and VISA team up in Malaysia 

7.5. M-ticketing trial in Austria 

7.6. NFC services in Taiwan 

7.7. Singapore's NFC public trial 

7.8. NFC payments in Amsterdam 

7.9. French retailers NFC trials in 2009 

7.10. Monaco launches NFC trials 

7.11. NFC trial in Melbourne 

7.12. ING and MasterCard trial in Romania 

7.13. Italian ski NFC trial 

7.14. NFC smart poster 

7.15. NFC on buses in Germany 

8. Latest developments on NFC 

8.1. January 2009 

8.1.1. Barclays NFC debit cards 

8.1.2. Gemalto reader 

8.2. December 2008 

8.2.1. Sagem-Orange SWP SIM card 

8.2.2. French NFC payments group 

8.2.3. NFC-compliant tags 

8.3. November 2008 

8.3.1. Australian m-payment trial 

8.3.2. SIMalliance NFC working group 

8.3.3. `Over-the-counter` payment service 

8.3.4. SCM`s contactless, NFC reader 

8.4.5. GSMA for more NFC handsets 

8.4.6. NFC hotel room access 

8.4.7. ViVOtech NFC pilot 

8.4.8. Bell ID mobile payments 

8.5. October 2008 

8.5.1. NFC interoperability 

8.5.2. MasterCard OTA service 

8.5.3. FeliCa in North America 

8.5.4. NFC to mass market 

8.5.5. Turkey NFC trial 

8.5.6. NFC payments at theatres 

8.5.7. NFC showcased 

8.5.8. Oyster could be replaced 

8.5.9. CPI, INSIDE payment stickers 

8.5.10. Consumer NFC adoption 

8.5.11. BART NFC trial 

8.6. September 2008 

8.6.1. AIRTAG NFC solution 

8.6.2. Visa m-payments services on Google, Nokia 

8.6.3. Smart Card Alliance's includes m-payments 

8.6.4. NFC pilot in Switzerland 

8.6.5. Telecom Italia and Mastercard team up 

8.6.6. Alcatel-Lucent`s Tikitag 

8.6.7. Visa`s four new mobile payment programmes 

8.6.8. London NFC trial 

8.7. August 2008 

8.7.1. Telstra`s NFC testing 

8.7.2. NFC-enabled SIM card interoperability 

8.7.3. Global FeliCa adoption 

8.7.4. NFC trial in Singapore 

8.8. July 2008 

8.8.1. Innovision, Sasken partner for NFC 

8.8.2. Collaboration model on NFC deployments 

8.8.3. New specifications for NFC devices 

8.8.4. Co-operation on global payment system 

8.9. June 2008 

8.9.1. NFC in healthcare 

8.9.2. StarHub mWallet pilot 

8.9.3. M-ticketing in Germany 

8.9.4. Blaze NFC 

8.9.5. Gemalto updates 53 million phones 

8.9.6. NFC pilot in UAE 

8.9.7. Innovision NFC tags 

8.9.8. Sony deal for FeliCa 

8.10 May 2008 

8.10.1. MasterCard Canada NFC experiment 

8.10.2. NFC in Italy 

8.10.3. McDonald`s e-coupons in Japan 

8.10.4. Collis new NFC chip 

8.10.5. GPS/GSM-based toll system 

8.10.6. Mifare for NFC apps 

8.11 April 2008 

8.11.1. DnB Nor-Telenor m-payments unit 

8.11.2. ViVOpay contactless payments 

8.11.3. M-payments in Western Europe 

8.11.4. Speakers with NFC 

8.11.5. Nokia 6212 Classic 

8.11.6. Maxis NFC technology 

8.11.7. SCM Microsystems `NFC dongle` 

8.11.8. NFC in pension distribution 

8.11.9. Indonesia looking at NFC 

8.12. March 2008 

8.12.1. Citigroup NFC phone 

8.12.2. New SoC solution 

8.12.3. Microsoft, Sirit partner on NFC 

8.12.4. Citi-SK Telecom m-commerce venture 

8.12.5. LEGIC card-in-card solutions 

8.13. February 2008 

8.13.1. NFC system on chip solution 

8.13.2. NFC Wi-Fi networks protection 

8.13.3. NFC at London Fashion Week 

8.13.4. BlueSky's AGPS-SIM card 

8.13.5. Multi-standard NFC chip 

8.13.6. SIM-based m-payment 

8.13.7. Real time employee tracking 

8.14. January 2008 

8.14.1. NFC trial in Washington 

8.14.2. BBC named NFC top tech for 2008 

8.14.3. Sony unveils TransferJet 

9. Views, quotes and useful leads 

9.1. Mohammad Khan, President, ViVOtech Inc 

9.2. Rob Conway, CEO GSMA 

9.3. Peter Ayliffe, CEO of Visa Europe 

9.4. Shuan Ghaidan, Head of Product Sales and Delivery, Asia/Pacific MasterCard 

9.5. Mark Collins, VP of Consumer Data Services at AT&T Mobility 

9.6. Mung-Ki Woo of Orange, VP Payment and Contactless 

9.7. Sol Trujillo, CEO of Telstra 

9.8. Important leads 

10. Conclusion and forecasts 

10.1 NFC progresses steadily since launch 

10.2. Evidence of NFC`s industrial adoptability 

10.2.1. Development and standardisation 

10.2.2. Industrial projects and consumer surveys 

10.2.3. Growth in strength and scope of NFC Forum 

10.2.4. NFC development efforts at GSMA platform 

10.2.5. Efforts by other institutions 

10.3. Factors for NFC popularity among stakeholders 

10.3.1.The success in consumers` trials and surveys 

10.3.2. The element of convenience 

10.3.3. Time-and-cost effectiveness 

10.3.4. Support to existing infrastructure 

8.3.5. Ability to interact with other technologies 

10.3.6. Potential for growth in m-payments 

10.4. Where NFC is positioned now 

10.4.1. NFC from trials phase to production phase 

10.4.2. NFC potential to reaching the critical mass 

10.5. NFC adoption: opportunities, benefits and drawbacks 

10.5.1. NFC adoption: opportunities for stakeholders 

10.5.1.1. Payment-led opportunities 

10.5.1.2. Opportunities in healthcare 

10.5.1.3. Business-to-business opportunities 

10.5.1.4. Opportunities in other areas 

10.5.2. NFC adoption: benefits and drawbacks 

10.5.2.1. Benefits 

10.5.2.1.1. Consumer benefits 

10.5.2.1.2. Benefits to stakeholders 

10.5.2.2. Drawbacks or risks 

10.6. NFC commercial launch: an opportunity in waiting 

10.6.1. NFC commercial launch: issues facing the technology and lessons to be
learnt by industry 

10.6.1.1. Infrastructure 

10.6.1.2. NFC-enabled mobile phones 

10.6.1.3. Technical standards 

10.6.1.4. Co-ordination among vendors 

10.6.1.5. Security and safety 

10.6.1.6. Marketing of NFC-led solutions 

10.7. Forecasts 

10.7.1. NFC market 2009-2014 

10.7.2. Demography of NFC growth 

10.7.2.1. M-ticketing - the future of contactless payments 

10.7.3. Growth from other areas 

10.7.4. NFC forecast: growth trends in regional markets 

10.7.4.1. Japan leads the contactless payment market 

10.7.4.2. Trends prevalent in Asian emerging markets 

10.7.4.3. Europe sits on huge m-payment growth potential 

10.7.4.4. Growth from US and Latin America 

10.7.5. NFC mobile phones 

List of Tables

Table 1.1. Payment systems - history in brief 

Table 1.2 Mobile browser 

Table 1.3. M-payment technologies comparison 

Table 1.4. IrDA`s major stakeholders 

Table 2.1. How does NFC compare to other wireless technologies 

Table 5.1.Mobile payment defined 

Table 5.2.Mobile banking 

Table 5.3.Mobile Payment Forum members 

Table 6.1. NFC Forum`s key members since launch 

Table.6.2. NFC Forum`s key members 

Table 6.3. Dimensions of security in mobile payments 

List of figures

Figure 1.1.M-Payment market forecast 2008-2013 

Figure 1.2.Annual m-payments growth rate 2008-2013 

Figure 1.3.Mobile barcode scanner 

Figure 1.4.An RFID tag 

Figure 2.1.NFC 

Figure 2.2.Mobile Bluetooth 

Figure 2.3.Biometrics 

Figure 2.4.NFC ecosystem 

Figure 2.5.Retailers survey on NFC-led m-payment technologies awareness 

Figure. 3.1.NFC positioning in mobile phone 

Figure 3. 2.NFC services 

Figure 3.3.NFC in transport and travelling 

Figure 3.4.NFC in information access 

Figure 3.5.NFC-enabled handsets and devices available 

Figure 4.1.NFC smart poster 

Figure 4.2.Small Chart Box 

Figure 4.3.Mobile payment adoption survey 

Figure 5.1.Mobile payment adoption survey 

Figure 5.2.Mobile payment adoption survey 

Figure 5.3.Mobile wallet network map 

Figure 10.1. Global telecoms subscriber growth-1982-2013 

Companies mentioned in this report

AirTag 

Assa Abloy Group 

ALcatel-Lucent 

Atlanta Philips Arena 

AT&T 

Atlanta Spirit 

Barclays 

Bouygues Telecom 

BKM-Interbank Card Center 

Bellid 

Bankalararasi Kart Merkezi 

Bern 

Bell Mobility 

Blaze Mobile 

BuleSky Positioning 

BBC 

Books Etc 

Bay Area Rapid Transit 

BBVA 

Banco do Brasil 

Col. 

Crown Computing 

Citigroup 

Chop`d, 

Coffee Republic 

Chase Bank 

Chinatrust Commercial Bank 

Commonealth Bank 

Computer Cab 

Collis 

Cingular Wireless 

Cellular South Wireless 

Companhia Brasileira de Meios de Pagamento 

Cal in Israel 

Cornèr Bank, Switzerland 

DnB Nor 

Dolby Laboratories 

Ergosum Project 

European Payment Council 

European Union 

Edgar, Dunn & Company 

ECMA 

Emirates NBD 

EAT 

European Telecommunications Standards Institute 

Etisalat 

FIME 

Frankfurt Rhein-Main 

Gemalto 

GSMA 

Google 

Giesecke & Devrient 

Garanti Bank 

Hypercom Corporation 

Hitachi 

Hyundai Card 

Huishang Bank 

Infrared Data Association 

INSIDE CONTACTLESS 

Innovision 

IW Bank,Italy 

ING 

Japan Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications 

JCB 

Krispy Kreme 

Korea Smart Card Company 

Korea Telecom Freetel 

KB Card 

Littleton 

LEGIC Identsystems Ltd 

LG Card 

LLC 

MasterCard 

Monitise Group 

Mobile Money Ventures LCC 

Maxis Communications 

Mobile Distillery 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology 

Maxis Communications 

Multimedia Solutions 

Multimedia Solutions 

McDonald`s 

Microsoft 

Maybank 

MBNA 

Monaco Government Tourist and Convention Authority 

Nokia Corporation 

National Australia Bank 

NXP Semiconductors 

NTT DoCoMo 

NTT Data 

NFC Forum 

National Australia Bank 

Nets 

Orange 

O2 

Osaifu-Keitai 

Obopay 

Payter 

Pathe Cinemas 

PNC Bank 

Rhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund 

Rhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund 

The Royal Bank of Canada 

Sagem Télécommunications 

SFR 

SIMalliance 

Smart Communications 

SCM Microsystems Inc 

Sony Corporation 

Telenor 

TeliaSonera 

Tesco 

Texas Instruments 

TextPayMe 

T-Mobile 

Toshiba TEC 

Turkcell 

Unify Media Group 

US Bank 

Valista 

VH-1 

Virgin 

Verifone 

Verizon 

Verrus 

Vimpelcom 

Visa 

ViVOtech 

Vodafone 

Wachovia 

Walgreen 

Wawa 

Wells Fargo 

Westel Mobil 

Western Union 

w-HA 

Wikipedia 

Wind 

WIT-Software 

Xringer 

YourRail 

Zagat 

ZiLOG 

To order this report:

Near Field Communications - the future of m-payments? An analysis and forecast
for NFC applications and markets 2009-2014

http://www.reportlinker.com/p0109867/Near-Field-Communications---the-future-of-m-payments-An-analysis-and-forecast-for-NFC-applications-and-markets-2009-2014.html

More market research reports here!



Reportlinker
Nicolas: nbo@reportlinker.com
US: (805)-652-2626
Intl: +1 805-652-2626 

Copyright Business Wire 2009

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.