Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
63,291
30,376



Griffin and ShopKeep POS have partnered up on a new iPad stand with integrated credit card reader, designed to be a physical point of sale terminal for retail stores.

The stand will be available only to ShopKeep POS customers beginning this quarter.

shopkeeppos.jpg
Durability and secure credit card transactions are often the main concerns merchants have for their POS system. Griffin's Kiosk Retail addresses these pain points with an integrated magnetic card reader and impact-resistant housing for the iPad. For secure transactions, the built-in magnetic card reader is TDES encrypted and has DUKPT key management, similar to the current MagTek® swiper that ShopKeep POS offers.

[...]

"We researched many POS companies before selecting ShopKeep POS as an exclusive launch partner for the Kiosk Retail in the United States," said Dean Shortland , Director of Business Development at Griffin Technology. "We are devoted to creating intuitively designed solutions that enhance user experience and the simple and powerful solutions that ShopKeep POS offers to small businesses fit well with our company focus. Plus, with over 3,500 merchants across the country, they are the leading iPad POS company in the US, and we are looking to scale our solution quickly."
The press release does not share details about pricing or how the stand actually connects to the iPad, whether through Lightning/30-Pin ports, or via the headphone jack like Square's more portable card reader does.

Article Link: CES 2013: ShopKeep POS and Griffin Partner on iPad POS System
 

AllieNeko

macrumors 65816
Sep 25, 2003
1,004
57

TMar

macrumors 68000
Jul 20, 2008
1,679
1
Ky
Not sure why you would design it so the home button was accessible for a POS term.
 

evansls

macrumors regular
Jul 18, 2004
132
93
Leesburg, VA
iOS 6 changed that

Not sure why you would design it so the home button was accessible for a POS term.

The 'home' button can be locked down now within iOS 6 while using 'Guided Access' mode. Once activated, tripple clicking the home button will request a password to be entered to leave the current app.

It's basically a "child proof" mode so the user can't exit the app accidentally now. Also, you can block certain areas from the screen from being activated, for example should there be a close button/back button within an app, you can lock that portion of the screen from being activated.

See apple site for more info

http://www.apple.com/ios/whats-new/#accessibility
 

a0me

macrumors 65816
Oct 5, 2006
1,074
166
Tokyo, Japan
they need a better acronym than POS...
The acronym for "Point Of Sale" has been used for the last 20 years at least, so it may be too late for that. Sort of unrelated, but in Japan, they use the acronym "BS" to refer to refer to satellite television (BS stands for "Broadcasting Satellite") and we end up having "BS News" "BS Channel" "BS Japan" and so on.
 

92jlee

macrumors 6502
Sep 11, 2009
277
0
Cardiff, Wales, UK
what's the point? 3 years time they will have to upgrade all the ipads because a minor software update will render them usless.
Apple don't cater for the business market anymore, they have been in the consumer electronics business for a very long time yet people for some reason want idevices and macs in large offices and other corporate areas.
 

dtremit

macrumors newbie
Jan 2, 2003
22
2
boston, ma
Magnetic card reader, 2012? :D

Can't sell a one at Europe anymore - electric card reader is needed and NFC is coming. Look for example https://www.izettle.com/.

Is USA so far behind?

Chip+PIN hasn't been widely adopted in the US because the card issuer -- and not the consumer -- is responsible for covering the cost of fraudulent transactions. Given the security questions about Chip+PIN, I'd say it's a good tradeoff.

Card-based NFC ("tap to pay") is fairly common here but hasn't really generated much enthusiasm.
 

Andeavor

macrumors 6502
Aug 19, 2010
297
1
Most people I know - Europe and abroad - still prefer or use CCs or debit cards to pay electronically. It costs many businesses a fortune to switch to NFC, which is not a smart move when most customers don't have an NFC-enabled device yet.
 

AllieNeko

macrumors 65816
Sep 25, 2003
1,004
57
Chip+PIN hasn't been widely adopted in the US because the card issuer -- and not the consumer -- is responsible for covering the cost of fraudulent transactions. Given the security questions about Chip+PIN, I'd say it's a good tradeoff.

Card-based NFC ("tap to pay") is fairly common here but hasn't really generated much enthusiasm.

That logic makes no sense to me though. Magnetic strips have NO security. EMV has theoretical attacks related to predictable unpredictable numbers. You'd rather have NO security than a system that's extremely, but possibly not perfectly, secure?
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.