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@BarackObama aura-t-il assez de soutien pour créer la plus grande réserve marine du monde? ➤ American Express tests Host Card Emulation (HCE) for #NFC payments. By Sarah Clark • nfcworld.com • Published 31 July 2014, 14:27 • Last updated 31 July 2014, 14:27 American Express is working with Croatia’s Privredna Banka Zagreb (PBZ), part of the Italy-based Intesa Sanpaolo banking group, to pilot an NFC payments service that makes use of host card emulation (HCE) technology.

The pilot marks the first time an American Express card issuing partner has field tested HCE payments and is the first step in Intesa Sanpaolo’s plan to make HCE-based mobile payment services available across its network of banks. To use the service, cardholders register with PBZ and download an app to their mobile phone. “The PBZ mobile NFC payment services will be enabled initially on smartphone devices,” Intesa Sanpaolo explains. “The launch of this pilot in Croatia marks an important milestone that will ultimately drive broader adoption of mobile payments across the region,” says Adriana Saitta, head of retail of Intesa Sanpaolo’s international subsidiary banks division. Bg page virginGalactic. Facebook introduces App Links for deep linking. Facebook has published an open source specification called App Links that will make it easier for developers to link directly to mobile apps. App Links is designed primarily to help web developers enable "deep linking" to their apps, rather than the mobile version of their web site.

Deep linking isn't new, but it's implemented differently on all three mobile platforms, and has been slow to roll out. There's also a discovery problem -- mobile developers don't always know how to link to a third party's mobile app, so resort to linking to the web site instead. App Links is meant to make this easier. App Links specifies HTML metadata code that developers can include in the header tag of a web page, so when mobile users encounter that page, it automatically opens that content in an app, rather than the browser. Developers who don't have a web site can use Parse, the mobile backend-as-a-service that Facebook acquired a year ago, to expose their mobile apps to other developers.

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