is this an early april fools joke? every card in my wallet either needs to be used as a physical object (i.e. swiped, hole-punched) or is there for an emergency situation (health insurance, 2-factor-auth don't-have-my-phone codes). I really don't understand what this is for.
I don't carry a wallet. For the past four years I've been carrying just a money clip with cash, ID, and one credit card. You mentioned health insurance cards, and this would be a good way for someone like me to have my insurance info on hand.
Hi guys, happy to read all the interesting stuff you write about our app.
We actually launched this app before both Passbook (Apple) and Wallet Hub (Microsoft). I'm not sure when Google Wallet launched, but we found out about it after releasing Wally.
Our intentions were to build a slick, intuitive and really easy to use wallet app without all the registration, cloud sync, offers etc. We developed it, released it...just to read about how all these major actors announced their stuff some weeks later. Also, some Swedish alternatives were released after us, winning awards, getting venture capital etc.
We never aimed for that...our app is really simple, and that has been the plan all along.
After releasing Wally, we have been working on other stuff (apps, open source libs, web services etc.) for the most time except some updates. However, after receiving some interesting feedback, we felt like going back and polishing the app some more. We did so, added iPhone 5 support and just finished retina support for the photos, when...
...a new app that's called Wally was released (yes, that's right)!
A week or so ago, a couple of guys in the middle-east just launched their new brand new, award winning app. It does not do the same thing, but it has the same name, similar icon and a similar logotype.
We'll see where this'll end :)
If you want to get in contact with us, give us feedback etc. - just hook up with us at http://wally-app.com. We will release a more informative site soon, but you'll find links to our issue and feedback page, Facebook page etc.
It looks handy. Some places allow you to use an image of the card (or just the number of the card without the physical card); and sometimes I'm buying online and I just need the numbers. I'm gently worried about the consequences of storing a credit card number and the cv2 number on a computer.
Isn't this ultimate skeumorphism? Take a real world object, photograph it, and put the photograph in a virtual wallet which is all leather and stitching. :-p
But it does look and easy to use. That bit of photo editing looked good.
How does this differ than Passbook (default on iOS)? You may want to answer that on the site, since they look basically the same. And as others mentioned, how is this useful if you can't even use the cards in the real world? It's essentially a nice looking photo library of pictures of your credit cards. I don't see any value in this, I think you need to add some points to the site of how this is could be useful in the real world.
AFAIK Passbook does not do this, or at least no company has integrated into Passbook yet. I still don't understand how Passbook works. In the US there is only a handful of apps that use Passbook, and even then, the one I do own (United), I still can't figure out "what it does".
I think the use case for this app is for people to store their loyalty cards in the app... Not their credit cards.
In most (almost all?) cases the cashier can manually enter the number on the front of the card in to their register. For example, if the magnetic stripe on the back of the card was wearing out or damaged.
http://lemon.com/ has been working on this for quite a while before this app and Passbook. Actually I'd say Passbook is a total Lemon rip off. It also lets you track your expenses by taking pictures of your receipts and by connecting to your bank accounts.
It's not only the glossiness, it's also about the original size. Barcodes work because they are at a fixed size, and a picture on screen can seldom reproduce the exact same size.
This is also why QR Codes have reference points (those three corner blocks or the big centre block)
I kinda like it... It's helpful for when I make a purchase online and I need to enter the code of my Visa/Mastercard, since my telephone is on the desk next to me and my wallet usually in my jacket, it could be handy. You could also scan some other cards containing something like a tax number or other information you might sometimes need. Might benefit from an add on feature to scan business cards?? You'd have to offer a search function though, I think?
It might be good to add some description to the site. I'm not going to watch a demo video, and I'm unlikely to click the App Store link when I don't really understand what the app actually does.
[+] [-] bgruber|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] gk1|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] alexjeffrey|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] danielsaidi|13 years ago|reply
We actually launched this app before both Passbook (Apple) and Wallet Hub (Microsoft). I'm not sure when Google Wallet launched, but we found out about it after releasing Wally.
Our intentions were to build a slick, intuitive and really easy to use wallet app without all the registration, cloud sync, offers etc. We developed it, released it...just to read about how all these major actors announced their stuff some weeks later. Also, some Swedish alternatives were released after us, winning awards, getting venture capital etc.
We never aimed for that...our app is really simple, and that has been the plan all along.
After releasing Wally, we have been working on other stuff (apps, open source libs, web services etc.) for the most time except some updates. However, after receiving some interesting feedback, we felt like going back and polishing the app some more. We did so, added iPhone 5 support and just finished retina support for the photos, when...
...a new app that's called Wally was released (yes, that's right)!
A week or so ago, a couple of guys in the middle-east just launched their new brand new, award winning app. It does not do the same thing, but it has the same name, similar icon and a similar logotype.
We'll see where this'll end :)
If you want to get in contact with us, give us feedback etc. - just hook up with us at http://wally-app.com. We will release a more informative site soon, but you'll find links to our issue and feedback page, Facebook page etc.
[+] [-] DanBC|13 years ago|reply
Isn't this ultimate skeumorphism? Take a real world object, photograph it, and put the photograph in a virtual wallet which is all leather and stitching. :-p
But it does look and easy to use. That bit of photo editing looked good.
[+] [-] bluetidepro|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mbesto|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] goatforce5|13 years ago|reply
In most (almost all?) cases the cashier can manually enter the number on the front of the card in to their register. For example, if the magnetic stripe on the back of the card was wearing out or damaged.
[+] [-] bmuon|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] martinced|13 years ago|reply
What can possibly go wrong?
: )
[+] [-] emillerm|13 years ago|reply
Also, the skeuomorphic design is nice but you could easily fit more cards on the screen by using a simpler list view.
[+] [-] jvdh|13 years ago|reply
This is also why QR Codes have reference points (those three corner blocks or the big centre block)
[+] [-] Down_n_Out|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|13 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] mikeash|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] frogpelt|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] genericresponse|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rbchv|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] imsofuture|13 years ago|reply