Skip to main content

Smart shopping and the payment revolution at CARTES 2013

Changes to the retail world over the next ten years could be even more important than those during the internet revolution of the 2000s – so how will payments and cards fare in this new environment? Answers will be found at one of the big attractions at CARTES 2013 – the Smart Shopping area. This zone, designed in partnership with independent consultant ADN’co, brings together the most significant innovations in the payment and retail industries, displayed as customer journeys renewed by new technologie
October 29, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Changes to the retail world over the next ten years could be even more important than those during the internet revolution of the 2000s – so how will payments and cards fare in this new environment?

Answers will be found at one of the big attractions at CARTES 2013 – the Smart Shopping area. This zone, designed in partnership with independent consultant ADN’co, brings together the most significant innovations in the payment and retail industries, displayed as customer journeys renewed by new technologies. Visitors will be able to see for themselves shopping walls for a new remote business, multi-services wallets, dematerialization, self-checkout in stores, the use of biometrics and much more… Cardlytics, Casyope, Flash’n Pay, Gemalto, Hexapay, Natural Security/CITC-RFID, Oberthur Technologies and SCCP group – experts which have been brought together for the first time - will be your guides for live demonstrations and the explanation of simple applications for complex problems.

The Smart Shopping area will run from Tuesday 19 November to Thursday 21 November in Hall 4 Stand: 4 J 124

Related Content

  • Cooperative infrastructure systems waiting for the go ahead
    February 3, 2012
    Despite much research and technological promise, progress towards cooperative infrastructure system deployment is still slow. Here, Robert Cone and John Miles take a considered look at how and when it might come about. From a systems engineering viewpoint it looks logical and inevitable that vehicles should be communicating between themselves and with the road infrastructure. But seen from a business viewpoint the case is not proven.
  • Multi-modal’s long road into the transportation mainstream
    June 4, 2015
    Andrew Bardin Williams looks at 20 years of multimodal transport in the Sun Belt and beyond and the key requirement for user engagement. Phoenix residents will head to the polls in August to decide whether to implement a three-tenths of a cent sales tax to fund the city’s new multimodal transportation plan. It will be the second transportation-related sales tax hike in the past 15 years yet city officials and advocates expect the resolution to easily pass—despite the strong anti-tax environment that has dom
  • Emovis: Rethinking smart enforcement in the tolling industry
    June 3, 2024
    Know your paying customers well and your violators even better! This almost sounds like a line you’d hear in an old Western classic movie. Actually, it is a credo to live by for tolling agencies, as Miguel Ainsa, operation director at Emovis, explains
  • Better liveability through more micromobility
    November 1, 2022
    Shared and micromobility offer new options, weaning urbanites off their cars, stitching existing mass transit combinations together. Andrew Stone looks at a report on transforming our cities