Today I went to pay for my breakfast burrito I get at Thornton’s every other 
day and wondered why the Apple Pay wasn’t working . As it works well at this 
store. Well on closer inspection the last customer had left his American 
express card in the read. Dam clear credit cards.:) Put it out and it works 
not.:)



From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of tom holloman
Sent: Monday, July 31, 2017 3:06 AM
To: Topics related to Apple and Macintosh computers
Subject: Re: [MacGroup] This and that.....

Had same problem I think their readers. Worked perfect at Whole Foods and 
McDonald's. Walgreens doesn't seem to care. We need find out how contact  
management.
Tom

On Jul 30, 2017, at 8:58 PM, James Bennett 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I used Apple Pay at the Walgreens at Frankfort Ave & Ewing Friday. Wouldn’t 
accept it the first few tries. Finally worked on the 3rd or 4th attempt. Don’t 
know if it was me holding the phone wrong or the reader, ‘cause I’ve only used 
Apple Pay a few times so far.
Jim

On Jul 28, 2017, at 1:21 PM, tom holloman 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

John
Agree. Did remind clerks. I suggested have tech check reader to Walgreens and 
she just gave me a blank look. Starbucks said they didn't have it. The reader 
was old kind. Worked perfect at ace hardware too. Didn't work at our local 
grocery store and clerk said I was only one that had tried.they could care 
less.only two places that have on our island are the grocery store and ace, so 
most my use off island. Yesterday was first time I had so much trouble. Had 
over $100 in cart at Walgreens. Would have left but we are on tight schedule 
because late planes were all full so I paid cash.
Tom

On Jul 28, 2017, at 7:12 AM, John Robinson 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Tom,

Most all the Starbucks take ApplePay, the one here was not on the top of the 
list so other stores had it long before we did…now when I purchase a drink I 
have to remind the clerk, especially if they are new, to hit the CREDIT button 
before handing the reader through the window…if I’ve tried to lower the watch 
to quickly it won’t work, I have to raise the watch and then go to the reader a 
second time…it then always works.  Walgreen’s is a perfect read every time, so 
your store needs to work on this.

John


On Jul 28, 2017, at 1:07 PM, tom holloman 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

That's good news especially after my experience on Maui yesterday. First one 
great at Whole Foods held watch up and bang, done. Next one Walgreens reader 
didn't take watch or iPhone. Has to be reader because it had just worked at 
Whole Foods. Also tried at different machine in their pharmacy, same result. 
Next stop Starbucks because I thought they took it but they said no.
These merchants need train clerks or keep machines working.
I really hate to hand my card to a stranger.
Tom

On Jul 28, 2017, at 5:54 AM, John Robinson 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:



1st

 Last night my wife found the nail polish she had been looking for ever so 
long.  Amazon didn’t have it….”out of stock, didn’t know if it would ever be 
offered”.

Then she found a company that offered the product…who are they?  Are they a 
front for my info?  Are they simply mining credit card numbers, addresses, 
email addresses?

But, if she wants it, I better take the chance and order…(been married 54 
years, I’ve learned my position)….

In the cart and now to checkout….once in checkout I was so hoping PayPal would 
be there..and fantastic, it was!  Whew, now no info to this firm…however right 
beside PayPal was ApplePay!!!  Goodness the Gods are smiling…

Hit ApplePay, the next process was to authenticate with the fingerprint…game 
over, I was done…not a single other thing to do, Apple completes the entire 
transaction.  I hear the ping on the iPhone from Apple, seconds later another 
ping from the company thanking me for the order, giving me the order number and 
date of delivery…

No being transferred to PayPal, putting in my password to PayPal and picking 
the institution I want them to use for the payment…

Folks, this ApplePay is amazing, using it on the internet is even better than 
at a Point Of Purchase checkout at a store….You owe it to yourself to utilize 
this system…


2nd

Just how good is Siri?  Lots of comparisons by the rag writers, for me the 
answer lies in does Siri do what I want?

This morning on the way to work I was beside a Sone Container Semi, I wondered 
if the company was publicly traded…”Siri, is Stone Container Corporation a 
publicly traded company”?

Here is what she sent….now you see why I talk as much to this lady as I do my 
wife…before you protest, remember, we’ve been married 54 years!!

Stone Container Corporation

SSCC was formed in November 1998, with the merger of Jefferson Smurfit 
Corporation (JSC) and Stone Container Corporation (Stone). JSC’s roots go back 
to 1974, when Dublin, Ireland-based Jefferson Smurfit Group (JSG) acquired 
partial interest in Time Industries, a Chicago-based paper and packaging 
company.


JSG established a major presence in the United States with the 1981 acquisition 
of the Alton Box Board Company and the 1982 acquisition of Diamond 
International’s packaging operations. In 1983, JSG’s U.S. operations 
reorganized and the majority of these operations became subsidiaries of JSC. 
JSC went on to establish a leadership position in the U.S. paper and packaging 
industry with its 1986 acquisition of 50 percent of Container Corporation of 
America (CCA) from Mobil Corporation.


Morgan Stanley Leveraged Equity Fund II (MSLEF II) purchased the other half of 
CCA. JSC restructured as a privately held company in 1989, jointly owned by JSG 
and MSLEF II.


As part of the restructuring, JSC acquired the remainder of CCA. In 1994, JSC 
recapitalized as a publicly traded company.


3rd

This one is hard to understand, why would anyone be buying the iPhone 7 when 
the 8 is just a couple months away?  Maybe the Android users are reading the 
same news the rest of us see,  a new Android virus every 10 seconds, expecting 
3.5 million this year alone….for some reason they are moving NOW instead of 
waiting for the 8….good news for Apple but unexpected.

The iPhone 8 isn't even here yet and Android owners are already switching to 
Apple

A Message from Sears 
<http://eb2.3lift.com/pass?tl_clickthrough=true&redir=http%3A%2F%2Fcat.ny.us.criteo.com%2Fdelivery%2Fckn.php%3Fcppv%3D1%26cpp>
 Published July 25, 2017

<1501002431322.jpeg>

File photo: Craig Federighi, Apple's senior vice president of software 
engineering, speaks during an announcement of new products at the Apple 
Worldwide Developers Conference in San Jose, Calif., Monday, June 5, 2017. (AP 
Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)  (Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights 
reserved.)

In a report published on Tuesday, market research firm CIRP revealed that Apple 
attracted more Android switchers in the most recent quarter than at any other 
time in the past year.

While over 75% of iPhone buyers were upgrading from the iPhone 5s, iPhone 6 or 
iPhone 6s (as well as the SE, 5c and Plus models), 20% of consumers surveyed 
said that they were switching over from an Android device.

"The good news for Apple is that relative to earlier quarters, they attracted a 
higher percentage of iPhone buyers from Android phones," said CIRP partner and 
co-founder Josh Lowitz. "In the past three quarters before the June 2017 
quarter, Android owners had represented 14% to 17% of iPhone buyers. With 
lengthening upgrade cycles and a growing percentage of owners with the most 
recently released models, continued platform switching will be important to the 
success of the next iPhones."

In addition to the increased rate of Android switchers, far more iPhone buyers 
elected to upgrade to the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus in the quarter ending in 
June than the previous quarter. The percentage of 7 or 7 Plus buyers didn't 
quite crack 70% last quarter, but this quarter, the number jumped to 81%.

Additionally, legacy models sold in the same quarter last year (when the 6s was 
the latest iPhone model) accounted for 34% of all iPhones sold in the US. This 
year, that number fell to 19%. Even with the iPhone 8 set to be unveiled in the 
next two months, consumers are still buying the latest, greatest iPhones. It'll 
be interesting to see how this affects iPhone 7s and iPhone 8 sales later this 
year.

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