I use FastSpring and they work very well, although somewhat expensive. They also allow the buyer the option to pay with PayPal or CC. Personally if a company only gave the option of PayPal I would lose a lot of confidence, they have shocking service and systems.
On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 12:56 PM, Paul Evrat <p...@paulevrat.com> wrote: > > Views ? - Is paypal needed to give buyers confidence in the payment process > (buyer guarantees / claim investigation / refund process etc)? > Particularly > say for customers of a small start-up (inc Aussie start-up selling to US > customers)? > > > -----Original Message----- > From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] > On Behalf Of Jorke Odolphi > Sent: Tuesday, 22 April 2014 12:00 PM > To: Jiri Kosar; ozDotNet > Subject: Re: payment gateways > > Straight out PIN is much simpler - business model and API, it¹s quite > similar to stripe in the US. Its been a while but last time I checked you > still need a merchant account for Eway, if I was Œbootstrapping¹ a business > today that was going to deliver a slick experience with minimal cost > upfront > - I¹d be using PIN. > > Eway has been around for a long time - they¹re very good, and I¹ve > supported > their platform for a long time (registering COM components etc on win2k) - > they¹re great if you have a bricks and mortar business already with a > merchant account. > > They also appear to have turned into the Godaddy of payments here, without > being cheap. > > > On 22/04/2014 10:26 am, "Jiri Kosar" <jko...@asi.com.au> wrote: > > >Hi Jorke , > > > >I've just read your part about eway, Can you be more specific what you > >didn't like about eway api? I'm just curious, because I haven't > >found it difficult or not working. I'll have a look at your > recommendation. > > > >Thank you > >Jiri > > > > > > > >-------- Original message -------- > >From: Jorke Odolphi <jo...@jorke.net> > >Date: > >To: ozDotNet <ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> > >Subject: Re: payment gateways > > > > > >I use Pin and its really good started out with Spreedly in the US > >which was for subscription management, (at that time the PG was > >worldpay I cannot recommend against them enough - but was best option > >at the time for AUD and USD billing) - Pin acquired spreedly an AU > >company acquiring a US company weird eh? > > > >They have a really nice API and billing in USD to your US account and > >their fees are pretty reasonable. Much better all round experience for > >a developer than eway/paypal > > > > > > > >From: William Luu <will....@gmail.com<mailto:will....@gmail.com>> > >Reply-To: ozDotNet > ><ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com<mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> > >Date: Monday, 21 April 2014 2:45 pm > >To: ozDotNet <ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com<mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> > >Subject: Re: payment gateways > > > >I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN > >(https://pin.net.au) when it launched. > > > > > > > > > >On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price > ><step...@perthprojects.com<mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> wrote: > > > >Hey all, > > > >Hope good Easter is being had by all :) > > > >I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know > >if anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. > > > >Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has > >a good .Net friendly API. > > > >Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with > >the first I've come across without some research. > > > >cheers, > >Stephen > > > > >