Okay, I'll bite. I'm an employee so you'll have to take what I say with a grain of salt.
The video was produced with a cosmetic device and with actors. You're right that the card has to be in the device during PIN entry. The scene you're referring to, however, is depicting tip entry.
The device does not have an ethernet port but we will be shipping with a separate charging dock that will provide wired connectivity.
I can assure you that all of our antennas are not behind LCDs. While compact, the device does have a number of non-LCD surfaces.
The customer facing camera is pointing horizontal. We'll continue to refine the angle (if needed) as we continue testing with our early adopters.
We did in-person demos with over a dozen news agencies. If you have any doubts about the existence of the device, please feel free to reach out to them for confirmation.
I am not doubting that you are building the product.
You/The company should probably put more effort in correcting the datasheet and the information you put out there. We can only judge by what is being presented. Your datasheet says Ethernet. It doesn't say Ethernet would be on a separate dock. It probably should.
If you are placing the antennas behind plastic surfaces, that is great. You should correct the diagrams.
Further to your point about tip entry, tip should be entered before the transaction is authorized right? So one would assume you'd enter tip then put in the card, and optionally enter a PIN or sign the screen.
I can appreciate that it may be just a video demo, but when you post it to a place like YN people are going to point out errors. Funny enough, that error was pointed out by a friend who was watching over my shoulder. She is not a technical person in any way and it jumped out at her.
No problem. I've been mostly a lurker on HN for a while but this is the first time being put under the microscope. I apologize if I came off as defensive. This is a product that's very close to my heart given the amount of time and effort we've put into the product offering. For the record, none of us here posted the article we are here because of the amount of attention and discussion it has garnered.
Point taken about the errors. There are many things we can improve on all across the board. We made a conscious decision to not let perfect be the enemy of good. The video is done so we won't go back and change that but I will work with the team to fix all of our marketing material to be as accurate as possible. Thank you for pointing out or errors.
With regards to tip entry. Industry standard recommends gratuity be added before PIN but it is not mandatory and is a merchant preference. I can't find all the card network examples easily but I happen to have the AMEX EMV Acceptance Guide open and this is what section 4.2.7 states - "In certain Merchant categories such as restaurants, it is standard practice to enable customers to add a gratuity to the amount of the transaction. There are many different ways in which a gratuity can be added. American Express does not define any specific methods for adding gratuities..." it further goes on to say "American Express
recommends that Terminal software enables the Cardmember to
add the gratuity amount to the transaction before entering his or her PIN. This enables the transaction to
be processed as a normal, “card present” transaction."
In any case, we've all appreciated the various comments on here and it has clearly been the most critical audience of the bunch.
Omissions and errors happen. Your company has responded better than most. I'm glad someone from your company was on the forum to correct the record.
With respect to the tip flow, with Chip & PIN you would need the final amount before authorizing the transaction so the tip would be added before just as your guide suggests. Chip & PIN terminals in Canada and Europe do just that. They present you with the tip screen (% or amount) before you enter your PIN & finish the transaction. For MSR, just like in restaurants today, they can change the amount after the initial authorization but they also often authorize for about 50% more (to allow for tip) and then do the capture once the server takes the bill from the table and "closes" it with the correct tip.
I can say from personal preference that I would do a double take if a device allowed me to put my card in and finished the transaction and then permitted a change to the charge amount. What is stopping the cashier from adding her own tip once I walk away.
As mentioned, the point at which the dialog for tip is presented (before or after CVM check) is a configuration option for the merchant. Keep in mind we are deploying a US solution first. We are also anticipating that in the US we will have signature as the primary CVM before PIN. From that perspective, our flow will should be a little less odd.
That said, in the true Chip & PIN solution, once you ask for tip after PIN entry you as the merchant are opening yourself up to higher rates (Card Not Present) as well assuming liability for chargebacks. I don't know why a merchant would want to do that but as a platform we have chosen that use-case as an option.
The expected way to handle Chip + PIN transactions is that the final price is set before you enter your PIN. It is never changed after you put the PIN in - because at that point, it becomes a card-not-present transaction.
The video was produced with a cosmetic device and with actors. You're right that the card has to be in the device during PIN entry. The scene you're referring to, however, is depicting tip entry.
The device does not have an ethernet port but we will be shipping with a separate charging dock that will provide wired connectivity.
I can assure you that all of our antennas are not behind LCDs. While compact, the device does have a number of non-LCD surfaces.
The customer facing camera is pointing horizontal. We'll continue to refine the angle (if needed) as we continue testing with our early adopters.
We did in-person demos with over a dozen news agencies. If you have any doubts about the existence of the device, please feel free to reach out to them for confirmation.