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1.1 South Africa. 1.2 Kenya. 2 Asia. ... Fujian Expressway ETC toll center Fujian: E-Serve ... Touch 'n Go Touch 'n Go eWallet RFiD: Touch 'n Go Sdn Bhd
Touch 'n Go: Touch n Go Sdn Bhd: 1997 Klang Valley: My Rapid Touch 'n Go: Rapid KL: June 2017 Klang Valley, Negeri Sembilan and Tanjong Malim, Perak: Komuterlink: KTM Komuter: 2016 Johor Bahru, Johor: Manjalink: Causeway Link: 2011 Penang: Pas Mutiara: Rapid Penang & Rapid Ferry: September 2019 New Zealand: Auckland: AT HOP card: Auckland Transport
[40] [41] As an alternative for toll payments, cars with the Touch 'n Go RFID Tag can pass through toll gates at RFID toll booths to make toll payments. Toll fares are deducted from the eWallet balance. [40] [42] Touch 'n Go eWallet is the first and only eWallet to offer a money-back guarantee feature on its eWallet.
Touch 'n Go Hub, Lot L2.07, Level 2, NU Sentral Shopping Centre; Touch 'n Go Hub, Ground Floor, Tower 2A, Avenue 5, Bangsar South; Nilai Lay-By (South Bound) Subang Toll Plaza (Outbound) Ebor North Toll Plaza (Inbound) Cash/Touch 'n Go eWallet Self-Service Kiosk (SSK) KL Sentral (at the Kelana Jaya Line concourse) All Kajang Line stations
EMV contactless symbol used on compatible payment terminals. EMV stands for "Europay, Mastercard, and Visa", the three companies that created the standard.Contactless payment systems are credit cards and debit cards, key fobs, smart cards, or other devices, including smartphones and other mobile devices, that use radio-frequency identification (RFID) or near-field communication (NFC) for ...
SmartTAG was designed, developed and manufactured by Teras Teknologi Sdn Bhd as an extension of the Touch 'n Go system, initially as a replacement of PLUS TAG. It is being marketed by Touch 'n Go Sdn Bhd (formerly Rangkaian Segar Sdn Bhd). The intellectual property rights to the SmartTAG belongs to an Austrian company known as EFKON Gmbh.
Examples of widely used contactless smart cards are Seoul's Upass (1996), Malaysia Touch 'n Go card (1997), Hong Kong's Octopus card, Shanghai's Public Transportation Card (1999), Paris's Navigo card, Japan Rail's Suica Card (2001), Singapore's EZ-Link, Taiwan's EasyCard, San Francisco Bay Area's Clipper Card (2002), London's Oyster card ...
An email address and local mobile number are required to register for an EZ-Link account. Users have to top-up the e-wallet with a debit/credit card, and make payments by scanning the QR code at a retail shop and entering the payment amount. Payment can be authorised with either a 6-digit PIN or the phone's fingerprint scanner.