There’s a little tiny computer circuit built into the credit card with a radio antenna. On most cards you can see it – it’s a little silvery rectangle near one end. The card reader sits there projecting radio waves around itself, and when you put your card near the reader the card “catches” some of those waves and uses them to power up, then sends some different radio waves back in return. The returned radio waves contain the information needed to identify your card so you can make a payment.
This technology is called “Passive Near-Field Communication” if you’d like to read more.
There’s a little tiny computer circuit built into the credit card with a radio antenna. On most cards you can see it – it’s a little silvery rectangle near one end. The card reader sits there projecting radio waves around itself, and when you put your card near the reader the card “catches” some of those waves and uses them to power up, then sends some different radio waves back in return. The returned radio waves contain the information needed to identify your card so you can make a payment.
This technology is called “Passive Near-Field Communication” if you’d like to read more.
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