Google CEO Eric Schmidt has demonstrated near field communication, a feature set to appear in the next version of Android allowing it to act as a touch-contact payment system.
Schmidt showed off the device in an interview at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco although he refused to be drawn on the specific hardware shown, an unannounced smartphone widely assumed to be the upcoming Nexus S follow up to the firm’s Nexus One ‘Google Phone’.
Android 2.3 ‘Gingerbread’ will contain support for near field communication chips which can allow communication with a variety of secure billing systems, effectively turning the phone into a form of e-wallet. Schmidt said that the next version of Android would appear in the ‘next few weeks.’
No manufacturer for the Nexus S was mentioned but the case does bare more than a passing resemblance to products from Samsung. Samsung was erroneously rumoured to be launching the Nexus S at an event which turned out to be the dual screen Continuum.
Engadget snapped some shots of Schmidt with the new phone.
Photo source: Engadget.
Advertisement
Related Stories
- Developer fined £50,000 over fake Angry Birds app May 25th 2012 at 12:28PM
- Via Technologies release Android PC to rival the Raspberry Pi May 25th 2012 at 10:30AM
- Google introduces Knowledge Graph for more intelligent search May 17th 2012 at 10:55AM
- Google's multi-Nexus Android strategy May 16th 2012 at 12:56AM
- Mozilla, Google blast Windows RT browser restrictions May 11th 2012 at 3:47AM
- Java judge will not rule on Android "fair use" May 11th 2012 at 1:52AM
- Google lets anyone be a TV station May 7th 2012 at 10:55PM
- Jury fails to fully decide in Oracle vs Google May 7th 2012 at 10:28PM






















