At Capital One 360, a customer forfeits the in-person experience to save money. If the app or website is down, a customer must send a deposit by mail.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I use a credit card for everything - and I choose one of the ones which gives you money back.
As a lot of the venture capital world seems to be shifting away from consumer, we want to make sure that consumer entrepreneurs know there's still money available.
I'm not a very good financing person. I don't even know how much money I have in my bank account. I never have opened one single envelope from the bank - they freak me out.
Microcredit has shown how you can reach out to people that conventional banking cannot. It has demonstrated that it's a doable proposition.
You get a lot of apps and companies that are trying to sell you on something that's totally useless or potentially unhealthy. Only occasionally does something really worthwhile really come out.
I've never gotten cash out of a machine. I use my credit cards, so I don't need to do that.
If there's not enough money in the bank account, you don't spend it.
In general in technology, if you own a platform that's valuable, you can monetize it.
In mobile, people really love having single-use case experiences. They want low friction to getting to the application's use case.
We're risking the future of the net. People are already losing their trust. Once you get burned once - somebody steals your credit card, or makes a purchase on your account - people tend to stay away from online commerce and from trusting online services.
No opposing quotes found.