Apple Wallet Cards

A wallet card in Apple Wallet is a digital version of a physical card that the user would normally keep in their wallet. This includes loyalty cards or tickets to events. By storing them in Apple Wallet, all the information is accessible in one place and can be retrieved quickly and easily. Cards can also be shared or displayed on the lock screen. In addition, Apple Wallet offers practical functions such as adding credit or redeeming offers.

The key features of wallet cards in Apple Wallet are:

  • Centralized storage: By storing them in Apple Wallet, all cards are collected in one place and can be accessed quickly and easily.
  • Sharing cards: Wallet cards can be easily shared with others.
  • Push messages on the lock screen: Maps can be displayed on the lock screen for quick access without unlocking the phone.

Overall, Apple Wallet provides a convenient way to store physical cards digitally and access them quickly.

Push messages with Apple Wallet

Push messages are notifications sent to the user's smartphone that provide the user with important information about his/her wallet cards. With push messages, users can be reminded, for example, that information in the wallet card has changed or that he/she is near a location where he/she can use a particular card. These messages can be sent by the card provider or the wallet app itself.

A push message is displayed directly on the lock screen or in the message center of the iPhone. When users tap the message, they are taken directly to the Wallet app to view more information about the card or to use it.

Push messages are a useful feature of the Apple Wallet app to remind the user:inside of important events or information related to their Wallet cards and provide them with a smooth user experience.

Important: while push messages are a standard feature on Apple Wallet, they are not standard on Google Wallet in that form. However, Miss Moneypenny Technologies has a solution for this, creating a very comparable user:inside experience on both operating systems.

Why do the pushes in my demo suddenly stop working?

Demoing or "testing" push journeys with short intervals and/or testing them multiple times on the same device unfortunately quickly leads to problems. A correctly built sequence of push messages then suddenly looks broken.

None of this relates to a live operation with several hours or days and weeks between them.

Why is that?

The policies and anti-spam measures of the Apple and Google platforms prevent multiple updates in short intervals.

The effect is amplified if the same device tests passes of the same certificate one after the other. At some point, no more pushes arrive there at all.

Result of testing with short intervals: Pushes come

  • not,
  • delayed,
  • after another link click
  • all at once as soon as the measure then no longer takes effect.

The exact limits are not public ("may vary"), which is understandable for an anti-spam measure.

So if you create a Pass Journey or messages and want to test them, you should try to do as much quality assurance as possible before the pushes are then tested on the devices.

FAQs

Apple Wallet Cards

A wallet card in Apple Wallet is a digital version of a physical card that the user would normally keep in their wallet. This includes loyalty cards or tickets to events. By storing them in Apple Wallet, all the information is accessible in one place and can be retrieved quickly and easily. Cards can also be shared or displayed on the lock screen. In addition, Apple Wallet offers practical functions such as adding credit or redeeming offers.

The key features of wallet cards in Apple Wallet are:

  • Centralized storage: By storing them in Apple Wallet, all cards are collected in one place and can be accessed quickly and easily.
  • Sharing cards: Wallet cards can be easily shared with others.
  • Push messages on the lock screen: Maps can be displayed on the lock screen for quick access without unlocking the phone.

Overall, Apple Wallet provides a convenient way to store physical cards digitally and access them quickly.

Push messages with Apple Wallet

Push messages are notifications sent to the user's smartphone that provide the user with important information about his/her wallet cards. With push messages, users can be reminded, for example, that information in the wallet card has changed or that he/she is near a location where he/she can use a particular card. These messages can be sent by the card provider or the wallet app itself.

A push message is displayed directly on the lock screen or in the message center of the iPhone. When users tap the message, they are taken directly to the Wallet app to view more information about the card or to use it.

Push messages are a useful feature of the Apple Wallet app to remind the user:inside of important events or information related to their Wallet cards and provide them with a smooth user experience.

Important: while push messages are a standard feature on Apple Wallet, they are not standard on Google Wallet in that form. However, Miss Moneypenny Technologies has a solution for this, creating a very comparable user:inside experience on both operating systems.

Why do the pushes in my demo suddenly stop working?

Demoing or "testing" push journeys with short intervals and/or testing them multiple times on the same device unfortunately quickly leads to problems. A correctly built sequence of push messages then suddenly looks broken.

None of this relates to a live operation with several hours or days and weeks between them.

Why is that?

The policies and anti-spam measures of the Apple and Google platforms prevent multiple updates in short intervals.

The effect is amplified if the same device tests passes of the same certificate one after the other. At some point, no more pushes arrive there at all.

Result of testing with short intervals: Pushes come

  • not,
  • delayed,
  • after another link click
  • all at once as soon as the measure then no longer takes effect.

The exact limits are not public ("may vary"), which is understandable for an anti-spam measure.

So if you create a Pass Journey or messages and want to test them, you should try to do as much quality assurance as possible before the pushes are then tested on the devices.

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