Re: payment gateways
Oh my. Guilt tripping me? hahah I'm checking it out. I'm not sure how I'll decide if I find two that are good. Flip a coin perhaps? How did you know they are in Perth? They seem a tiny bit more expensive. 3% instead of 2.9%. C# support page shows a library on github. Not sure if that's a good or bad thing... On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 1:41 PM, Jorke Odolphi wrote: > You should be supporting them - they’re the best thing to come out of > Perth since.. … … > > :) > > From: Stephen Price > Reply-To: ozDotNet > Date: Tuesday, 22 April 2014 12:18 pm > To: ozDotNet > Subject: RE: payment gateways > > Simple is good. > > I did get an email from someone at eway who mentioned that its not > necessary to get bank set up before using eway account. Might still need it > down the track, will investigate. > -- > From: Jorke Odolphi > Sent: 22/04/2014 9:59 AM > To: Jiri Kosar ; ozDotNet > Subject: Re: payment gateways > > Straight out PIN is much simpler - business model and API, it¹s quite > similar to stripe in the US. Its been a while but last time I checked you > still need a merchant account for Eway, if I was Œbootstrapping¹ a > business today that was going to deliver a slick experience with minimal > cost upfront - I¹d be using PIN. > > Eway has been around for a long time - they¹re very good, and I¹ve > supported their platform for a long time (registering COM components etc > on win2k) - they¹re great if you have a bricks and mortar business already > with a merchant account. > > They also appear to have turned into the Godaddy of payments here, without > being cheap. > > > On 22/04/2014 10:26 am, "Jiri Kosar" wrote: > > >Hi Jorke , > > > >I've just read your part about eway, Can you be more specific what you > >didn't like about eway api? I'm just curious, because I haven't found > >it difficult or not working. I'll have a look at your recommendation. > > > >Thank you > >Jiri > > > > > > > > Original message > >From: Jorke Odolphi > >Date: > >To: ozDotNet > >Subject: Re: payment gateways > > > > > >I use Pin and its really good started out with Spreedly in the US which > >was for subscription management, (at that time the PG was worldpay I > >cannot recommend against them enough - but was best option at the time > >for AUD and USD billing) - Pin acquired spreedly an AU company > >acquiring a US company weird eh? > > > >They have a really nice API and billing in USD to your US account and > >their fees are pretty reasonable. Much better all round experience for a > >developer than eway/paypal > > > > > > > >From: William Luu > >mailto:will@gmail.com> > > > >Reply-To: ozDotNet > >mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> > > > >Date: Monday, 21 April 2014 2:45 pm > >To: ozDotNet > >mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> > > > >Subject: Re: payment gateways > > > >I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN > >(https://pin.net.au) when it launched. > > > > > > > > > >On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price > >mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> > wrote: > > > >Hey all, > > > >Hope good Easter is being had by all :) > > > >I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if > >anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. > > > >Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a > >good .Net friendly API. > > > >Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the > >first I've come across without some research. > > > >cheers, > >Stephen > > > >
Re: payment gateways
You should be supporting them - they’re the best thing to come out of Perth since.. … … :) From: Stephen Price mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> Reply-To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> Date: Tuesday, 22 April 2014 12:18 pm To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> Subject: RE: payment gateways Simple is good. I did get an email from someone at eway who mentioned that its not necessary to get bank set up before using eway account. Might still need it down the track, will investigate. From: Jorke Odolphi<mailto:jo...@jorke.net> Sent: 22/04/2014 9:59 AM To: Jiri Kosar<mailto:jko...@asi.com.au>; ozDotNet<mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com> Subject: Re: payment gateways Straight out PIN is much simpler - business model and API, it¹s quite similar to stripe in the US. Its been a while but last time I checked you still need a merchant account for Eway, if I was Œbootstrapping¹ a business today that was going to deliver a slick experience with minimal cost upfront - I¹d be using PIN. Eway has been around for a long time - they¹re very good, and I¹ve supported their platform for a long time (registering COM components etc on win2k) - they¹re great if you have a bricks and mortar business already with a merchant account. They also appear to have turned into the Godaddy of payments here, without being cheap. On 22/04/2014 10:26 am, "Jiri Kosar" mailto:jko...@asi.com.au>> wrote: >Hi Jorke , > >I've just read your part about eway, Can you be more specific what you >didn't like about eway api? I'm just curious, because I haven't found >it difficult or not working. I'll have a look at your recommendation. > >Thank you >Jiri > > > > Original message >From: Jorke Odolphi mailto:jo...@jorke.net>> >Date: >To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> >Subject: Re: payment gateways > > >I use Pin and its really good started out with Spreedly in the US which >was for subscription management, (at that time the PG was worldpay I >cannot recommend against them enough - but was best option at the time >for AUD and USD billing) - Pin acquired spreedly an AU company >acquiring a US company weird eh? > >They have a really nice API and billing in USD to your US account and >their fees are pretty reasonable. Much better all round experience for a >developer than eway/paypal > > > >From: William Luu >mailto:will@gmail.com><mailto:will@gmail.com>> >Reply-To: ozDotNet >mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com><mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> >Date: Monday, 21 April 2014 2:45 pm >To: ozDotNet >mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com><mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> >Subject: Re: payment gateways > >I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN >(https://pin.net.au) when it launched. > > > > >On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price >mailto:step...@perthprojects.com><mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> > wrote: > >Hey all, > >Hope good Easter is being had by all :) > >I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if >anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. > >Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a >good .Net friendly API. > >Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the >first I've come across without some research. > >cheers, >Stephen >
RE: payment gateways
I note PIN is about same cost as paypal - 3% + 30c per transaction. Paypal api is easy enough once you have coded it once and offers many features .. -Original Message- From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On Behalf Of Paul Evrat Sent: Tuesday, 22 April 2014 12:57 PM To: 'ozDotNet' Subject: RE: payment gateways Views ? - Is paypal needed to give buyers confidence in the payment process (buyer guarantees / claim investigation / refund process etc)? Particularly say for customers of a small start-up (inc Aussie start-up selling to US customers)? -Original Message- From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On Behalf Of Jorke Odolphi Sent: Tuesday, 22 April 2014 12:00 PM To: Jiri Kosar; ozDotNet Subject: Re: payment gateways Straight out PIN is much simpler - business model and API, it¹s quite similar to stripe in the US. Its been a while but last time I checked you still need a merchant account for Eway, if I was Œbootstrapping¹ a business today that was going to deliver a slick experience with minimal cost upfront - I¹d be using PIN. Eway has been around for a long time - they¹re very good, and I¹ve supported their platform for a long time (registering COM components etc on win2k) - they¹re great if you have a bricks and mortar business already with a merchant account. They also appear to have turned into the Godaddy of payments here, without being cheap. On 22/04/2014 10:26 am, "Jiri Kosar" wrote: >Hi Jorke , > >I've just read your part about eway, Can you be more specific what you >didn't like about eway api? I'm just curious, because I haven't >found it difficult or not working. I'll have a look at your recommendation. > >Thank you >Jiri > > > > Original message ---- >From: Jorke Odolphi >Date: >To: ozDotNet >Subject: Re: payment gateways > > >I use Pin and its really good started out with Spreedly in the US >which was for subscription management, (at that time the PG was >worldpay I cannot recommend against them enough - but was best option >at the time for AUD and USD billing) - Pin acquired spreedly an AU >company acquiring a US company weird eh? > >They have a really nice API and billing in USD to your US account and >their fees are pretty reasonable. Much better all round experience for >a developer than eway/paypal > > > >From: William Luu mailto:will@gmail.com>> >Reply-To: ozDotNet >mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> >Date: Monday, 21 April 2014 2:45 pm >To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> >Subject: Re: payment gateways > >I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN >(https://pin.net.au) when it launched. > > > > >On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price >mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> wrote: > >Hey all, > >Hope good Easter is being had by all :) > >I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know >if anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. > >Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has >a good .Net friendly API. > >Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with >the first I've come across without some research. > >cheers, >Stephen >
Re: payment gateways
I use FastSpring and they work very well, although somewhat expensive. They also allow the buyer the option to pay with PayPal or CC. Personally if a company only gave the option of PayPal I would lose a lot of confidence, they have shocking service and systems. On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 12:56 PM, Paul Evrat wrote: > > Views ? - Is paypal needed to give buyers confidence in the payment process > (buyer guarantees / claim investigation / refund process etc)? > Particularly > say for customers of a small start-up (inc Aussie start-up selling to US > customers)? > > > -Original Message- > From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] > On Behalf Of Jorke Odolphi > Sent: Tuesday, 22 April 2014 12:00 PM > To: Jiri Kosar; ozDotNet > Subject: Re: payment gateways > > Straight out PIN is much simpler - business model and API, it¹s quite > similar to stripe in the US. Its been a while but last time I checked you > still need a merchant account for Eway, if I was Œbootstrapping¹ a business > today that was going to deliver a slick experience with minimal cost > upfront > - I¹d be using PIN. > > Eway has been around for a long time - they¹re very good, and I¹ve > supported > their platform for a long time (registering COM components etc on win2k) - > they¹re great if you have a bricks and mortar business already with a > merchant account. > > They also appear to have turned into the Godaddy of payments here, without > being cheap. > > > On 22/04/2014 10:26 am, "Jiri Kosar" wrote: > > >Hi Jorke , > > > >I've just read your part about eway, Can you be more specific what you > >didn't like about eway api? I'm just curious, because I haven't > >found it difficult or not working. I'll have a look at your > recommendation. > > > >Thank you > >Jiri > > > > > > > > Original message > >From: Jorke Odolphi > >Date: > >To: ozDotNet > >Subject: Re: payment gateways > > > > > >I use Pin and its really good started out with Spreedly in the US > >which was for subscription management, (at that time the PG was > >worldpay I cannot recommend against them enough - but was best option > >at the time for AUD and USD billing) - Pin acquired spreedly an AU > >company acquiring a US company weird eh? > > > >They have a really nice API and billing in USD to your US account and > >their fees are pretty reasonable. Much better all round experience for > >a developer than eway/paypal > > > > > > > >From: William Luu mailto:will@gmail.com>> > >Reply-To: ozDotNet > >mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> > >Date: Monday, 21 April 2014 2:45 pm > >To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> > >Subject: Re: payment gateways > > > >I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN > >(https://pin.net.au) when it launched. > > > > > > > > > >On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price > >mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> wrote: > > > >Hey all, > > > >Hope good Easter is being had by all :) > > > >I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know > >if anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. > > > >Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has > >a good .Net friendly API. > > > >Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with > >the first I've come across without some research. > > > >cheers, > >Stephen > > > > >
RE: payment gateways
Views ? - Is paypal needed to give buyers confidence in the payment process (buyer guarantees / claim investigation / refund process etc)? Particularly say for customers of a small start-up (inc Aussie start-up selling to US customers)? -Original Message- From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On Behalf Of Jorke Odolphi Sent: Tuesday, 22 April 2014 12:00 PM To: Jiri Kosar; ozDotNet Subject: Re: payment gateways Straight out PIN is much simpler - business model and API, it¹s quite similar to stripe in the US. Its been a while but last time I checked you still need a merchant account for Eway, if I was Œbootstrapping¹ a business today that was going to deliver a slick experience with minimal cost upfront - I¹d be using PIN. Eway has been around for a long time - they¹re very good, and I¹ve supported their platform for a long time (registering COM components etc on win2k) - they¹re great if you have a bricks and mortar business already with a merchant account. They also appear to have turned into the Godaddy of payments here, without being cheap. On 22/04/2014 10:26 am, "Jiri Kosar" wrote: >Hi Jorke , > >I've just read your part about eway, Can you be more specific what you >didn't like about eway api? I'm just curious, because I haven't >found it difficult or not working. I'll have a look at your recommendation. > >Thank you >Jiri > > > > Original message ---- >From: Jorke Odolphi >Date: >To: ozDotNet >Subject: Re: payment gateways > > >I use Pin and its really good started out with Spreedly in the US >which was for subscription management, (at that time the PG was >worldpay I cannot recommend against them enough - but was best option >at the time for AUD and USD billing) - Pin acquired spreedly an AU >company acquiring a US company weird eh? > >They have a really nice API and billing in USD to your US account and >their fees are pretty reasonable. Much better all round experience for >a developer than eway/paypal > > > >From: William Luu mailto:will@gmail.com>> >Reply-To: ozDotNet >mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> >Date: Monday, 21 April 2014 2:45 pm >To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> >Subject: Re: payment gateways > >I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN >(https://pin.net.au) when it launched. > > > > >On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price >mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> wrote: > >Hey all, > >Hope good Easter is being had by all :) > >I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know >if anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. > >Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has >a good .Net friendly API. > >Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with >the first I've come across without some research. > >cheers, >Stephen >
RE: payment gateways
Simple is good. I did get an email from someone at eway who mentioned that its not necessary to get bank set up before using eway account. Might still need it down the track, will investigate. -Original Message- From: "Jorke Odolphi" Sent: 22/04/2014 9:59 AM To: "Jiri Kosar" ; "ozDotNet" Subject: Re: payment gateways Straight out PIN is much simpler - business model and API, it¹s quite similar to stripe in the US. Its been a while but last time I checked you still need a merchant account for Eway, if I was Œbootstrapping¹ a business today that was going to deliver a slick experience with minimal cost upfront - I¹d be using PIN. Eway has been around for a long time - they¹re very good, and I¹ve supported their platform for a long time (registering COM components etc on win2k) - they¹re great if you have a bricks and mortar business already with a merchant account. They also appear to have turned into the Godaddy of payments here, without being cheap. On 22/04/2014 10:26 am, "Jiri Kosar" wrote: >Hi Jorke , > >I've just read your part about eway, Can you be more specific what you >didn't like about eway api? I'm just curious, because I haven't found >it difficult or not working. I'll have a look at your recommendation. > >Thank you >Jiri > > > > Original message >From: Jorke Odolphi >Date: >To: ozDotNet >Subject: Re: payment gateways > > >I use Pin and its really good started out with Spreedly in the US which >was for subscription management, (at that time the PG was worldpay I >cannot recommend against them enough - but was best option at the time >for AUD and USD billing) - Pin acquired spreedly an AU company >acquiring a US company weird eh? > >They have a really nice API and billing in USD to your US account and >their fees are pretty reasonable. Much better all round experience for a >developer than eway/paypal > > > >From: William Luu mailto:will@gmail.com>> >Reply-To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> >Date: Monday, 21 April 2014 2:45 pm >To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> >Subject: Re: payment gateways > >I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN >(https://pin.net.au) when it launched. > > > > >On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price >mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> wrote: > >Hey all, > >Hope good Easter is being had by all :) > >I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if >anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. > >Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a >good .Net friendly API. > >Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the >first I've come across without some research. > >cheers, >Stephen >
Re: payment gateways
Straight out PIN is much simpler - business model and API, it¹s quite similar to stripe in the US. Its been a while but last time I checked you still need a merchant account for Eway, if I was Œbootstrapping¹ a business today that was going to deliver a slick experience with minimal cost upfront - I¹d be using PIN. Eway has been around for a long time - they¹re very good, and I¹ve supported their platform for a long time (registering COM components etc on win2k) - they¹re great if you have a bricks and mortar business already with a merchant account. They also appear to have turned into the Godaddy of payments here, without being cheap. On 22/04/2014 10:26 am, "Jiri Kosar" wrote: >Hi Jorke , > >I've just read your part about eway, Can you be more specific what you >didn't like about eway api? I'm just curious, because I haven't found >it difficult or not working. I'll have a look at your recommendation. > >Thank you >Jiri > > > > Original message ---- >From: Jorke Odolphi >Date: >To: ozDotNet >Subject: Re: payment gateways > > >I use Pin and its really good started out with Spreedly in the US which >was for subscription management, (at that time the PG was worldpay I >cannot recommend against them enough - but was best option at the time >for AUD and USD billing) - Pin acquired spreedly an AU company >acquiring a US company weird eh? > >They have a really nice API and billing in USD to your US account and >their fees are pretty reasonable. Much better all round experience for a >developer than eway/paypal > > > >From: William Luu mailto:will@gmail.com>> >Reply-To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> >Date: Monday, 21 April 2014 2:45 pm >To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> >Subject: Re: payment gateways > >I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN >(https://pin.net.au) when it launched. > > > > >On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price >mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> wrote: > >Hey all, > >Hope good Easter is being had by all :) > >I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if >anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. > >Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a >good .Net friendly API. > >Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the >first I've come across without some research. > >cheers, >Stephen >
Re: payment gateways
Hi Jorke , I've just read your part about eway, Can you be more specific what you didn't like about eway api? I'm just curious, because I haven't found it difficult or not working. I'll have a look at your recommendation. Thank you Jiri Original message From: Jorke Odolphi Date: To: ozDotNet Subject: Re: payment gateways I use Pin and its really good – started out with Spreedly in the US which was for subscription management, (at that time the PG was worldpay – I cannot recommend against them enough - but was best option at the time for AUD and USD billing) - Pin acquired spreedly – an AU company acquiring a US company – weird eh? They have a really nice API and billing in USD to your US account – and their fees are pretty reasonable. Much better all round experience for a developer than eway/paypal From: William Luu mailto:will@gmail.com>> Reply-To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> Date: Monday, 21 April 2014 2:45 pm To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> Subject: Re: payment gateways I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN (https://pin.net.au) when it launched. On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> wrote: Hey all, Hope good Easter is being had by all :) I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a good .Net friendly API. Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the first I've come across without some research. cheers, Stephen
Re: payment gateways
Hi All, I've been using eway (www.eway.com.au) for couple years now and quite happy with it. Does integrate easily with dotnetnuke nbstore as well as magento, because you can find sample code for it. I haven't recently compared eway pricing with some other gateway, but few years back it was a good choice if you want Australian company without hassle of making your own interface with a bank. Jiri Original message From: Jorke Odolphi Date: To: ozDotNet Subject: Re: payment gateways I use Pin and its really good – started out with Spreedly in the US which was for subscription management, (at that time the PG was worldpay – I cannot recommend against them enough - but was best option at the time for AUD and USD billing) - Pin acquired spreedly – an AU company acquiring a US company – weird eh? They have a really nice API and billing in USD to your US account – and their fees are pretty reasonable. Much better all round experience for a developer than eway/paypal From: William Luu mailto:will@gmail.com>> Reply-To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> Date: Monday, 21 April 2014 2:45 pm To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> Subject: Re: payment gateways I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN (https://pin.net.au) when it launched. On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> wrote: Hey all, Hope good Easter is being had by all :) I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a good .Net friendly API. Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the first I've come across without some research. cheers, Stephen
Re: payment gateways
I use Pin and its really good - started out with Spreedly in the US which was for subscription management, (at that time the PG was worldpay - I cannot recommend against them enough - but was best option at the time for AUD and USD billing) - Pin acquired spreedly - an AU company acquiring a US company - weird eh? They have a really nice API and billing in USD to your US account - and their fees are pretty reasonable. Much better all round experience for a developer than eway/paypal From: William Luu mailto:will@gmail.com>> Reply-To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> Date: Monday, 21 April 2014 2:45 pm To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> Subject: Re: payment gateways I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN (https://pin.net.au) when it launched. On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> wrote: Hey all, Hope good Easter is being had by all :) I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a good .Net friendly API. Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the first I've come across without some research. cheers, Stephen
Re: payment gateways
I've never used one, but there was a bit of hype around PIN (https://pin.net.au) when it launched. On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Price wrote: > Hey all, > Hope good Easter is being had by all :) > I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if > anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. > Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a > good .Net friendly API. > Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the > first I've come across without some research. > cheers, > Stephen
RE: payment gateways
Hi Geoff, Yep, it’s the classic one. I looked at RAPID when it came out but decided against it for some reason. Can’t recall why. Sounds like I’ll talk to you further about it then. Regards, Greg Dr Greg Low 1300SQLSQL (1300 775 775) office | +61 419201410 mobile│ +61 3 8676 4913 fax SQL Down Under | Web: <http://www.sqldownunder.com/> www.sqldownunder.com From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On Behalf Of Geoff Appleby Sent: Monday, 21 April 2014 1:48 PM To: ozDotNet Subject: Re: payment gateways Hey Stephen, As an Eway employee I probably can't recommend any where else, but it's nice to hear others saying good things about us :) Since I'm a Dev and not in sales I can't offer any sort of special pricing, but I can help with any implementation questions that may come up. (And who knows, mentioning me may not hurt? I can't promise anything and I've only been with the company 6 months...) Hey Greg, are you using the classic shared payment page or the responsive one that's a part of RAPID? If you use RAPID, I have help :) I added a new feature just recently (went live maybe 4 weeks ago I guess) where you can predefine surcharges for transactions based on credit card type, and we'll automatically adjust the total for you based on the card number entered. You can define them on the shared page settings page in MyEway. This only works if you're redirecting customers to the responsive shared page, not direct payment calls. HTH :) (and I'm happy answer any further questions if I'm able) --Geoff On Apr 21, 2014 12:24 PM, "Stephen Price" mailto:step...@perthprojects.com> > wrote: Hey all, Hope good Easter is being had by all :) I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a good .Net friendly API. Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the first I've come across without some research. cheers, Stephen
Re: payment gateways
Hey Stephen, As an Eway employee I probably can't recommend any where else, but it's nice to hear others saying good things about us :) Since I'm a Dev and not in sales I can't offer any sort of special pricing, but I can help with any implementation questions that may come up. (And who knows, mentioning me may not hurt? I can't promise anything and I've only been with the company 6 months...) Hey Greg, are you using the classic shared payment page or the responsive one that's a part of RAPID? If you use RAPID, I have help :) I added a new feature just recently (went live maybe 4 weeks ago I guess) where you can predefine surcharges for transactions based on credit card type, and we'll automatically adjust the total for you based on the card number entered. You can define them on the shared page settings page in MyEway. This only works if you're redirecting customers to the responsive shared page, not direct payment calls. HTH :) (and I'm happy answer any further questions if I'm able) --Geoff On Apr 21, 2014 12:24 PM, "Stephen Price" wrote: > Hey all, > > Hope good Easter is being had by all :) > > I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if > anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. > > Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a > good .Net friendly API. > > Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the > first I've come across without some research. > > cheers, > Stephen >
RE: payment gateways
Same here. Very happy with them on most things. Their shared payment page is the easiest but it’s got limitations. For example, you could ask people which sort of card, and apply an appropriate surcharge but you can’t then lock down which sort of card they use at checkout. They could say they will use a Visa in your processing, let you work out an amount, but then they’ll choose Amex at checkout (which should have been more expensive). They don’t have any answer for this sort of thing except to use the API which is actually pretty good. Regards, Greg Dr Greg Low 1300SQLSQL (1300 775 775) office | +61 419201410 mobile│ +61 3 8676 4913 fax SQL Down Under | Web: <http://www.sqldownunder.com/> www.sqldownunder.com From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On Behalf Of Anthony Borton Sent: Monday, 21 April 2014 12:50 PM To: ozDotNet Subject: RE: payment gateways Hey Stephen, Easter being spent with jetlag and man-flu :) I’m using eWay on two sites and have found them to be very good. Never had a problem with them and I’ve found their support to be great on the couple of occasions I have used it. Cheers Anthony Borton Senior ALM Trainer/Consultant Visual Studio ALM MVP Enhance ALM Pty Ltd From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com <mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com> [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On Behalf Of Stephen Price Sent: Monday, 21 April 2014 12:24 PM To: ozDotNet Subject: payment gateways Hey all, Hope good Easter is being had by all :) I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a good .Net friendly API. Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the first I've come across without some research. cheers, Stephen
Re: payment gateways
Cool. thanks. not cool re feeling crap tho. Hope the man-flu is short lived! I looked at the eWay .Net examples and they looked pretty old but guess they still work. :) cheers, Stephen On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 10:50 AM, Anthony Borton wrote: > Hey Stephen, > > > > Easter being spent with jetlag and man-flu J > > > > I’m using eWay on two sites and have found them to be very good. Never had > a problem with them and I’ve found their support to be great on the couple > of occasions I have used it. > > > > Cheers > > > > Anthony Borton > > Senior ALM Trainer/Consultant > > Visual Studio ALM MVP > > Enhance ALM Pty Ltd > > > > *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto: > ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] *On Behalf Of *Stephen Price > *Sent:* Monday, 21 April 2014 12:24 PM > *To:* ozDotNet > *Subject:* payment gateways > > > > Hey all, > > > > Hope good Easter is being had by all :) > > > > I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if > anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. > > > > Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a > good .Net friendly API. > > > > Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the > first I've come across without some research. > > > > cheers, > > Stephen >
RE: payment gateways
Hey Stephen, Easter being spent with jetlag and man-flu ☺ I’m using eWay on two sites and have found them to be very good. Never had a problem with them and I’ve found their support to be great on the couple of occasions I have used it. Cheers Anthony Borton Senior ALM Trainer/Consultant Visual Studio ALM MVP Enhance ALM Pty Ltd From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On Behalf Of Stephen Price Sent: Monday, 21 April 2014 12:24 PM To: ozDotNet Subject: payment gateways Hey all, Hope good Easter is being had by all :) I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a good .Net friendly API. Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the first I've come across without some research. cheers, Stephen
payment gateways
Hey all, Hope good Easter is being had by all :) I'm going to need some kind of payment gateway and would love to know if anyone has any good/bad experiences with them. Looking for something that deals with Australian banks, as well as has a good .Net friendly API. Have been looking at what eWay can do but don't want to rush in with the first I've come across without some research. cheers, Stephen