A friend introduced me to GalaxyCard. I signed up and got approved in no time! I even referred my brother and he got approved in minutes as well.No other credit limit works in my town. GalaxyCard is my preferred way to pay for recharging my phone and to shop online
Awesome App...
Superb Service...Go for It...I got my credit limit within minutes... Fastest Processing applications on Google Play Store.. I highly recommend this app to everyone.. Thanks GalaxyCard!!
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I found about GalaxyCard while surfing on the internet, and applied the same day. Got approved without any hassles in no time at all. I've even referred many of my friends now!I use GalaxyCard to pay at local shops, online shopping and other things. It works at all the stores
You will not need a physical card with GalaxyCard. Your phone becomes your credit limit and you can simply scan any UPI QR code in the GalaxyCard app, or enter your GalaxyCard number in any website to pay.
Since the debut of Marvel Studios' Guardians of the Galaxy in 2014, Star-Lord, Groot, and crew have captivated the hearts of all Marvel fans. Follow their journey through the universe and save the galaxy from Ronan the Accuser, Ego, and the High Evolutionary!
1Only compatible with select Visa, Mastercard, American Express, and Discover cards from participating banks and qualifying Samsung devices. Check with your bank/issuer to ensure that your card is compatible; and check the Samsung Pay Support page for additional compatibility information regarding devices, carriers and cards.
You don't need that bulky wallet anymore. With Samsung Pay, you can add your credit and debit cards right onto your phone. Once everything is set up, you'll be able to make purchases in-person, online, or in an app with only your phone. Soon, you'll be paying the easy way.
Note: To use Samsung Pay on your smart watch with a non-Samsung phone, you must update to Android 6.0 or higher. Full card details cannot be accessed in Samsung Pay. Please contact your bank for assistance with locating a lost card or for questions regarding returns and refunds.
Samsung has you covered, because Samsung Pay has partnered with top U.S. banks and credit card companies, like American Express, Visa, and MasterCard. Plus, we're always expanding our list of financial partners.
Note: Initial setup and card registration for your watch may vary depending on the region or wireless service provider. Even if the cards you're adding have already been registered to your phone, they still need to be activated on your watch.
Before you can use Samsung Pay on your watch, you need to connect your watch to your phone and add a PIN. If you've used Samsung Pay before, you may be able to import cards you've already added. But if it's your first time using Samsung Pay, you'll need to add all the cards yourself.
If there is a card you don't really use anymore, you can remove it from Samsung Pay any time you want. But remember, when you delete a card in Samsung Pay, your physical card will remain active. If you want to cancel your card, contact the card issuer.
While the Samsung Pay app on your watch and phone are similar, they are actually separate. That means payment cards need to be separately removed from both devices. If you want to delete a payment card on your watch, you can do it directly from the watch or from the Galaxy Wearable app.
This [HowTo] has been extensively tested on the Galaxy Book FLEX but should work on the ION and hopefully other models too.
The instructions have a script (TO912.sh) with important verbs and then some services to auto-load it on boot and keep it alive.
I am not an expert myself so I hope one of the linux experts here (or anywhere really) can take the hda-verb commands ( ) and make them a kernel patch to make this card work out of the box on future kernels.
If I do the steps manually and just run:
bash /home/YOURUSER/scripts/TO912.sh
it works! Now when I know where the problem is, I might be able to fix it myself without bothering you further. Thank you for the guide.
Apps aren't designed to run on SD cards, so SD cards should be used for things like music and pictures and file downloads. You can set the camera's storage location to your SD card, but you can't install apps to them. If you succeed in moving apps there, and they somehow work, you will then be complaining about how slow they are. Previously (quite a few years and android versions ago) you were able to format an SD card as an extended hard drive but no longer. With the availability of devices with larger storage capacities, it became unnecessary. SD cards are slower and not meant for the repeat actions of using apps.
You can also check in file manager for downloaded documents stored in the phone, those you can move to the download folder on the SD card. I think you can set your download location to SD card. Go to the settings in the browser(s) you use, scroll for downloads and select it. It should come up with a window on where to download (phone/folder or SD card), select SD card. that should save you some space going forward.
After with my latest experience with the not-at-all helpful chat as well and finding a thread on Reddit with the same issue dated 2 years ago I lost all my hope my issue will be solved by Samsung. I doubt that a solution exists to be honest.
So now I decided to completely delete Samsung Pay from my phone. Enough is enough. Installed Google Pay on both devices, set up the NFC so it uses Google Pay, set the Home button in a way so it brings up Google Pay when double tapping it, and voil, both of my cards are present and working from there. No shoddy additional payment cards/apps whatever, nothing.
I got my new phone and watch about 5 weeks ago and all was set up successfully, all stuff was transfered from my previous phone. Payment with watch was working fine after the initial set up. Then for some reason Samsung sent me a new physical Curve card. I don't know why I was just informed it's on the way. Then it arrived and I activated it in the app.
I did everything as advised, sent in an error log that my phone generated and attached... except it did not do such thing, at least that is what the helpdesk (?) guy claimed. He told me again what to do (which was the same as before). So I did.
Again, nothing. Then he told me to record my screen while sending in the report. I was unable to, as screen recording does not work - I guess because I am adding sensitive information like my CVC number?
I was again told to do a screen recording. Followed all the instructions on how to do that, again, I was unable to record anything while using the Contact us option. So I decided to use my tablet to record me while I am trying to send in a report. All success! Only to be told by app that I can only attach a file that is less than 100 MB. My recorded video is 240 MB. So I uploaded it to Google Drive and shared it + added the link to my report.
Contacted the Chat as well to ask for their advice, but closed the window once I was asked to provide the serial number of my watch (that I already explained to them I ordered 5 weeks ago directly from Samsung and that I have already used for payment with my previous Curve card until my new Curve card arrived) to CHECK if it is COMPATIBLE WITH SAMSUNG PAY! Are these real people or just bots or AI doing nonsense?
I started to play hobby board games in the late 70's with games like Diplomacy and Kingmaker. I dropped out of playing in the 90's, but rediscovered the hobby in the early 00's, after a friend bought us a copy of Settlers of Catan. I now happily play a couple of times a week. (martinfowlercom on BGG)
San Juan and Race for the Galaxy (henceforth "Race") are two card games with a common origin and similar gameplay. I enjoy both games a lot, and they have enough differences in their appeal that I'm happy to own both. The essence of their differences is that Race is the deeper and more complex game, so appeals more to people who are comfortable with more complexity in rules and gameplay. Furthermore Race makes heavy use of icons to explain what its cards do - some find the icons work well once learned, others find them very off-putting.
The common origin is that they are both card games inspired by Puerto Rico, which was the most highly regarded game of its time (mid 2000s), holding a 6 year run at the #1 spot on the Board Game Geek's rankings. Tom Lehmann (the designer for Race) and Andreas Seyfarth (Puerto Rico's designer) worked independently on a Puerto Rico card game. In the end Seyfarth, taking some ideas from Lehmann's work, produced San Juan as a clear successor to Puerto Rico, while Lehmann developed his ideas into Race using a science fiction theme.
Both games share core mechanics of hand management and tableau building. During the game I draw cards into my hand. I can then choose to build some of them, placing them in my tableau. Building a card in the tableau gives me special powers for the remainder of the game and also victory points at the end. But in order to build a card, I need to pay for it by discarding other cards - hand management. Once the tableau reaches a certain size, it's the end of the game, and whoever has the cards that score the most victory points wins.
I first came across this combination of hand management and tableau building with Citadels, although it's not clear if either designer had come across that game. But there is a sense in which you can say that both Race and San Juan are some crazy experimental fusion of Citadels and Puerto Rico. 1
1: This inevitably brings to mind Shut up and Sit Down's Frankenstein experiment, where they strangely pictured San Juan as the lab-forged offspring of Citadels and Race for the Galaxy (?!!!). It always puzzled me as to why they picked this pairing, it later turned out that they'd never played Puerto Rico. Which strikes me as rather like a movie critic saying they'd never seen Casablanca.
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