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Giuliani: Kim Jong-un 'begged' for summit to take place

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Donald Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani has said North Korea's leader "begged" for their summit to be rescheduled after the US president cancelled it. Speaking at a conference in Israel, Mr Giuliani said Mr Trump's tough stance had forced Pyongyang's hand. Mr Trump called off the summit in May, accusing North Korea of "tremendous anger and open hostility". But plans for the 12 June bilateral in Singapore were revived after a conciliatory response from Pyongyang. Mr Giuliani was speaking at an investment conference in Israel when he made the remark. The Wall Street Journal first reported that Mr Giuliani said: "Well, Kim Jong-un got back on his hands and knees and begged for it, which is exactly the position you want to put him in." Trump-Kim to meet on Sentosa island What not to say to North Korea Dennis Rodman: The Trump-Kim matchmaker? How Kim the outcast became popular Mr Giuliani is an attorney for the president tackling the Russia collusio

Samsung Pay could come to more non-premium smartphones

Samsung Pay could come to more non-premium smartphones

Samsung Pay could soon make its way to J series phones in India, says report.



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Samsung Pay works with credit cards, gift cards, and even membership cards.
Samsung Pay could end up on even more devices, starting with the Galaxy J series phones in India, Mashable reports.
Samsung Pay lets you save credit cards, gift cards, and other payment methods onto your smartphone and then use it when paying. Your phone mimics your cards right down to the magnetic signal, so it works in most places that accept credit cards thanks to Magnetic Secure Transmission (MST) and Near Field Communication (NFC). Just tap your device against the payment terminal and you're generally good to go.
But only if you've owned a premium smartphone. Samsung Pay generally only features in pricier phones like the Galaxy S7 and Galaxy s7 Edge, though it has also come to the Galaxy A line and Samsung Gear S watches.
Now, according to Mashable's sources, Samsung has quietly been adding the technology to cheaper phones too, and plans to experiment with the idea in India -- where Samsung Pay recently launched -- in the next few months. (Mashable correctly reported the launch of Samsung Pay in India with anonymous sources as well.)
Why India, instead of other Samsung Pay countries like South Korea, Australia, the US, UK, Brazil, and China? For one thing, Counterpoint analyst Tarun Pathak told Mashable that out of the 85 million Samsung smartphones in India, 25 million are the cheaper Galaxy J devices.
Another possibility: last November, India was the subject of a banknote ban that prohibited 500 rupee and 1,000 rupee bills from circulating. In the midst of this currency upheaval, new payment methods like Samsung Pay could help make buying things easier.
Should the experiment be a success, perhaps Samsung's payment service will spread more quickly to other countries where less expensive phones are key, or to cheaper devices in places where Samsung Pay already exists.

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