VIDEO DESCRIPTION:
Discover the hidden powers of Indonesia’s GoPay e-wallet! In this video, I dive deep into the standalone GoPay app and uncover crucial features that are NOT available in the standard Gojek super app. As a traveller in Banda Aceh, Sumatra, I test these features in real-time.
🔓 You’ll learn how to:
• Withdraw CASH from your e-wallet at Indomaret (perfect for travellers leaving Indonesia!)
• Use QRIS Tap for contactless payments
• Top up transportation cards (like Mandiri e-Money) via NFC on your phone
• Access better privacy controls, dark mode, and one-handed operation
• Use handy tools like expense reports, bill splitting, and sending gift money
I also put two major features to the test: successfully withdrawing cash at a local Indomaret and my quest to find a working QRIS Tap terminal in Banda Aceh.
📌 RESOURCES & LINKS:
• My First QRIS/GoPay Tutorial: https://youtu.be/sMF1USBEXqQ
VIDEO TRANSCRIPT:
Good afternoon and welcome back to Planet Doug. I’m in Banda Aceh in Sumatra right now and I’m hanging out at my favorite coffee shop. I’ve been here in Banda Aceh for a little over a month and in that time I’ve been doing a deep dive into QRIS and e-wallets.
Now QRIS is Indonesia’s national QR code payment system. They developed QRIS to standardize QR codes. So the idea is that no matter what e-wallet you’re using—GoPay, OVO, Dana, Shopee Pay—or if you’re using a banking app, whatever banking app you’re using, you can all scan the same QR code.
So, you go into a coffee shop like this one, into a store, into a restaurant, and if you see the QRIS QR code, you can launch your e-wallet, your banking app, whatever it is, scan that QRIS QR code, and transfer payment to them. It’s very convenient, very fast, very efficient, and I love using it.
But when I started testing QRIS for myself, what I decided to do was keep it really simple. So I downloaded the Gojek super app. And the GoPay e-wallet is built into Gojek and that’s all I used the whole time that I was doing my testing.
Then I found out that GoPay the e-wallet you can download it as a separate standalone app. So this gets a little bit technical a little bit complicated but trust me it’s actually very very simple.
GoPay is the e-wallet and it is part of Gojek. So, you can access the GoPay e-wallet from inside the Gojek app or you can download a separate standalone GoPay app and then use that instead. And I thought it didn’t matter which one you used. And I shot an entire video about this. You can see the thumbnail for the video here. Go into the description or go to my YouTube channel, find that video, and you can learn all about QRIS and how to use it. And all my examples were using the Gojek app.
But later on, I discovered I learned about the GoPay standalone app. So, in this video, I’m going to go over all the ways that the GoPay standalone app differs from GoPay inside the full Gojek super app. And as I go over all of these features and added benefits, I’m going to be learning a lot more about QRIS. We’re going to be learning about new things that you can do with QRIS, and I’m going to include actual examples of me out there in the real world doing those things. So, stick around for those later in the video.
So, I think this video will be interesting for people who use the GoPay e-wallet and Gojek, but it will be interesting for other people as well because we’re going to be talking about QRIS in general and all the things you can do with the GoPay e-wallet app. I’m pretty sure you can also do these things with Dana, with OVO, with the other options on the market.
So, let’s dive into this. Let’s start with the obvious. The GoPay e-wallet app, the standalone app, is just a lot simpler and easier. And that makes a lot of sense when you think about it because the Gojek super app is actually a collection of apps. When you look at the homepage, you see GoRide, GoCar, GoFood, GoSend, GoMart. And each one of those is technically a separate app. And GoPay is just one of many.
So the Gojek screen is very cluttered. Has a lot of buttons. And then the GoPay portion is just this tiny sliver with a small pay button and a top up button. It works perfectly fine, but the screen is a little bit more cluttered. And of course, the app itself when you download it is bigger, requires more memory and more processing power.
So depending on how old your phone is, if you have an older phone with less memory, less processing power, maybe it would struggle a little bit with Gojek. And then if you use the GoPay standalone app requires less memory, less processing power and maybe it works just a lot more smoothly, more efficiently.
And one thing I noticed is that when I use the Gojek app, quite often the balance doesn’t show up in the GoPay segment. It’s just like a series of dots. The actual balance in my e-wallet, it doesn’t appear. And I don’t know why I kind of refresh refresh and the balance won’t show up. But when I use the standalone GoPay app, the balance is always there. And of course, the number is much larger. It’s more visible and easier to see. It’s right there and bigger.
So that makes GoPay a little bit easier to interact with just as in terms of the interface. And you’ll notice that how you scan a QR code is quite different and that is a big advantage for many people using GoPay.
On Gojek as I pointed out. If you want to scan a QR code, you click on this little pay button. It’s quite small and for me that’s not an issue because I hold my phone in my left hand and then when I want to scan a QR code I just hold it here and then I use my index finger on my right hand and I hit the pay button and that opens up the scanner as you can see here.
To me that’s not an issue because that’s how I hold my phone. But a lot of people they like to hold their phone in one hand and hit the buttons with their thumb. And with the Gojek app, it’s hard to do because it’s way up here at the top. But the GoPay app has a large green button at the bottom there and it’s labeled QRIS. It’s not labeled pay. But if you’re holding your phone like this and then your thumb just naturally lands right on the QRIS button. So you can sort of operate it with one hand easier than if you’re using the full Gojek super app.
Another difference that might be important to a lot of people is that the GoPay standalone app has a privacy setting. So up here at the top, you can see the balance in my e-wallet, but maybe when you’re out in public standing at a cash register, lots of people around, and if you have a lot of money in your e-wallet, maybe you don’t want people to be able to see it.
So with the GoPay standalone app, there’s a button up here. You click on the button and it hides your balance. It’s like a little eye. The eye closes and now there’s privacy. Nobody can see how much money is in your e-wallet. And that feature is not available on the Gojek app. The privacy button is only available with the GoPay standalone app.
And there’s one other very useful feature in terms of the interface on GoPay. If you scan or scroll all the way down to the bottom, you’ll see almost like a light switch and it says, “Which side are you on? Dark or light.” So, this is the light theme. And if you click on this button, see that? It changes to a dark theme.
And a lot of people like that. Personally, I don’t. I don’t change any of my laptops or tablets or phones to dark layout for some reason. I don’t like the white lettering on a black background, but a lot of people really like that. And the GoPay app gives you the option. So, you can choose between this dark layout, looks like that, or go all the way down to the bottom, click on the button, and now you’re in the light layout. And that’s how I prefer it. But yeah, you have a choice here.
And you can’t, as far as I’m aware, you can’t do that with the Gojek app. I mean, I could be wrong about a lot of these things because, as I said, the Gojek is a super app with a lot of features, a lot of menus, and I’ve explored it as much as I can and gone into all the settings and menus and features. Maybe I missed something, but I couldn’t find the privacy button. It doesn’t seem to exist. I couldn’t find the dark light theme switch. Those things don’t seem to be available on Gojek. Those are only available on GoPay.
But there’s more to the GoPay app than just the different layout. There are actually features and really big important features that are available in GoPay through the standalone app that aren’t available when you use GoPay through the Gojek super app.
That this was a complete surprise to me in my first video. As I said, I only used Gojek the entire time. So, by the time I finished all of my experimenting and edited the video and uploaded it, I had no idea that these features even existed, people had to tell me about them in the comments. And then when I downloaded the standalone GoPay app and started exploring, I was like, “Oh, oh, oh, that feature, that feature.”
So, there are some real advantages to using the GoPay standalone app. And probably the biggest is something that they call QRIS Tap. And this blew my mind. I had no idea that this was even a possibility.
The idea is, of course, normally you scan a QR code. That’s the foundation of QRIS. That’s the foundation of e-wallets in general. You scan QR codes. But with QRIS Tap, you don’t even have to do that. You’re using the QRIS system, but you’re just tapping on a scanner with your phone and the payment just goes through automatically.
I guess most people in the world are familiar with this because everyone is doing it with their phone already using Google Pay, Apple Pay, things like that where they’ve linked their credit card to their phone through Google Pay and they just go around just tapping their phone.
It’s particularly popular, I think, here in Indonesia for transportation where in places like Jakarta, you can get on and off buses and in and out of the subway just by tapping, which makes sense because you got thousands of people going through the turnstiles all day long. You can’t have everyone stopping to scan a QR code, select an amount, hit enter, hit confirm. No, you need speed. You need efficiency. And that’s what QRIS Tap gives you.
So instead of like you go into the QRIS menu, you hit the QRIS button and then you just pick down here at the bottom, it says QRIS Tap. So instead of scanning the QR code, you select QRIS Tap and now you’re ready to go.
And then the business of course has to be set up for this. And then all you do is put your phone on top of the scanner, hold it there. You don’t really tap it, of course. You’re supposed to place your phone on the scanner and through NFC, it will make a connection and process the payment.
So, you don’t have to do anything. Hit QRIS Tap, put your phone down, beep, it pays, and you’re done. I haven’t done it yet. So, that’s going to be I’m going to test this for myself later in the video. I’m going to go to some kind of business that I think maybe they have QRIS Tap technology, which is very exciting for me because I’ve never used it in my entire life, not once in any form. I’ve never used Google Pay, you know, Apple Pay. I’ve never used credit card tapping to pay. I’ve never done it anywhere.
So, this is going to be a brand new experience for me. And that’s what it looks like on GoPay. You can see they’re giving you a graphic illustration of just taking your phone and placing it on top of an EDC scanner. That may be what they call them.
So QRIS Tap is only available through the standalone GoPay e-wallet. You can, as I keep saying, you can use the GoPay e-wallet through Gojek. Works fine, but you don’t have QRIS Tap. That’s only available in the standalone GoPay e-wallet app. I hope that’s clear.
Another big feature that’s only available with the GoPay standalone app is the ability to top up your cash card. So, one thing I learned in my time here in Banda Aceh is that to ride on the buses, I needed some kind of a cash card. And you can use a variety of cards that are available from all the different banks here. And I chose the Mandiri e-money card because it was available at Indomaret. I could just go into Indomaret and buy one of these cards.
But it is a cash card and you put money on the card and then you can use this to tap into buses, trains, things like that all across Indonesia. So, I’ve been using this in Banda Aceh. You can use this for purchases as well. It’s a little bit slow and inefficient, but you can go into some stores like Indomaret and you can pay for purchases using this card. I prefer an e-wallet. It’s faster.
But anyway, you have money on your card and when you run out, you need to top up. And what I discovered is that you can do that with GoPay through NFC. And that was a complete surprise as well.
It’s like any other NFC top up. You take your card and then you just put it with NFC enabled. Put it on the back of your phone, hold it there for a few seconds, and then it will link to your phone with NFC and then you get a menu. How much would you like to top up directly from your GoPay e-wallet directly onto your card? And of course, you can check the balance of your card.
So, I was like, wow. I mean, that just blew my mind when I realized that I could do that because it added another layer of convenience. I don’t have to go into Indomaret and go through the long complicated process, which usually fails, of them topping up my cash card. I can have complete control over it, monitor my balance, and top it up directly from the GoPay e-wallet.
But the theme of this video, you can’t do that through Gojek. That feature is not available through the Gojek super app. You have to have the GoPay standalone app to do that.
Another feature that I learned about that is only available in the GoPay standalone app is the ability to withdraw money in cash. And this is really important for two reasons.
I mean, for most local people here in Indonesia, the obvious utility of that feature is they’re out there in the world and they actually need money. Their e-wallet isn’t cutting it. They need cash, but maybe there’s no ATM. They forgot their bank card. Their bank card isn’t working. They don’t have any cash, but they have a balance in their e-wallet.
So with the withdraw function you can just go into Indomaret go into like select withdraw how much you’d like to withdraw 100,000 rupiah and then you show it to the clerk at Indomaret and then they scan the code or whatever they do and then they give you actual cash. I think that’s so useful and I had no idea you could do that.
But you can’t do that with Gojek only with the separate GoPay e-wallet app. And the second reason this is such an important feature is for foreigners because as a friend of mine pointed out in the comments, what happens if you just came to Indonesia on a holiday, you put money in your Indonesian GoPay e-wallet. Now you leave the country. Oh, I’ve got all this money in this e-wallet that I can’t use anymore. At least you can’t use it in Indonesia because you’ve left the country. It feels like your money is locked into this e-wallet and you can’t access it.
But you can with this withdraw feature. You can cash out your e-wallet. So you’ve been in Indonesia for 3 weeks, your holiday is over. You’ve got some money left over. All you do is go to Indomaret or some other stores and then you cash out. You see how much you have and you say, “Oh, I’d like to withdraw 500,000 rupiah.” And then you can withdraw your balance in cash. And now your balance is down to zero. Essentially, you’ve cashed out your e-wallet. Your e-wallet is still there. It’s still functional, but your balance has been reduced to zero because you cashed out. You just withdrew the money that was there.
And I think that’s an incredibly useful feature. Again, not available through Gojek, only available in the standalone app.
Finally, and I’ll end with this list of features, there are a variety of smaller features that are only available through the GoPay app. This is kind of funny because I was trying to confirm to myself that, okay, before I make this video, I better know what I’m talking about. And if I say it’s not available in Gojek, I better be sure of what I’m saying.
So I will go to Gojek and I’m looking for this feature. And to my surprise, I found these features on Gojek. There was a button for them. And I thought, oh, you can do this on Gojek. But every time I clicked on the button for that feature in Gojek, it said, oh, please download GoPay to get this.
So they have the button on Gojek. It’s listed, but when you try to turn on that feature, you get a nice friendly window from a guy saying, “Oh, if you want to use this feature, please go to GoPay. It’s not available here. Please download the GoPay separate e-wallet.”
And in those features there are smaller things not as big as QRIS Tap and withdrawing money topping up your e-money card but they can be useful to a lot of people.
So for example with GoPay e-wallet app you can get an expense report like a budget at the end of the week at the end of the month you click on the expense report and it breaks it down for you exactly how much money you spent when you spent it and then it breaks it down into category. How much you spent on food, how much you spent on transportation, drinks, pharmacy, whatever the categories are. And it’s just a handy little budgeting feature.
There’s also a feature where you can send people gifts and it comes in a themed envelope. So, it’s your friend’s birthday, you forgot to get them a present and then you thought, “Oh, I’ll just send them some money through GoPay.” And that’s a little bit eh, you know, oh, money, thank you very much. But GoPay has a themed envelope, so you can actually send it to them inside a birthday card. And the birthday card opens up and says, “Happy birthday, and here’s a gift from me. Treat yourself to a nice cup of coffee.” And you can, you have, you know, themes like love for Valentine’s Day, you know, Christmas theme, happy birthday theme, all these different holiday special event themes.
So that’s only available on GoPay. Another one is the ability to split a bill. So if you’re having lunch with five of your friends, the bill comes, one person pays for it with their e-wallet, covers the whole bill, and then there’s an automated feature where you split it amongst everyone, and everybody gets sent a QR code for the amount that they owe.
So rather than fumbling in their wallets, oh, how much do I owe you? Oh, do you have can you break a 50? Can you do this? Can you do that, you just everybody gets a QR code and they just scan the code on their e-wallet and sends the amount they owe into your e-wallet.
And the cool thing about that that I realized later on is that you don’t have to do that right away, right? Like you’ve ended the lunch if everybody’s paying in cash. It’s a little bit awkward. I cover the bill and then you oh, you owe me 35,000, you owe me 40. How much do you have? You know, everybody’s fumbling with money. You’re trying to sort it all out in real time and it’s just a bit awkward.
But with the split feature, people can just do it later, right? No one has to do it there at the table. They can go home at the end of the day and oh yeah, I got to reimburse Doug for that lunch we had. You’re done. So it can be done later on and you don’t have all of this social awkwardness. So I find that to be an interesting feature.
Another feature available only in the GoPay e-wallet, maybe the final one I’ll talk about is that you can request money in a polite way. So, if somebody owes you money, maybe they’ve forgotten, it’s past due, whatever it is, you can send them a little QR code reminder. So, you can request money from somebody and it just sends them a little nudge. Oh, that 35,000 rupiah and it gives them, this is the key, it gives them a QR code that will automatically send the money from their e-wallet into your e-wallet.
So, it’s just a polite little nudge that you can do through the GoPay e-wallet standalone app, but that feature is not available in the Gojek super app.
There are almost definitely other differences between GoPay and the Gojek super app that I haven’t highlighted. There might even be a big feature that I just don’t even know about. So, if someone out there is a QRIS master like me, yeah, put it down in the comments. You can help other people discover new things about the GoPay e-wallet app that you can do.
Of course, this isn’t to say that it’s better than the Gojek super app. In fact, for Indonesians and for foreign visitors, my recommendation would be get both. Why not? It doesn’t cost anything. It doesn’t hurt.
What I would do, if I were a foreign visitor coming to Indonesia, I would download the Gojek super app, open an account. Very, very simple. Phone number, email address, you’re pretty much done. Name, and you’re done.
So download the Gojek super app, open an account, then download the GoPay standalone e-wallet app and then you just say I already have an account and you enter your phone number and that automatically links it to the Gojek super app because they both access the same balance.
So, when you’re looking at your e-wallet balance in Gojek, it’s the same money as what’s in your balance when you look at it from the GoPay standalone app. They’re physically two separate apps, but they’re all just part of the same thing.
And when you do that, of course, you have access to all the Gojek features. For example, GoFood, GoRide, GoCar. So you can use Gojek when you want to have food delivered to your hotel. So you just open up Gojek, order food, and the GoPay e-wallet is embedded into Gojek. So you order the food and pay for it from inside the same app. Same thing with GoCar, GoRide, GoMart, all of them, the whole Go universe, right?
So yeah, get both. It’s the same account, same balance. They work beautifully together.
So, drum roll, please. Going to end this video with me trying to do two new things with QRIS and with GoPay that I’ve never done before. I’m going to try to withdraw money. I’m going to do that first because there’s an Indomaret right around the corner. I don’t have high hopes for this, but who knows, maybe it can be done. I have a feeling that not many people in Banda Aceh use this feature. So if I go into this local neighborhood Indomaret, they might not understand what it is I’m trying to do, but we’ll find out.
And I’m going to try to use QRIS Tap. I’m going to tap for the first time in my entire life. But I may have to make a trip across the city to do that because I’m not aware of any big businesses in this neighborhood that might use QRIS Tap. I think I have to go to a more commercial district like go to a big department store, supermarket, Kentucky Fried Chicken or something that has the appropriate scanner where I can QRIS Tap.
So, let’s go see how we can do these two things in real life.
I guess for the withdrawing money from my e-wallet, I can start the process right here at my table. And up here near your balance, there is a little button that says withdraw. And because I’ve never done it before, because I’m new to the feature, it looks like I get a couple of free ones. Normally there would be a small administrative fee but anyway I click on the withdraw button and now I have a list of places stores where I can do this and they list Indomaret Alfamart or a BCA ATM Alfamidi Dandan and Lawson.
So I can go to all these different places to withdraw money. I’m most comfortable at Indomaret and it looks like there’s normally a 4,000 rupiah fee but it’s free for my first time I guess. So let me click on Indomaret and now I select the amount. So just for fun let’s choose well 150,000 rupiah. Click on the button confirm and withdraw. So I confirm this withdrawal.
Now I have to use my thumb print to verify. There you go. So it said withdrawal at Indomaret. Show this code to the Indomaret cashier. Huh. So, there’s actually a number there and they have to do something with that number. I was hoping it would be like a barcode or a QR code and then they would just scan it and it’s done because that would be obvious. But now I have to show them this withdrawal code and then I guess they have to understand what it is and enter it into their system.
So, let’s go try it out. If it doesn’t work at this Indomaret, maybe I can go to a bigger, more central one and try again. But yeah, let’s go try it out.
There’s my friendly neighborhood Indomaret. It’s actually a big one, but I have had mixed luck at this place in the past when it comes to technology. Let’s see how this works.
GoPay. Yeah, GoPay. Yeah. Withdraw a number. Number number there. I mean like so cell number. Oh, cell phone number. Okay. Thank you. Yeah. Samsung. Okay.
And look at that. I’m honestly amazed that it worked so easily, but I’m very pleased at the same time. So, there you have it. I had this money in my e-wallet and now I withdrew it in cash and I have it in my hand.
The only surprise there, well, I guess a couple of surprises. I was hoping, as I said, it would all be based on a barcode or a QR code and it would be more automated. But you have to show them this number and I had to tell them my phone number and I wasn’t quite ready for that. I mean it’s not a big deal but it is a little bit few more steps than I expected.
So you tell them what you want to do. That young man in there spoke English. He understood me and he needed to know my phone number. Enter that code and then yeah, I got the money.
Let’s go back to my balance and we can see what happened over there. Yep, my balance dropped. So, I’m now down to about 390,000 rupiah.
And this might be a small thing, but one thing I prefer about Gojek is it’s much easier to see your transaction history. So over here, let’s go to Gojek. There’s my balance. You can see my balance hasn’t updated. So that’s what I said. The balance here is not always as accurate. But if I just all I need to do is click on the balance and it automatically opens up transaction history. So there it is. Cash out successful. 150,000 rupiah. I really like that.
But in GoPay when you click on your balance you get all kinds of things but you don’t get a transaction history. It’s not here as far as I can tell. The only way to get your transaction history is to scroll all the way down here where it says transaction history. Click on view all. And now here we can see cash out successful. But it seems like every time I do a transaction, I sort of want to check and with Gojek, it’s very quick and easy. With GoPay, the standalone app, it isn’t here. It isn’t automatic. You got to scroll all the way down, find transaction history, and then click a button. Small thing but yeah in terms of UI for that feature I prefer Gojek.
So there we have it. I withdrew money from my GoPay e-wallet worked beautifully.
For the final test, the final experiment I came all the way down here to the Suzuya Mall. I’m thinking that if any place in Banda Aceh will be set up for QRIS Tap, it’s going to be a shop in here. The Suzuya Mall, the like the Suzuya supermarket seems to be the most modern place in town in terms of technology. I’m going to go there first. I don’t even know how to ask like tap bisa tap. We’ll see what happens. If they can’t do it, maybe I can try KFC. There’s a fancy coffee shop here. I might try a couple of different places and just see. Can I use QRIS Tap in Banda Aceh? Let’s find out.
So, there is a Suzuya. And as always, I think my timing is off. I happen to pick an extremely busy day. This place is jammed with people.
So, I have my purchase. I have GoPay open with QRIS Tap and let’s see how this goes. I see people ahead of me paying with QRIS by scanning QR codes.
I know that can be done here. Bisa QRIS Tap can. Yeah, can member no member.
So, this is looking good actually, except he doesn’t have his own machine. They seem to be sharing them between cash registers. Oh, yeah. Has one now. This is so exciting.
Tap. Yes. Oh, car. Oh, no. Curious. Okay. They’re just curious. Okay. Okay.
So, there it is. I got my milk. But I kind of suspected he didn’t really know what I was saying. I kept trying to say tap like you actually have tap technology QRIS Tap and he did say yes but then when the scanner came out he was just showing me the QR code QRIS as he called it and I being a dummy of course I tried to put my phone onto the scanner hoping that’s what I was supposed to do but when he saw me do that he says no no no no no QRIS so okay so then I had to default back to just scanning the QR code as I normally do.
So, so far, no tap. I’ll try KFC. And I don’t have hope, but we’ll see. We’ll see.
Here I am at KFC. And let’s try again.
And this tap. Yes. Tap.
So they have tap on that machine there. So it looks promising. Tap to pay.
The first time she did it, it just came up with the QR code. Let’s see. Ah, wait a minute. Okay, first step. Scan completed. Oh, invalid parameter. Oh, okay. This is Yeah.
So, another failure, but it was kind of half and half. They had tap to pay, but when I tried to do it with QRIS, it failed. We just got error messages. We tried a couple of times and it just wouldn’t go through. Invalid parameter.
So, they do have tap to pay, but it probably only works with cards, not with QRIS on a smartphone.
So, anyway, I think that is the end of my experiments with GoPay for today. And that brings me to the end of this video and this little experiment learning about the differences between GoPay and the Gojek super app and of course some new things that you can do with QRIS that I wasn’t aware of.
The one like withdrawing money from Indomaret that was amazing that it works so well that was so successful that is such a useful feature and topping up my e-money card from Mandiri I know that works really well that’s a great feature Tap to pay still a little bit of a mystery I think in Suzuya in the supermarket they didn’t have any tap to pay technology at all so it wasn’t a QRIS problem. It was well, I don’t think you could tap with a card there either. They just didn’t have anything like that.
Here at KFC, it was a bit of a middle ground. They clearly had tap to pay technology. It was written right on the scanner. I was really excited to see that, but for some reason, QRIS and my GoPay e-wallet just couldn’t communicate through that tap to pay terminal.
So, I’m assuming that KFC doesn’t have it set up for QRIS Tap right now. It has it for like credit card tap, card like debit card tap, but not smartphone QRIS Tap that. But I’m just guessing. All I know is that it failed every time we tried.
But still, I learned a lot now. I know what it looks like. So, in the future, if I see tap to pay, I know what it looks like and I can try it again in the future maybe in a city outside of Banda Aceh. We’ll see how that goes.
All right, that’s it. Shutting down with this video. I hope you enjoyed that. I hope you learned something. And of course, as I said earlier, if you know something about QRIS, about GoPay, about Dana, about OVO, all the other e-wallets, banking apps, yeah, give other people the benefit of what you know. Put it down in the comments and then I’ll reply to those when I get the chance.
That’s it. Shutting down. See you in the next video.