My first dangerous things Product

@Satur9 i definitely will.

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@Scroogemcduck
What country do you live in?

I’m currently doing a payment conversion like what satur9 mentioned above

United States :us: @Eriequiet

@Eriequiet i keep seeing the thread for purewrist conversation which is amazing.

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Do it! Just make sure you don’t have reloading issues with it and your bank.

Good because what I was going to say is

If you’re currently playing with wearables, you could get a pure wrist and make a more multifunction wearable

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Will the purewrist expire after 3-4 years like a normal card? Just a curious question, I’m not huge on payment ability and they lost me with the fees.

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Yes, ~3 years, likely a little less depending on when you get your card, plus conversion time.

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Of course.

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This unfortunately

I had to replace my original card, which was originally only like 34 months instead of 36

The replacement was only 30 so that sucks, but I’m still hoping that apex payment is approved before I need a replacement

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tenor (75)

@Eriequiet so you have purewrist? and what chip did you convert? Can the chip also do other things aside from payments or would you need a whole other chip on top of your current. For example opening doors or starting car ?

As you asked him directly, I will let him answer, in the mean time, this will be worth a read

@Pilgrimsmaster Thanks great information as I’m still new to all of this.

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Yep I just got my purewrist back, it will be implanted Thursday

In a nut shell because @Pilgrimsmaster linked a great thread

As far as what chip, the purewrist that’s literally the chip… the conversion is essentially just changing its form factor so it can be implanted

The chips are complex and encrypted… so it’s nit possible to “copy” it, you just cut it out of a donor

![image|336x500]

That black chunk in the middle is the chip

And now it’s here

As far as “can you use it for other things?”
Maybe kinda? But for the most part no

All chips have a serial number, and many lower security systems simply check this serial number against its list to see if it likes you

13.56 chips are often locked and can’t be changed, but if you have/build a system where you are able to add new numbers to the “list” then you could use it like that

But you can’t do anything technical with it, as its fixed liked I said

If that makes sense

@Eriequiet can’t wait to see are you going to upload a video ? Thanks for all the information I’m definitely going to look into getting a purewrist.

Probably…
assuming I can figure out video angles

…and I’m not chit chatting or swearing too much as I currently don’t have any topical numbing stuff due to poor planning… and if your not aware the narrow flex’s use a …hefty… needle

@Eriequiet :grimacing:

You can do so much! NFC chips are capable of communicating with a wide range of devices, allowing you to read and write from most cellphones, even. You can make it talk to you, it can be scanned to share text, photos, URLs, crypto addresses, and all sorts of other information. Like others have said, get NFC Tools for your phone and start playing around with it.

Is OK but some chip identification is a bit hit and miss.
Put TagWriter and TagInfo in your tool bag also

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