

It opened its early access program at the same time to give select sellers and retailers the chance to try it out. Square first announced that it was going to support Apple's Tap to Pay on iPhones, which the tech giant was seen testing at its visitor center in May, back in June. In its announcement, the company also addressed a potential security concern and said that Apple doesn't store card numbers on the sellers' device or on its servers. Square is hoping that the solution could provide even small merchants an easy way to conduct in-person business. Make sure your video format is set to H.264, and that the preset is set to Match Source. Export your square video by going to File > Export > Media or by simply hitting Command + M. Choose Keep Sequence Settings and adjust the crop by using the position sliders under the Motion tab. Like with any other point-of-sale system, sellers only have to ring up the sale on Square's app and then have the customer pay using contactless credit and debit cards or Apple Pay and other digital wallets. Grab your finished video and place it on the timeline. If you want to save the normally exposed copy of your selfies, simply go to Settings > Photos and Camera > Keep Normal Photo. Click Auto to activate the Auto HDR mode. Once clicked, three options will appearauto, on, and off.

Sure, they need to have a newer iPhone - the oldest model that can run the feature is the iPhone 11 - but they don't need to buy additional hardware to access the feature. To turn on the Auto HDR mode, click the HDR option at the upper part of your camera screen.

That means sellers across the US can now use the company's Point of Sale app to receive payments from customers using just their iPhones anywhere they are. Square has publicly launched its Tap to Pay solution for the iPhone after running an early access program these past few months.
