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This is awesome!!! Great idea!
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starsearcher
quote:


New Computers Make Grocery Carts Smarter

By LIBBY QUAID, Associated Press Writer
Wed May 4, 7:34 AM ET



CHICAGO - New supermarket carts equipped with touch screens will guide you to the tomatoes or toothpicks, let you order deli meat without standing in line and keep a running tally of your purchases.

What they won't do is tell you how many fat grams or calories are in your cart. The idea is to make it easier for consumers to buy, not induce second thoughts that maybe you should put something back on the shelf.

The touch-screen devices are on display at the supermarket industry's annual convention, being held this week in Chicago by the Food Marketing Institute.

"It helps save you time, and it helps save you money. It's all about making it easy for you," IBM Corp. executive Ken Lawler said in an interview.

IBM's "shopping buddy" has been test-marketed at Stop & Shop stores in Massachusetts and is being rolled out this summer. A competing device called Concierge, made by Springboard Retail Networks Inc., is being tested by Canadian stores in June and July.

"The whole model is driven by advertisers' need to get in front of consumers," said Springboard spokesman Michael Alexandor. "They're not watching 30-second TV ads anymore."

People can use a home computer to make their shopping list. Once at the store, they can use their preferred customer card, or a key that fits on a keychain, to log into a system that will organize their trip through the aisles.

If you're looking for toothpicks, you type in the word or pick it from a list, and the screen will display a map showing where you are and where you can find them.

The Concierge and IBM's cart are equipped with the miniature equivalent of GPS, the global positioning satellite system. Sensors can track the devices to see right where your cart is, so that as you turn into an aisle, the screen can show what's there on your list and which items are on sale.

The systems also keep a running tally of what you buy. Many stores do so already by signing shoppers up for preferred customer cards, but what's new is that the store can offer special discounts based on your buying habits or tell you while you're in the store that one of your favorite products is on sale.

You scan the bar codes on items you are buying as you drop them into your cart. When you're finished, the device figures out your bill. Then you swipe your card or key and hand it to the grocery checker or insert it into a self-checkout stand and pay. All that's left is bagging the groceries.

The buddy won't advertise things that don't fit with a shoppers' buying habits, Lawler said: "We don't want it to become a yakky box, or customers will tune out in a heartbeat."

There are differences between the Concierge and the shopping buddy. The Concierge is mounted on the handle of a shopping cart. With the buddy, shoppers get their carts first and then pick up a buddy as they walk into the store. It fits into a holder on the cart.

The Concierge has a barcode scanner on the bottom of the panel, while the buddy has a detachable wand to scan your items.

Shoppers already say they like using the self-checkout stand, said Michael Sansolo, senior vice president of FMI. It's fast as well as entertaining — a mom can have her kids help bag the items, he said. FMI research indicates self-checkouts will outnumber checkouts with grocery clerks in the next 10 years, he said.

Like self-checkouts, a smart grocery cart is a way to help stores make shopping trips more convenient, which, along with discounts and other incentives, can cultivate loyalty, Sansolo said.

That's vital in an industry that has very narrow profit margins and intense competition among different types of stores, from traditional supermarkets to supercenters, discount stores, limited assortment stores and warehouse clubs, as well as natural or organic stores and convenience stores.

The new computerized shopping assistants don't come cheap. To buy the buddy devices and install sensors and charges will cost the average store about $160,000, Lawler said. Alexandor said the Concierge will cost stores about $500 apiece.



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/fit_smar...HNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
house_conXion
Those look pretty awesome, definitely would make my time in a grocery store alot shorter. (ing spend half my time looking for than actually purchasing stuff)

Now if they had a feature were you can pay straight from the touch-screen, grocery shopping would be a hundred times easier.
Fir3start3r
Cool!
Now homeless people can inventory their life easier and joy riders can use it as a speedometer to find out how fast they were going before that high negative impact!
St_Andrew
Cool :D Next step is to make an automatic cart that actually pick up everything you want too :D heh
magikb
quote:
Originally posted by St_Andrew
Cool :D Next step is to make an automatic cart that actually pick up everything you want too :D heh



Yeah.. and deliver it to your house!

Might as well get really lazy while you are at it :happy2:
zoogla
Nice sig, beautiful! ;)
magikb
quote:
Originally posted by fayraree
Nice sig, beautiful! ;)




LOL.. I wonder who the two were behind this brillant idea??
:conf: :conf:


;)
cmack
quote:
Originally posted by magikb
Yeah.. and deliver it to your house!

Might as well get really lazy while you are at it :happy2:


Let's go even lazier here people...stay with me here:

A device implanted that sends signals to the grocery predicting what you want to buy that week (or day etc) so you don't even have to use energy THINKING about it.
rabbitjoker
Integrate the computer with RFiD and it is even more interesting - the end of the check-out scanner.
nycionx
newer technology has made us so much lazier its unbelievable. really unhealthy, but im not compaining heh

magikb
quote:
Originally posted by cmack
Let's go even lazier here people...stay with me here:

A device implanted that sends signals to the grocery predicting what you want to buy that week (or day etc) so you don't even have to use energy THINKING about it.


haha.. gotta love it...

but, if you are too indecisive I think that may be a bit of an overload for this device.. just won't know what to get ur ass at the store :P
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