Amazon's automated grocery store of the future opens
Monday
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[January 22, 2018]
By Jeffrey Dastin
SEATTLE (Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc will
open its checkout-free grocery store to the public on Monday after more
than a year of testing, the company said, moving forward on an
experiment that could dramatically alter brick-and-mortar retail.
The Seattle store, known as Amazon Go, relies on cameras and sensors to
track what shoppers remove from the shelves, and what they put back.
Cash registers and checkout lines become superfluous - customers are
billed after leaving the store using credit cards on file.
For grocers, the store's opening heralds another potential disruption at
the hands of the world's largest online retailer, which bought high-end
supermarket chain Whole Foods Market last year for $13.7 billion. Long
lines can deter shoppers, so a company that figures out how to eradicate
wait times will have an advantage.
Amazon did not discuss if or when it will add more Go locations, and
reiterated it has no plans to add the technology to the larger and more
complex Whole Foods stores.
The convenience-style store opened to Amazon employees on Dec. 5, 2016
in a test phase. At the time, Amazon said it expected members of the
public could begin using the store in early 2017.
But there have been challenges, according to a person familiar with the
matter. These included correctly identifying shoppers with similar body
types, the person said. When children were brought into the store during
the trial, they caused havoc by moving items to incorrect places, the
person added.
Gianna Puerini, vice president of Amazon Go, said in an interview that
the store worked very well throughout the test phase, thanks to four
years of prior legwork.
"This technology didn't exist," Puerini said, walking through the
Seattle store. "It was really advancing the state of the art of computer
vision and machine learning."
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An Amazon employee manages inventory in the company's line-free
Seattle store days before the store's public debut, in Seattle,
Washington, U.S., January 18, 2018. Photo taken January 18, 2018.
REUTERS/Jeffrey Dastin
"If you look at these products, you can see they're super similar," she said of
two near-identical Starbucks drinks next to each other on a shelf. One had light
cream and the other had regular, and Amazon's technology learned to tell them
apart.
HOW IT WORKS
The 1800-square-foot (167-square-meter) store is located in an Amazon office
building. To start shopping, customers must scan an Amazon Go smartphone app and
pass through a gated turnstile.
Ready-to-eat lunch items greet shoppers when they enter. Deeper into the store,
shoppers can find a small selection of grocery items, including meats and meal
kits. An Amazon employee checks IDs in the store's wine and beer section.
Sleek black cameras monitoring from above and weight sensors in the shelves help
Amazon determine exactly what people take.
If someone passes back through the gates with an item, his or her associated
account is charged. If a shopper puts an item back on the shelf, Amazon removes
it from his or her virtual cart.
Much of the store will feel familiar to shoppers, aside from the check-out
process. Amazon, famous for dynamic pricing online, has printed price tags just
as traditional brick-and-mortar stores do.
(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in Seattle; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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