Computerworld
Quick Menu
Search



Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
Computerworld 2007Subscribe to Computerworld
40 years of the most authoritative source of news and information for IT leaders.

Retailers make trial offers on shopping technologies

They're testing new in-store devices tied to back-end systems
 

Sign up to receive Retail Resource Alerts

January 17, 2005 (Computerworld) -- Tired of waiting in line at your supermarket's deli counter? At select Stop & Shop stores, you can place an order through a tablet-size PC that's mounted on a shopping cart and connected to a wireless network and be notified electronically when your order is ready.
Quincy, Mass.-based Stop & Shop Supermarket Co. is piloting the so-called intelligent shopping cart technology, which was developed by IBM and Cuesol Inc. The system is one of the emerging technologies that will be showcased this week as part of the X05 Smart Store display at the National Retail Federation's annual convention in New York.
But what looks cool to the outside world couldn't happen without the integration of numerous applications, including the supermarket chain's point-of-sale and loyalty-card systems, said Susan Shahroodi, a director of development with the information services group at Ahold USA Inc., which owns Stop & Shop.
When customers scan their loyalty cards, the cart-mounted PC -- which Stop & Shop calls a Shopping Buddy -- can display a wide range of information, including their buying histories, promotional items, personalized coupon offers and store maps.
In addition, the PCs are equipped with laser scanners that can read bar codes as shoppers place items in their carts, eliminating the need to scan the goods at checkout.

Metro AG is testing an IBM device that works with the retailer's systems to guide shoppers to wine they've selected at an interactive kiosk.
Metro AG is testing an IBM device that works with the retailer's systems to guide shoppers to wine they've selected at an interactive kiosk.
The PC, which is equipped with an Opera browser, communicates via radio frequency with an IBM WebSphere server running a shopper-assistant application that was written by Quincy-based Cuesol. Web services and more traditional integration technologies connect the various back-end systems, according to Shahroodi.
Planning Is Key
Stop & Shop has spent about a year on the project, she said. "It's not just, 'Come in and plop down some racks and tablets and you're ready to go.' It's highly integrated, and you have to plan that."
The project was originally a joint development effort with Cuesol and Symbol Technologies Inc. After Symbol pulled out last year, Stop & Shop turned to IBM, Shahroodi said. The company rolled out the IBM hardware at three stores in Massachusetts this month, replacing Symbol models. Plans call for an expansion to 20 more stores in Massachusetts and Connecticut beginning in June, Shahroodi said.
Among the other cutting-edge technologies that will be showcased in the Smart Store at the NRF show is an IBM Everywhere Display that is being piloted by German retailer Metro AG in the wine aisle of its Future Store in Rheinberg.
Metro customers select a bottle of wine at a kiosk, assisted by an application
Continued...
1 | 2 | NEXT  



Print this Story Send Us Feedback E-mail this Story Digg! Digg this Story Slashdot this Story
"As far as federal departments go, the Department of Homeland Security is so new that it will experience its first..." Read more...
"Analysts at Datamonitor say IT budgets are headed south in 2009 -- except in the health care industry (thanks to..." Read more...
Read more retail posts or See all Blogs
Microsoft feared Mac vs. Vista comparison in '05, insider e-mails show
Downed Hadron Collider faces $21M in repairs
Thanks to gamers, the desktop supercomputer arrives
More top stories...
Hosting firm takedown bags 500,000 bots
New Firefox app lets users pimp their browsers
Microsoft to launch major upgrade to NAV ERP software Dec. 1
If you're like our 7,000 survey respondents, your paycheck this year has been flattened and your bonus obliterated. We offer 12 ways to plump up your paycheck.
Microsoft's next OS might more accurately be called Windows 6.5: It's essentially a better version of Vista.
Twitter can be a valuable business tool -- if you know what you're doing. Here's how to juice it for all it's worth.
By helping Intel with loosened 'Vista Capable' requirements, Microsoft 'severely damaged' its credibility, said an HP exec in a newly unsealed Feb. 2006 e-mail.
Get the latest news, reviews and more about Microsoft's newest desktop operating system
Find wage data for 50 IT job titles.
All Zones
Business Continuity Zone
The File Data Management Zone
Security Management Zone
The SAS Zone
Business Intelligence and Analytics Zone
The Enterprise Search Zone
Software as a Service Zone
The Security Zone

Ads by TechWords

See your link here