• roofuskit@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Walgreens CEO, “We lost business due to our locked shelves.”

    CVS: “Hold my beer.”

  • ReverendIrreverence@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I guess I am starting to be okay with “leaning in” and taking advantage off my “old guy” (false) technical ineptitude and will just pretend to shuffle up to a store employee and ask them to open those cabinets for me

  • SoftestSapphic@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    How about I just shop somewhere else?

    There’s not a good reason to do this.

    Any money saved by preventing thefts in our dying world will be lost from the customers who don’t want to be treated like thieves.

  • aceshigh@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    lol good luck with that. when they (and rite aid) started locking up their shelves I stopped buying from them.

  • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I’m waiting for the ultimate reductive customer experience. These drug stores will eventually block off access to the shelves and aisles entirely. Instead, the front point-of-sale area and places where people used to wait in line with their purchases will be turned into a new blocked off large vestibule with floor to ceiling transparent glass. In there (where customers can access) will be kiosks which can control tele-presence robots that will let customers “walk the aisle” to look at product on shelves:

    If you want to make a purchase, you press a button on the kiosk and pay for it, then a human worker inside will fetch the item off the shelf for you and drop it in a transaction drawer where you pick up your item:

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      There used to be a store called Service Merchandise with a similar model. Their floor was just a showroom with one of each item, sort of like a physical catalog. You just grab a ticket to buy stuff and wait for it to come up a conveyor, sort of like airline baggage claim. I always wondered why that model never succeeded: it was so convenient and would be even better now with automation and online shopping, qr codes

    • ReverendIrreverence@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      then a human worker inside will fetch the item off the shelf for you

      Soon enough that robot will complete that whole transaction and the humans will not be needed

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    What I’m always stunned by, who is fucking stupid enough to shop there?! I go to the pharmacy, get my shit, leave. Even when I had a fat income, I still wouldn’t pay those prices.

    Locally, the Winn Dixie is shutting down because the new Publix out competed them. For those not in the know, both are very nice groceries, with Publix a little nicer and way costlier. FFS, we have an Aldi (along with 5 other cheaper groceries) and it’s never as busy as the expensive stores.

    Hit a couple of big box stores waiting on my wife. Never go in those places anymore, especially since inflation went nuts the last couple of years. People pay for that crap?! At Pets Mart a chunk of driftwood is between $20 and $50! Y’all, we’re in Florida, paying for driftwood and sand. The mind boggles.

    tl:dr; American consumers are idiots and I’m not going to hear the whining about high retail prices.