Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Technology

Amazon Ditches 'Just Walk Out' Checkouts at Its Grocery Stores (gizmodo.com) 161

Amazon is phasing out its checkout-less grocery stores with "Just Walk Out" technology. The company's senior vice president of grocery stores says they're moving away from Just Walk Out, which relied on cameras and sensors to track what people were leaving the store with. From a report: Just over half of Amazon Fresh stores are equipped with Just Walk Out. The technology allows customers to skip checkout altogether by scanning a QR code when they enter the store. Though it seemed completely automated, Just Walk Out relied on more than 1,000 people in India watching and labeling videos to ensure accurate checkouts. The cashiers were simply moved off-site, and they watched you as you shopped.

Instead, Amazon is moving towards Dash Carts, a scanner and screen are embedded in your shopping cart, allowing you to checkout as you shop. These offer a more reliable solution than Just Walk Out, whose impressive technology was truly ahead of its time. Amazon Fresh stores will also feature self check out counters from now on, for people who aren't Amazon members.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Amazon Ditches 'Just Walk Out' Checkouts at Its Grocery Stores

Comments Filter:
  • Ahead of its time? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Comboman ( 895500 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:09PM (#64364098)

    >>whose impressive technology was truly ahead of its time

    Other than being done remotely, how exactly is hiring a human being to follow customers around and bill them for what they take "ahead of its time"? More like a throwback to the (very) old days of picking something off the shelf and telling the shopkeeper to "put it on my tab". The only "innovation" is the off-shoring of labor (which in this day and age is hardly innovative).

    • by PhrostyMcByte ( 589271 ) <phrosty@gmail.com> on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:21PM (#64364148) Homepage

      Indeed, it's less "impressive technology ahead of its time" and more "nice idea ahead of the technology".

      They were likely counting on AI catching up quickly to avoid having that labor all together. Get the cost of AI mistakes down to less than the cost of labor and you win.

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        I'm going to miss it, I can go into the Fresh store down the hill, buy 6 things, and leave in less time than it takes just to wait in line for a cashier or the self-check terminals.

      • "Amazon Offers Free Credits For Startups To Use AI Models Including Anthropic" - I guess their business strategy has changed to letting others do the work for them, either startups to fix their AI or shoppers to do cashier duty.
    • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:24PM (#64364170) Homepage

      Because it's not an accurate description of the process, is why (check the link they cite, though it's paywalled). It was not "remote human beings following customers around and billing them for what they take". It was an automated system, but because it was still in development and not yet trustworthy, they then had humans review every transaction to see if they agreed. In most cases, they did. In cases where they did not, this became training data for the automated system.

      It's unknown how reliable they ultimately got it, what the failure rate was. But the thing is, its competition - having users scan their own items as they put them into their cart - is probably no more expensive to implement, but still lets you offload all checkout labour (except surveillance for shoplifting) to customers themselves. Users lose out on convenience, but from a corporate perspective, it won out.

      • by jhecht ( 143058 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @02:18PM (#64364348)
        With all the unknowns we don't know what went wrong, and Amazon probably won't tell us if they figured it out. I'm not surprised it didn't work well enough to continue. They may have wanted to attract more customers, and the more customers in the store, the harder tracking everybody becomes. And how many people got the creeps from having surveillance all over the place?
      • by Junta ( 36770 )

        Users lose out on convenience

        Talking about versus a 'walk out with your groceries' or versus 'having to go through a cashier'?

        Technically speaking, self scan at the cart is a *tad* more work, but hardly worth mentioning. The same action you were doing to pick up the item takes a slight detour to get scanned.

        Compared to going through a cashier? That always sucked, there was nothing convenient about that. Self-checkout is significant improvement, but spreading that over the trip when you can take your time is more convenient than havin

    • They're trying for a technological impossibility, so instead they faked it ny outsourcing cashiers to a country with a reprehensibly low minimum wage. If they're working remotely in a store in California, they should be subject to California's minimum wage laws.
    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      how exactly is hiring a human [shopkeeper, and]...customers...telling shopkeeper to "put it on my tab"... ahead of its time?

      PHB: "We invented the Homo-Sapien-based product purchase verbal cross-checking system to augment our store management AI for advanced quality assurance!"

      Naive Investor: "Sounds brilliant!, I'll take 10,000 shares of your stock!"

      • PHB: "We invented the Homo-Sapien-based product purchase verbal cross-checking system to augment our store management AI for advanced quality assurance!"

        Naive Investor: "Sounds brilliant!, I'll take 10,000 shares of your stock!"

        US Government: "Patent granted."

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:14PM (#64364116)

    I've seen this implemented in the Apple store in Oakland.

  • by kriston ( 7886 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:15PM (#64364122) Homepage Journal

    After checking out, the receipts took hours to be produced so I was wondering if they were being reviewed by humans. I seem to remember that Amazon Fresh said the system was automated but it's interesting to learn there were 1,000 people watching the cameras.

    • That is all kinds of messed up. Only idiots agree to pay a bill that hasn't been generated. But then money is now treated like water, we can even print it - and if we can't print it we borrow it and maybe pay it back...
      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        You get an email thanking you for shopping, then a couple hours later the receipt arrives via email. Your card isn't charged until you've been sent the receipt. Originally the receipt arrived within half an hour, but then they opened more stores. I generally review the bill, and only once has it been in error (they charged me for one box of pasta instead of two).

    • Seems to me having to remember to check your receipt for accuracy hours later would be a big hassle. I'm guessing that was what Amazon was counting on, since most people aren't going to notice.

      That's like those mini POS terminals restaurants leave on the tables that calculate the tip on the post-tax amount, and then kind of shame you for not leaving at least 20%, by making that the default.

      • Restaurants and shops really should be required to include sales tax and labor in the sticker price instead of making the tax a fucking guessing game of "what jurisdiction is this and how many of which sales taxes am I paying?" and "You get to decide if the waiter gets to eat tonight or not, PWYW" dilemma. Sum it up FFS.
  • Oh good... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by skam240 ( 789197 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:19PM (#64364140)

    Oh good, so I get all of the annoyances of self checkout without an employee standing nearby for when something inevitably gets screwed up. I'll pass, thank you very much.

    • by sinij ( 911942 )

      I'll pass, thank you very much.

      Not before you pay for 6 bottles of Dom Pérignon you picked up in the soft drink isle!

    • Oh good, so I get all of the annoyances of self checkout without an employee standing nearby for when something inevitably gets screwed up. I'll pass, thank you very much.

      Err no. Not an annoyance at all. This kind of shopping is common in my country and I've stopped shopping at grocery stores which don't offer it. Take an item off the shelf, scan it and put it in your basket, rinse, repeated, at checkout scan a barcode, pay and leave. Done. I typically complete the entire checkout process (there's never a queue either) in the time it takes for some normal guy to fumble around with his cash getting asked whether they want a receipt.

      Even the system that verifies checks against

      • Why would I want to do the supermarkets job for them if I don't have to? It's not like I'm getting a discount. And if it's like gasoline, then it's actually making things more expensive. Just compare minimum service gas in NJ or Oregon to self service in the same metro areas, the self service is always 5-15Â more expensive to do the gas stations job for them.
  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:21PM (#64364156)

    Just Walk Out relied on more than 1,000 people in India watching and labeling videos to ensure accurate checkouts. The cashiers were simply moved off-site, and they watched you as you shopped.

    That's not creepy at all. /s

    More seriously, don't know who I feel worse for the shoppers or the people whose job it is just to watch people shop -- I mean, what's the career advancement for that latter?

  • Jokes on them!!! (Score:4, Informative)

    by sarren1901 ( 5415506 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:25PM (#64364178)

    In California and probably Washington as well, many "customers" continue this practice of "Just Walk out". We use to call that stealing but since it's not prosecuted, it is really a crime?

    • by skam240 ( 789197 )

      Of course shoplifting is prosecuted in California https://apnews.com/article/fac... [apnews.com] . I've even observed this in action as I do IT for a small chain of grocery stores in California and I know for a fact our shoplifters are prosecuted.

      Once again I'll tell you, your news media is making you stupid.

  • Memes become reality (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Pinky's Brain ( 1158667 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:25PM (#64364180)

    All AI is just mechanical turk after all?

    Supermarkets need ultracheap printable NFC tags which can be individually distinguished when you walk through a gate, then you just need to check if people aren't removing the labels or using Faraday shielded bags.

    • by taustin ( 171655 )

      All AI is just mechanical turk after all?

      That really isn't what this tells us. What this tells us is that AI isn't as reliable as mechanical turk.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:31PM (#64364198)

    "Though it seemed completely automated, Just Walk Out relied on more than 1,000 people in India watching and labeling videos to ensure accurate checkouts."

    Funny how that little tidbit was never mentioned in any of the advertorial "tech" stories about these stores, which all breathlessly gushed over the supposed amazing technology being used.

    Even at Indian wages, it's probably cheaper to hire a couple dozen local cashiers and install cash registers.

  • Magic (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mhocker ( 607466 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:43PM (#64364232)

    This leads me to an observation that magic, AI and 1,000 people in India are all indistinguishable.

  • by NomDeAlias ( 10449224 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @01:55PM (#64364278)
    I hate seeing a dozen checkout lanes but only one or two actually open with massive lines for them and the self checkout. Get rid of self checkout and silly no checkout tech, staff all those cash registers. I want the 80s/90s back.
    • I want the 80s/90s back.

      GenXer here. People who want the 80s back almost never want the (inflation-adjusted) 1980s *prices* back.

      Today at Wal-Mart you can buy a 55" inch 4K smart TV for the 1985 equivalent price of $87.

      Compare that with back then when a 20" color TV cost around six times that much.

      • I'll be especially happy to have the 70's, 80's and a bit of the 90's back....

        Especially the parts of not having fucking cameras everywhere, no social media, and being much more of a cohesive single minded nation (US)....people actually meeting and conversing in meatspace, more sense of community.....and better fucking music.

        It would be nice to see kids out playing again in neighborhoods....and less people freaking out about everything....

        It was also nice when everyone confidently knew what a man and a w

        • LOL I miss the joy of jumping in front of the live camera at the electronics store in the mall. Look, look! I'm on the TV!
        • by ledow ( 319597 )

          "It was also nice when everyone confidently knew what a man and a woman was."

          Know a redhead? Then you know an intersex person, they just haven't told you about it. And with your attitude, I know exactly why.

          And were entirely wrong a minimum of 1% of the time, because naturally-occuring intersex variations appear in that proportion in populations the world over. Roughly the same percentage as redheads, diabetics, etc. It's actually a large factor in infertility, because "X" and "Y" are not the cut-and-dr

          • As short as 10-15yrs ago...the sex thing wasn't a problem like it is now. We didn't have people obsessed over the insignificant number of oddities and outliers out there, and it wasn't pushed as an agenda, and life was normal.

            I'm not saying life was perfect, but it sure was less stressful, less antagonistic, and the country as a whole, was much more unified and less polarized than it is now.

            Sure there have always been good and bad sides of town, not talking about that....but largely, kids could and did st

      • That's because we shipped manufacturing to china not because we replaced cashiers.
        • That's because we shipped manufacturing to china not because we replaced cashiers.

          Retailers work on percentage margins - Those margins reflect profits that can be used to hire cashiers.

          In the good ol' days, prices were higher, as were margins as a percentage of those prices - So it meant retailers made more money.

          Source: I worked at a camera store in the 1980s and saw both the wholesale and retail prices on things like Camcorders that had an inflation-adjusted retail price of $4,000.

          That chain is

      • never mind OLED wasn't invented yet and is cheaper to build than a CRT ever was.
    • I hate seeing a dozen checkout lanes but only one or two actually open with massive lines for them and the self checkout. Get rid of self checkout and silly no checkout tech, staff all those cash registers. I want the 80s/90s back.

      You've dismissed the checkout tech without even experiencing it, screwing yourself. There's no long self-checkout queues where I live. In fact there's never a queue even in peak hour, precisely because the tech we use is the same proposed scan as you go. The checkout process literally takes a couple of seconds per person.

      I've not been in a super market where self checkout is slower than traditional checkout in the 8 years I've lived where I live. That said what you describe I do see in other more backwards

  • So Amazon just learned what every other major retailer already knew: improving the front-end experience at a grocery store is wildly expensive and complicated, in comparison to having a person standing there scanning barcodes and punching in produce codes.

    Kroger has been working on self-checkout solutions for decades trying to come up with "better" - from their little custom handheld barcode thing that you could grab off a rack next to the shopping carts and scan products as you put them in the cart (they b

    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      Scan & Go actually works really well.

      You just have to remove the side cases where it doesn't - like loose products as you say. But loose products are, by far, not essential to anyone's shopping. I don't buy cornflakes by the flake or by the gram, there's no need to buy pears individually by weight either.

      Since those scan & go technologies come in, however, my shopping is now utterly predictable, far more accurate, less impulse buys, and I'm in and out of the store in half the time. Mainly, it has

  • I encountered this in an airport once. I didn't like having no way to confirm, at the moment I walked out of the store, that what I actually bought, was what I actually paid for. I prefer to have a piece of paper that tells me I bought what I thought I bought, and that I paid what I thought I paid for it.

    It's kind of like electronic voting machines, which have largely started producing a paper "receipt" of some sort, because otherwise there's no way for each voter to confirm that their votes were recorded c

  • by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @03:38PM (#64364576) Homepage Journal

    Many of us on this website dream of a day when humans no longer have to perform backbreaking or mind-numbing labor. Our spirits are assaulted whenever we hear politicians hatefully brag about how they will create more jobs instead of leading us toward the Star Trekkian paradise of less soul-crushing or injurious toil.

    I thought Amazon was one of the few good guys, working to help create a world of 100% unemployment. I know it's only an ideal to strive for (we'll likely never free everyone from having to work) but they seemed to be trying.

    How many times have we been promised "I'll replace you with a script" or "AI is coming for your job?" Empty words. Lies. To find out they were secretly saddling innocent humans with computers' jobs, is an insult to both of our races.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Star Trekkian paradise of less soul-crushing or injurious toil.

      Here's your red shirt, Guy.

    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      Because that all crawls towards universal basic income (of which there has never been an unsuccessful trial, and which always results in people being better humans, spending wisely, etc. basically).

      Universal basic income means that you are no longer tied into generating profit in order to then spend your wages generating profit. UBI means that someone has to pay a robot AND you.

      You're just a product, and governments have no interest in treating you otherwise (tax, etc.) . Even those places with universal

  • Really? It sound like simply a stupid fucking idea to me.
  • I thought this was the promise of RFID; instead of self scanning through those shitty slow barcode readers, the whole cart or basket could be scanned in an instant provided products were tagged with rfid.

    The only need for the monitoring then would be to make sure RFID tags are not sneakily removed before walking out (a choice of products to sell might help).

    Seems to me that most people enrolled in the system are likely honest and mistakes etc. could be mitigated with spot checks. And the blatantly dishones

    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      Inducing the power in the RFID tags of a whole basket full of items causes them all to (very, very rapidly, before they run out of power) transmit their message on the same frequencies as everything around them.

      You simply don't have time for them to hold-off and retransmit as they're only induced for a fraction of a second as the field moves past them, and so you don't really have time for retransmission, verification, etc.

      With commodity scanners, you just get a load of noise talking over each other, you wo

      • It's all "possible", but nobody has ever bothered to get that far because of the sheer logistics and expense.

        I actually used exactly this implementation at a Uniqlo store in Tokyo. Load your shopping into a bag as you walk around the store, put your bag in a bin at checkout, and it rings up all of the items in the bin. I think I bought a few pairs of socks and some pants. It worked well.

    • Wow, check out Rip van Winkle here. Ever notice how RFID is so unreliable that it won't even unlock the door at work when you press your tag directly on the receiver?
  • "1,000 people in India" - what do they care about US businesses losing money to people walking out without paying?
  • Instead, Amazon is moving towards Dash Carts, a scanner and screen are embedded in your shopping cart, allowing you to check out as you shop.

    So, Amazon is implementing Scan & Go, but with dedicated hardware built into the cart instead of allowing me to use my phone.

    Way to innovate there, Amazon.

  • Hmmm? Nah [youtube.com].

  • 'whose impressive technology was truly ahead of its time'

    Wtf? CCTV has been around for several years.

All life evolves by the differential survival of replicating entities. -- Dawkins

Working...