The Hamilton Spectator

Inside Amazon’s store of the future: No lines, no cashiers

- NICK WINGFIELD

SEATTLE — The first clue that there’s something unusual about Amazon’s store of the future hits you right at the front door. It feels as if you are entering a subway station. A row of gates guard the entrance to the store, known as Amazon Go, allowing in only people with the store’s smartphone app.

Inside is an 1,800-square foot minimarket packed with shelves of food that you can find in a lot of other convenienc­e stores — soda, potato chips, ketchup. It also has some food usually found at Whole Foods, the supermarke­t chain that Amazon owns.

But the technology that is also inside, mostly tucked away out of sight, enables a shopping experience like no other. There are no cashiers or registers anywhere. Shoppers leave the store through those same gates, without pausing to pull out a credit card. Their Amazon account automatica­lly gets charged for what they take out the door.

On Monday, the store opened to the public for the first time.

There are no shopping carts or baskets inside Amazon Go. Since the checkout process is automated, what would be the point of them anyway? Instead, customers put items directly into the shopping bag they’ll walk out with.

Every time customers grab an item off a shelf, Amazon says the product is automatica­lly put into the shopping cart of their online account. If customers put the item back on the shelf, Amazon removes it from their virtual basket.

The only sign of the technology that makes this possible floats above the store shelves — arrays of small cameras, hundreds of them throughout the store. Amazon won’t say much about how the system works, other than to say it involves sophistica­ted computer vision and machine learning software. Translatio­n: Amazon’s technology can see and identify every item in the store, without attaching a special chip

There were a little more than 3.5 million cashiers in the United States in 2016 — and some of their jobs may be in jeopardy if the technology behind Amazon Go eventually spreads. For now, Amazon says its technology simply changes the role of employees — the same way it describes the impact of automation on its warehouse workers.

“We’ve just put associates on different kinds of tasks where we think it adds to the customer experience,” said Gianna Puerini, the executive in charge of Amazon Go.

Those tasks include restocking shelves and helping customers troublesho­ot any technical problems. Store employees mill about ready to help customers find items, and there is a kitchen next door with chefs preparing meals for sale in the store. Because there are no cashiers, an employee sits in the wine and beer section of the store, checking IDs before customers can take alcohol off the shelves.

Most people who spend any time in a supermarke­t understand how vexing the checkout process can be, with clogged lines for cashiers and customers who fumble with selfchecko­ut kiosks.

At Amazon Go, checking out feels like — there’s no other way to put it — shopliftin­g. It is only a few minutes after walking out of the store, when Amazon sends an electronic receipt for purchases, that the feeling goes away.

Actual shopliftin­g is not easy at Amazon Go. With permission from Amazon, I tried to trick the store’s camera system by wrapping a shopping bag around a $4.35 fourpack of vanilla soda while it was still on a shelf, tucking it under my arm and walking out of the store. Amazon charged me for it.

A big unanswered question is where Amazon plans to take the technology. It won’t say whether it plans to open more Amazon Go stores, or leave this as a one-of-akind novelty. A more intriguing possibilit­y is that it could use the technology inside Whole Foods stores, though Puerini said Amazon has “no plans” to do so.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Amazon employee Krishna Iyer shows off an Amazon Go app as he shops in the Amazon Go store in Seattle on Monday.
ELAINE THOMPSON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Amazon employee Krishna Iyer shows off an Amazon Go app as he shops in the Amazon Go store in Seattle on Monday.

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