Las Vegas Review-Journal

Amazon’s Just Walk Out still alive

Technology on sale to other businesses

- By Haleluya Hadero

NEW YORK — Amazon wants the public and especially other businesses to know it’s not giving up on its Just Walk Out technology.

Although the company is ditching the cashier-less checkout system at its Amazon Fresh grocery stores, it plans to sell the technology to more than 120 third-party businesses by the end of the year. Reaching that goal would double the number of non-amazon enterprise­s that use Just Walk Out compared with last year.

“For us, really making sure that we can service that third-party market is the most important thing,” Jon Jenkins, the vice president of Just Walk Out at Amazon, said in an interview. “We’ve definitely been reassuring people that we are in this for the long haul.”

Just Walk Out uses cameras, artificial intelligen­ce and sensor trackers to determine what’s taken off of shelves, enabling customers to grab what they want and leave if they insert a credit card or another payment method at a store’s entry gate.

The retailer first began offering the technology to other businesses — such as sports stadiums — in 2020, two years after it started using it at Amazon Go convenienc­e stores. Those stores and some Amazon Fresh stores in the U.K. will continue to offer Just Walk Out. But the technology will be replaced with smart carts at Fresh stores in the U.S., Amazon announced this month.

Smart carts, which are already available in some Amazon Fresh locations, use sensors to identify items placed inside and have screens that allow customers to see nearby deals as well as how much their groceries will cost. Customers can skip the checkout line by scanning and tallying up items on its cameras.

The change comes as Amazon is working to revamp its Fresh stores with a mix of technology and traditiona­l grocery offerings that will help it attract more customers. The company’s grocery store brands include Amazon Fresh and Amazon Go, as well as supermarke­t chain Whole Foods, which it bought in 2017 for $13.7 billion.

Abandoning the technology in many of its own stores could make it challengin­g for Amazon to sell

Just Walk Out to other businesses. But some experts think the move also could expand adoption among smaller-format stores and locations akin to Amazon Go stores.

John Clear, a senior director at the profession­al services firm Alvarez & Marsal, says he thinks cashier-less technology is going to become more common in grab-and-go shopping areas where human interactio­n tends to be limited, labor is hard to come by and businesses are almost always trying to cut down on costs.

In its attempt to sell its technology to other businesses, Amazon is also trying to counter some recent viral social media posts that claimed the checkout system was not a technologi­cal marvel but was instead powered by contractor­s in India who manually added up items in carts as customers shopped.

Business publicatio­n The Informatio­n and news website Vox reported in the past that Amazon used human reviewers for the technology, which the company has acknowledg­ed. Jenkins said the company hires associates who take some video clips and label them so they can be used to train the machine learning system.

But the notion “people in India are watching you shop live in a store and figuring out what you bought is completely inaccurate,” he said.

 ?? Matt Rourke The Associated Press ?? Amazon is removing Just Walk Out technology, a cashier-less checkout system, from its Amazon Fresh stores as part of an effort to revamp the grocery chain.
Matt Rourke The Associated Press Amazon is removing Just Walk Out technology, a cashier-less checkout system, from its Amazon Fresh stores as part of an effort to revamp the grocery chain.

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