Comment Re:Setting their sights higher (Score 1) 65
I'm pretty sure investors could get behind letting chatbots run a company,
It's been tried. Didn't work out so well.
I'm pretty sure investors could get behind letting chatbots run a company,
It's been tried. Didn't work out so well.
Rubbish. It's doing what it's programmed to do. The goal is for the AI to have complete, 100% control of the computer, to the exclusion of any human input. The tech bros want us to believe this is a good thing, that it will automate your life and make it easier, but they don't believe that either. It's about control.
They intend to make AI the 21st century form of slavery, where you are their literal property.
Some people (and I use the term loosely) don't see The Matrix as dystopian.
Oh, and Bert and Ernie were gay too, right? Of course, from a kids perspective, they were kids themselves and kids have sleep overs and *gasps* share the same bed. Guess they are all gay. It's just hogwash.
As an irrelevant side not, the producers of Sesame Street did issue a formal statement on the subject:
"They're puppets and puppets don't have a sexual orientation."
You have established that you're a pervert loser already, you can stop shouting it from the rooftops.
And you've admitted I'm right. You would show me, if only you had any.
There's a difference?
One has to know what's going on
And if you don't, Microsoft's games aren't the problem.
It's not that it's not cost effective over time so much as the up front cost in one big bite. It would literally double the cost of opening a new store for us, is not more.
While I'm not crazy about how much paper is used, there's also all the plastic and other minerals consumed for these.
Then I guess we should burn the store to the ground and all go live in a cave and hunt dinner (or each other) with sharp sticks.
And dead batteries aren't a problem with the digital tags, they're a problem with managers who don't maintain their store competently. The managers who don't check for dead tags for 5 years (which is how long the batteries tend to last, since e-ink only uses power while you change the display) also won't check for outdated paper tags for that long, by which time they will have faded to the point of not being readable anyway.
Nonsense. This is about eliminating, in a Walmart, hundreds of man-hours of wages changing hundreds, if not thousands of paper tags every week. Any amount they could possibly make from dynamic pricing (even not counting the fines when someone is charged more at the register than they saw on the shelf) pales in comparison that being able to change every price in the store with a couple of mouse clicks.
Changing pricing during business hours is insanely stupid, since it leads to serious legal problems.
As opposed to a paper label in the same forgotten area that's years out of date and so faded you can't read it anyway? Or sale signs that nobody remembered to take down when the sale ended?
Lack of maintaining the store isn't a problem with digital labels, it's a problem with lazy, incompetent management.
The big downside is the same one that all shelf tags have - things get moved around. A shelf tag does nobody any good if they can't figure out which tag refers to the item they just picked up.
Yeah, but that's true whether the tag gets moved or not. People don't read flashing neon signs bigger than they are that they have to walk around to come in the door, they certainly don't read tiny bin labels.
The biggest downside is the cost. Our stores have 40,000-60,000 items each, and those tags cost $5-20 apiece. That's hundreds of thousands to over a million dollars per store in initial investment. That's comparable to the cost of merchandise to open a new store.
Yes, digital tags would make it far easier and more efficient to get reamed by Weights & Measures for charging people more than the price they saw on the shelf.
The only people who talk about "dynamic pricing" based on the customer in a brick & mortar store are tech bros who don't know their ass from a hole in the ground about the real world of retail (or much else, really) spewing their insane fantasies, and pearl clutching idiots who are terrified of their own shadows.
Nobody with any retail experience would consider it because it's a bad idea.
If the price only changes when the store is closed anyway then there is no issue.
Which is not, in any way, related to digital tags. Believe it or not, employees could change the paper tag during business hours, too! And management could even change the price in the computer system at the same time!!!! It's amazing what technology and a little elbow grease can do!!!!!!!!!!
Which is to say, unless one is droolingly stupid or clinically insane, prices will not change during business hours.
With paper labels, we have a specific process every week for price changes:
If the price is going down, we change it in the computers immediately, then put up the labels as there is time. If the price is going up, we prioritize updating the labels with a specific deadline it must be done by, and then change it in the computers. Either way, if there's a difference at the register, you're being charged less than the label.
If we had digital tags, it would all be 100% automatic outside of business hours, and you'd never see a difference at all.
E-ink doesn't require any power to display something. Only to change it. Batteries last for years.
Money cannot buy love, nor even friendship.