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77 points

I think the main concern is that this is a step towards normalizing extremely frequent price changes, a la Uber surge pricing.

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25 points

That’s exactly what this is. All stores will eventually do this and prices will fluctuate throughout the day.

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13 points

isn’t it pretty much what amazon’s been doing since the beginning? the difference being there’s no “app” like camel yet to track prices over time at a single store

but yea, still another reason not to go to walmart. how do they mitigate the problem of something being $X when you put it in your cart, and the price being X+whatever by the time you get through the 2 mile long line at one of the 2 open registers?

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6 points

seems like great time to cap how often prices can be changed and force them to show price history

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4 points

Paper ticket stores already do this, its just a more work for the workers than e-ink.

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25 points

It’ll be exciting to see prices temporarily jump during the few hours the majority of working class folk have to do their shopping.

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6 points

As long as it’s advertised openly, I don’t see a big problem with it. It would probably be sold as a discount for shopping at slower times, though. It’s a tried-and-true method of smoothing congestion.

Assuming a store with 9a-9p hours (every day), a 9-5 worker can shop 44 hours in a week, vs 40 they cannot. But that doesn’t particularly line up with the busy hours. Around here, after 7 on weekdays and 5 on weekends tend to get pretty slow.

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34 points

It’s price gouging, pure and simple. There’s no positive to it whatsoever

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24 points

You’re thinking logically and with the desire for good service. I assure you they are not.

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11 points

Assuming a store with 9a-9p hours (every day), a 9-5 worker can shop 44 hours in a week, vs 40 they cannot.

You can’t just logic this kind of thing out mathematically because during those 44 hours people have lives to live and obligations to fulfill. Families to manage, food to prepare, appointments to attend, plus they need to sleep. Busy shopping hours are busy for a reason. Nobody wants to be stuck in a busy shopping center. They just do because that’s the time they have to do it.

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14 points

And personalized pricing, based on your profile and what they think they can get you to pay.

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14 points

I can’t wait for them to get sued into the ground because their AI is changing prices based on skin color.

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2 points

Well, that’s what coupons are for.

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12 points
*

So, if I grab an item off the shelf and browse around the store for a while, is the price going to be the price currently displayed or the price when I grabbed it?

If it’s the current price, what’s the point of a price tag? If I can’t actually know the price until checkout, then showing me the price is kind of a useless bit of data. I also suspect that the “speak to a manager” types would make that a major headache for stores.

If it’s the price when I grabbed it, how are they keeping track of that? I see two ways of handling that: one requires that you use their app to shop, and the other requires cameras and “machine vision” that are still unreliable, at best. The former seems more likely, but I doubt either is going to sit well with customers.

Edit: someone pointed out that it might not actually display a price, and you’d have to scan it to get your price. Kind of like the first option, but I think it’s going to turn off less tech savvy customers.

I haven’t seen that aspect addressed in any articles about the “feature”.

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5 points

Take a photo of it, I work with paper but we change our tags frequently. We often have prices changed when a customer reaches checkout. I’ve also had times where a customer came back to check a shelf tag after I just updated it. I honored the previous price those times as I was still holding the tickets but its not a guarantee even in paper stores.

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6 points

We often have prices changed when a customer reaches checkout.

I know this isn’t your fault or anything but damn, that seems lightly customer hostile at best, and deeply unethical at worst. It sounds like it should be illegal.

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2 points

Its not that it can’t happen now. Its that it will happen all the time with digital tags.

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4 points

Even at stores that have this feature, I rarely see people use it. It’s clearly not an experience that people flock to.

OTOH, on the rare occasion I’ve visited a Walmart in the past 10 years, I have a 100% rate of checkout taking an absurdly long time. Everyone there just seems to accept it like they have no choice.

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6 points

I edited in another thought. I agree with that fear, that’s obviously the concern. I didn’t feel the need to repeat it.

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6 points

It will become an Olympic event where you have to get from the shelf to the till before the price changes!

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