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Previously on "New strict, very harsh measures considered by HMG"

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  • SueEllen
    replied
    Originally posted by mallisarealperson View Post
    Boots are the best at that.

    Where are the plasters. Next to hair brushes and shoe polish?????
    No it was Tescos who won hands down. They use to rotate where their stuff was placed every 5 days.

    They stopped doing it so frequently when they sent senior managers into a store with a shopping list.....

    Oh and they told their staff to be happy and pleasant on the tills. It was funny....

    Leave a comment:


  • mallisarealperson
    replied
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
    I hope they don't put a one-way system in the Sainsbury's I go to. I always have to double back a few aisles for something I forgot I wanted, usually more than once; if I have to go all the way round the board and back to the start, I'll be in there for hours

    And what about when they suddenly move things from where they were to a completely different part of the store, as they seem to do every few months? I walked back and forth the length of the store three times before I finally found the toothpaste the last time they did that. Surely having everybody go round the entire store multiple times because jam is now next to eggs isn't in anybody's interests.
    Boots are the best at that.

    Where are the plasters. Next to hair brushes and shoe polish?????

    Leave a comment:


  • psychocandy
    replied
    Covid madness has hit the UK...

    People in cars alone with a face mask on?

    Community centre by me is going to house a mobile testing centre. Residents are getting a petition together because people driving past to go there are "putting them at risk". If it could transmit through the car windows, 10m up the driveway, through you're front door or window, I think we'd all be dead by now.

    Astonishing stupidity....

    Leave a comment:


  • Hobosapien
    replied
    Will likely require the type of rfid product tagging that that Amazon Store must use to track when produce is taken out of store so the customer is automatically billed. Simple cheap security tags on everything to allow automation of product discovery and movement.

    Though we are then reliant on them not being able to track the produce to our homes so theives can kick the door in when there's a toilet roll shortage.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    Originally posted by Hobosapien View Post
    Someone with your talent could create an app for the supermarkets that acts like a satnav to the products you're interested in, so no wrong turns or missed pick ups.

    Once it's popular you can licence it to the supermarkets for integration in those handlheld scan as you go devices for the real kerching.

    Feel free to drop me a few mill when it's IPOd for many billions.
    I don't know if it's still the case, but that's how Tesco first did home deliveries - a staff member went out in store with a trolley to pick stuff from the shelves, guided by a handheld device that knew where everything was.

    But as vetran says, unless the shops provide an open API of some kind for their in-store location data, everything falls apart when the jam gets moved next to the eggs for no good reason

    I've taken to using the handheld self-scan things lately. What they could do with is a system that allows me to create a shopping list on my phone (or online and send it to my phone), then send that over to the handheld scanner when it's activated (Bluetooth should be able to manage that), and the scanner then guides me round the shop by the most efficient path.

    Leave a comment:


  • vetran
    replied
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
    I hope they don't put a one-way system in the Sainsbury's I go to. I always have to double back a few aisles for something I forgot I wanted, usually more than once; if I have to go all the way round the board and back to the start, I'll be in there for hours

    And what about when they suddenly move things from where they were to a completely different part of the store, as they seem to do every few months? I walked back and forth the length of the store three times before I finally found the toothpaste the last time they did that. Surely having everybody go round the entire store multiple times because jam is now next to eggs isn't in anybody's interests.

    Think of the extra steps!

    Someone cleverly did a shopping satnav for in stores a while ago but had trouble getting the shops to organise and share the data - it needed to be done on a per shop basis. Not sure how shops such as Homebase who are unable to label goods with a price in their stores will cope.

    Leave a comment:


  • Hobosapien
    replied
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
    I hope they don't put a one-way system in the Sainsbury's I go to. I always have to double back a few aisles for something I forgot I wanted, usually more than once; if I have to go all the way round the board and back to the start, I'll be in there for hours

    And what about when they suddenly move things from where they were to a completely different part of the store, as they seem to do every few months? I walked back and forth the length of the store three times before I finally found the toothpaste the last time they did that. Surely having everybody go round the entire store multiple times because jam is now next to eggs isn't in anybody's interests.

    Someone with your talent could create an app for the supermarkets that acts like a satnav to the products you're interested in, so no wrong turns or missed pick ups.

    Once it's popular you can licence it to the supermarkets for integration in those handlheld scan as you go devices for the real kerching.

    Feel free to drop me a few mill when it's IPOd for many billions.

    Leave a comment:


  • Zigenare
    replied
    Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
    I thought ashe already bought the white lightening for you?
    8 Ace!

    Leave a comment:


  • BrilloPad
    replied
    Originally posted by Zigenare View Post
    The wife can do the shopping.
    I thought ashe already bought the white lightening for you?

    Leave a comment:


  • Zigenare
    replied
    The wife can do the shopping.

    Leave a comment:


  • Old Greg
    replied
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
    I hope they don't put a one-way system in the Sainsbury's I go to. I always have to double back a few aisles for something I forgot I wanted, usually more than once; if I have to go all the way round the board and back to the start, I'll be in there for hours

    And what about when they suddenly move things from where they were to a completely different part of the store, as they seem to do every few months? I walked back and forth the length of the store three times before I finally found the toothpaste the last time they did that. Surely having everybody go round the entire store multiple times because jam is now next to eggs isn't in anybody's interests.
    Most likely one way within an aisle but now between aisles.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    I hope they don't put a one-way system in the Sainsbury's I go to. I always have to double back a few aisles for something I forgot I wanted, usually more than once; if I have to go all the way round the board and back to the start, I'll be in there for hours

    And what about when they suddenly move things from where they were to a completely different part of the store, as they seem to do every few months? I walked back and forth the length of the store three times before I finally found the toothpaste the last time they did that. Surely having everybody go round the entire store multiple times because jam is now next to eggs isn't in anybody's interests.

    Leave a comment:


  • SueEllen
    replied
    Originally posted by Old Greg View Post
    This is the way to deal with them.

    Man remanded on bail for not wearing mask in shop
    Problem is in the UK once arrested like these - Bench arrest video 'stage-managed by anti-lockdown protesters' - BBC News they identify themselves so they only get a fine.

    Leave a comment:


  • AtW
    replied
    Originally posted by d000hg View Post
    Your average shelf-stacker is not looking to get a load of abuse for asking people to wear their mask.
    Chances of getting stabbed to death for that are likely to be higher than getting Covid and then even smaller chance of fatality.

    Leave a comment:


  • Old Greg
    replied
    This is the way to deal with them.

    Man remanded on bail for not wearing mask in shop

    Leave a comment:

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