world's first cashier-less shop is set to open in Cork
Deleted User wrote: » Not sure of that pic with the fellow clutching his bottle of orange and sandwich. He looks...bemused.
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » Putting it in Tallaght might provide for a more robust test environment? Population size and all that.
the_pen_turner wrote: » what annoys me about this , is that it is another way to get rid of employees. eventually there wont be any where for people to work. most jobs are riddled with this. I know its great for business but creating jobs is important too
The Highwayman wrote: » I absolutely will never use a shop like this. Cash in your pocket is vitally important. The cashless society advocates are the creepiest globalist there are.
Gerrup Outta Dat! wrote: » Albert Einstein once said,”I fear the day that technology will surpass our human interaction, the world will have a generation of idiots”.
murpho999 wrote: » What so vital about cash? Bits of paper that can be lost and coins that put holes in your pockets. Cashless is the future and it's coming and won't be stopped. Using phones to pay is already quicker and safer than cards or cash so I don't get why people would be against it.
murpho999 wrote: » What about the jobs involved in creating this technology? Do you still think there will be no people working in the stores?
server down wrote: » Many reasons. Privacy of any individual transaction for one.
dublinman1990 wrote: » I watched a piece about checkout free shops before on BBC Click over the summer. I can't find the video for it but I'm actually surprised that Ireland is going to be the very first country in the world to get a business like this one. In all honesty; this is not a bad venture in itself. But; I would be skeptical in how a business like this one will be viable because it makes process of someone finding a job a little bit harder as the years go on.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » Would you rather we'd stayed with manually lit gas streetlighting, and manual typewriters instead of computers? As the population ages, the jobs will just change. More need to for caregivers, less for checkout operators.
murpho999 wrote: » What privacy do you face and who would care what you buy? Do you go around a shop blanket over the trolley?
Employment rates in 2015 were similar but slightly higher for Irish nationals (63 per cent) than non-Irish nationals (60 per cent). However, the employment rate varied across national groups and was “very low” for African nationals (about 40 per cent).
server down wrote: » Yes I do, who doesn’t?. But enough about me and your straw man personalised attacks, when I said “some people”. There are all kinds of reasons why some people might want to use cash to hide their purchases from their wife, the bank, or the authorities. (To the hard of thinking some people is not a me).