• SootySootySoot [any]@hexbear.net
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    1 month ago

    These devices are used in basically every big store in the UK and much/most of Europe.

    Unless they’re using some super expensive version, they still have to manually be changed, one by one, just by touching a device to it. So the difference in pricing change speed isn’t significant.

    • Evil_Shrubbery@thelemmy.club
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      1 month ago

      That doesn’t make sense. The devices used in European stores in the last 10+ years are all wireless. And super cheap (BLE wireless, two color, are sub 10€ for end consumer not buying in bulk, so I bet they get them for like one or two monies a pop).

      It would not make financial sense to not have them wirelessly updated bcs that way it wouldn’t solve anything (the same labour & speed as regular paper labels, with wireless ones you take that job from someone).
      (There do exist NFC only ones, which don’t even seem chapter, but I assume that is for boutique shops with a few labels. The benefit is that you don’t need a system or a database, just write the price via a phone app. And they cost the same bcs there isn’t much demand.)

      I’ve never seen a worker change the display manually, but I have seen a worker place a blank one on the rack. And I have seen them all update in sequence without anyone touching them (with the “newer” three-color ones the refreshes are more obvious).

      • D61 [any]@hexbear.net
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        1 month ago

        My shopping day aligns with a stocking/price update day at a nearby store. Somebody with a basket of price tags and a handheld has to walk the aisles, adjust the position of the tags on the shelf to match the product facings, and touch the handheld to the price tags. I also see the price tags knocked off the shelves and sitting on the floor fairly often.

        I get the reduction in paper waste but a negative for the customers is that with each delivery, the prices of items can change. So the same box of cereal you buy every week now has a lower labor cost to adjust the price by 1~5% every two to four days. (With paper printed tags, you might wait for a price increase/decrease of a certain percent before taking the time to change the price on the shelf which might take months.)

        Now, in the USA there’s a silly “pricing to the 9’s” thing. So in some cases, a small change in the cost of the goods could mean a price jump higher that the few cents per item the store is paying as stuff has its prices “rounded up” to the nearest 9 cents. So an adjusted cost of a box of cereal with its retail markup moves from 5.99$ to 6.09$ instead of 6.01$.

        • Evil_Shrubbery@thelemmy.club
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          1 month ago

          I get the reduction in paper waste

          Paper waste (even with plastics & toxic pigments) is nothing compared to unrecyclable e-waste (batteries included).

          The current implementation of such tags is also perhaps a bit silly - forcing new tech to replace paper a process 1:1 is usually the initial awkward phase of a digitalisation process (instead of revising the whole system, eg smarter e-paper shelves).

          Also - oh, touch the tags to tag them so the (BLE) system knows what product they represent. Yes, that is prob always the case with the initial (re)placing, especially with non-permanent items. The shelves restocking process basically (non-discount stores prob have a bit less of that).

    • chgxvjh [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      1 month ago

      It’s not that much more expensive to buy networked e labels. Many of the e labels have Bluetooth support, and you connect them to an IP network via a gateway for maybe $200. Of course you need multiple since ble is low range but still. That’s easily worth is for the savings labor cost and of course also opens doors for dynamic pricing.