Technology3 mins ago
Self service tills.....
Apparently they are much hated according to News 24 this morning. Can't think why I think they are a giant leap for mankind myself. No longer do I have to wait in line behind slow people doing annoying things eating into my lunch break. My local ASDA for example has 14 of them so I never have to queue. So self service tills, love em or hate em?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.every time you scan a bottle of wine, you have to summon staff to approve it, so it ends up not much quicker than the tills. And people scanning their own goods are slower than operators. Plus the machines are forever refusing to scan or throwing up error messages about bags. Maybe they'll be okay when the bugs are sorted out and a few thousand more check out operators are thrown on to the dole, but not yet.
I don't like them. If you have a bottle of alcohol you have to fetch a supervisor to take the neck thing off, and she has to tell the computer that it's OK for you to have it. If you have something out of the ordinary (e.g. a piece of ginger) you have to either fiddle with the buttons or fetch a supervisor to get the machine to let you buy it. They're a waste of time.
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I never use them...partly on principle. I like the personal touch,and having a wee conversation at the checkout-when time allows. Our city-centre Sainsbury's has just installed at least a dozen-so getting rid of tills and I assume-operators. And any checkout person will be much quicker than me...lol
10 years, or so, ago, Safeways used to have a hand-scanner than fitted into a cradle on the shopping-trolley. You picked the item from the shelf, scanned it and packed it into your bag/box.
At the end, you placed the scanner back into its unit where is issued an itemised receipt which you simply took to the till and paid the amount asked. Occasionally it would ask you to put your shopping through the checkout as usual, I suppose the thought that there could be a random check kept most people 'honest'.
I was so much easier and I've never understood quite why more supermarkets didn't take it up.
At the end, you placed the scanner back into its unit where is issued an itemised receipt which you simply took to the till and paid the amount asked. Occasionally it would ask you to put your shopping through the checkout as usual, I suppose the thought that there could be a random check kept most people 'honest'.
I was so much easier and I've never understood quite why more supermarkets didn't take it up.
I found that in 2003/2004 the tesco ones I used were very good. Easy to use no problems.
In 2010 ASDA I find that they get themselves into a loop. I don't want a bag so have tried to use my own but it starts with unreconised item in bagging area the keeps on until you have a superviser over to cancel it. The Sainsbury's one is much the same - looks easy but gets into a loop. I prefer self scanning like Waitrose and others use where you pack as you go. Never had any problems with that.
The ASDA I use never seems to have queues so I find it just as quick to go through a ordinary checkout.
In 2010 ASDA I find that they get themselves into a loop. I don't want a bag so have tried to use my own but it starts with unreconised item in bagging area the keeps on until you have a superviser over to cancel it. The Sainsbury's one is much the same - looks easy but gets into a loop. I prefer self scanning like Waitrose and others use where you pack as you go. Never had any problems with that.
The ASDA I use never seems to have queues so I find it just as quick to go through a ordinary checkout.