Lifestyle
Kips Bay resident Geraldine Foley said she liked the new carts because they were easier on her wallet, but complained that they were too heavy.
helaine sideman
The future is in aisle 5.
Smart carts powered by artificial intelligence are being rolled out in Big Apple supermarkets and will do almost everything for you except prepare your food.
Instacart's Caper Carts uses AI to identify items, prices, and weight of produce, allowing shoppers to check out stress-free with just a click on a touch screen.
One TikTok user, @em.ly.x, titled a Feb. 8 video of people using a Caper Cart at a ShopRite store, “2024 is the new 2050.”
The carts, installed at Fairway Market in Kips Bay and a handful of Shoprites in Staten Island, N.J., could also save consumers a dollar or two.
When customers spend $35 or more, they can spin the wheel on the touch screen at checkout to get $2, $5, or $10 off their entire purchase.
Cart users also receive more discounts if they participate in Fairway's membership program.
“I like the discounts. I got $10 off twice, which was great,” she said.
“It's funny, I never go to self-checkout. But if they give me an incentive, if I can make money doing it, then why not?” T., a Tudor City resident. – Kat Ford said she treks 11 blocks to use the fairway cart. “This deal is too good to be true.”
“Another good thing is that you can instantly see how much you are spending on the touch screen,” she added.
Fairway buyer Geraldine Whaley also praised the savings.
The technology, which was unveiled at Fairway in October, still has some glitches, including some items in Wheelie's cart not being automatically detected.
And caper carts are heavier than their Stone Age counterparts, Whaley added.
“It's hard to turn around… I wish I had bought something lighter,” she said.
It also costs money. The high-tech cart could reportedly fetch up to $10,000, which is about 100 times the price of a typical metal cart.
Wheely's experience with Caper Cart was “less than ideal,” an Instacart spokesperson said.
“[We] “We definitely want to acknowledge that this is new technology that many of our customers have probably never used before…and we have staff on site in case any issues arise,” the spokesperson said. said.
According to an Instacart spokesperson, ShopRite and Fairway Market customers will still be able to use their traditional cards because Wakefern Food Corp., which owns the grocery store brand, did not want to include card readers in its caper carts. It is necessary to check out using the following method.
But soon, state-of-the-art carts will display a map of the grocery store, along with recipe recommendations based on the products inside, so consumers can ask which aisle their milk is in. There will no longer be a need for it, a spokesperson said.
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