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    Retail CIOs Demo RFID Prototypes

    Written by

    Evan Schuman
    Published January 17, 2005
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      NEW YORK—Speaking to an overflow crowd at the National Retail Federations Redefining Retail show Monday, Metro Group CIO Zygmunt Mierdorf beamed in live footage of the companys prototype RFID-enabled stores from Germany, showing interactive changing rooms that make clothing recommendations and have clerks bring additional pieces, a cashier shelf that instantly scans items (so the cashier doesnt have to) and a privacy system that literally leaves the chip in the store.

      Mierdorf also demonstrated smart shelves that display the clothing sizes on them so that customers need not rummage through clothing piles.

      The customer in the dressing room can interact with a touch screen. If the clothing selected is not the right size “or if the customer accepts a computer-recommended accompanying piece of clothing” an attendant is automatically alerted and brings the items to the customer in the dressing room. This is helpful when customers may not want to go through the bother of getting dressed, go into the sales area to pick up the replacement items, and then return to the dressing area and repeat the dressing process, Mierdorf said.

      Mierdorfs presentation was one of three that teased attendees with the prototype potential of RFID, along with a brief update on initial RFID deployment activities from Wal-Marts CIO, Linda Dillman.

      Dillman opened the presentation with references to her companys highly publicized RFID trials, with the extensive attention to Wal-Marts announced plans to deploy this month. “As my vendors have told me repeatedly, January does not mean Jan. 1,” she said.

      Dillman said little new about the rollouts beyond what analysts were briefed on in late December. But she did reveal the small bugs discovered during the trial process, such as discovering that one manufacturers system kept issuing a sleep command to another vendors chip.

      /zimages/5/28571.gifWith the new year, RFID challenges are starting to mount. For more details, click here.

      Wal-Mart will soon have forklift-mounted RFID readers and product visibility within 30 minutes of merchandise movement, Dillman told the crowd. She also said that an immediate advantage of their trial is that when associates try to place manual orders—something Dillman promised would always be permitted—the system can now alert the associate if the product being ordered is already in the backroom. Today, its just an FYI alert. In 60 days, Dillman said, they are considering making it mandatory, where the system will not permit a manual order if it knows the merchandise is already there.

      The Wal-Mart executive also showed video of a handheld device—which she described as more closely resembling a small Geiger counter than a typical PDA—that associates can use to track wayward merchandise on the back of a store shelf. Just like that Geiger counter, the Wal-Mart unit beeps progressively faster as it approaches the hidden product.

      As is the rule with live demonstrations, not everything went perfectly. Colin Cobain, the U.K. IT director for Tesco, had created on-stage a live working demo of the companys RFID system. The demonstration was intended to show that the system would detect merchandise changes. On the first try, the system properly flagged a flawed crate with a red light. After it was repaired, though, it was supposed to show a green light. It didnt, leaving some in the audience to comment that it was perhaps a more realistic demo than had been intended.

      Retail Center Editor Evan Schuman can be reached at [email protected].

      /zimages/5/28571.gifCheck out eWEEK.coms for the latest news, views and analysis on technologys impact on retail.

      Evan Schuman
      Evan Schuman
      Evan Schuman is the editor of CIOInsight.com's Retail industry center. He has covered retail technology issues since 1988 for Ziff-Davis, CMP Media, IDG, Penton, Lebhar-Friedman, VNU, BusinessWeek, Business 2.0 and United Press International, among others.

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