Friday, October 24, 2008

Please return item to the bagging area, revisited

Dan broke the bad news last week that these satanic machines have spread around the world.

If you recall, my voyage into hell began when I tried to use a supermarket self-checkout machine and couldn't get the thing to stop shouting at me.

After my most recent battle, I decided to do something very unusual: make eye contact with and speak to another person in a busy shop in London.

No. I hadn't gone out of my mind... this person worked there.  But still.

I asked why the machine was so demonstrably rubbish and he made a useful observation: the machine takes some time to register that an item has been placed in the bagging area. 

This means that if you want to remove a bag, you have to wait for the item to be registered and then remove the bag.

I tried his idea and, sure enough, if I waited a second or so, the item would be registered. Then, if I lifted off the bag, it would still shout at me but one of the options was to tell it that I had lifted off the bag.

Phew!

I think I also understand why the machines work in this way.  The question is... is there a better way?

Consider the design meeting.

Requirement: "All our customers are thieves so we need to be able to detect if somebody places an item in the bagging area if they haven't scanned."

Now... an "obvious" solution to this is to put in a sensor that reacts when an item is placed in the bagging area.  If an item is registered without a preceding scan operation then something dodgy is going on.

So far, so good.

But there's a problem: different customers will scan in different ways.

Sure... some of them will "scan, bag, scan, bag, ..." and this detection mechanism will work.

But some of them will pick up three items, scan all three and then put two of them in the bagging area and hold on to the other one because they know it's fragile and they want to put it in last... and then they'll scan two items and put both in together at the same time.... (you get the idea).

This means that it would be impossible to tell whether somebody had placed an unscanned item into one of these batches and the requirement could not be met.

Now, the solution they chose to employ was simple and cheap. They simply enforced the "scan, bag, scan, bag, ..." approach in the most clunky way possible.

However, it's interesting to think about what else they could have done.

One user-friendly idea could have been to add a set of scales to the side of the machine where the unscanned items are kept prior to scanning.

If the total weight of the "to be scanned" items equals the total weight of the "scanned" items at the end of the process then they would know there had been no skulduggery.  (I can immediately think of a few problems with this approach, however...)

Either way, I still hate those machines.

5 comments:

Andrew F said...

I must be missing something here. Yes, the machines are crap and annoying. But I fail to see how they stop you nicking stuff by weighing anything anyway. Surely it's trivial to take a bag, and just put things into it directly from your basket? If challenged, you could easily claim one or two items were just an oversight.

It's a typical over-engineered solution. If you want self-checkout, you'll get some level of theft. Get over it.

In case I'm not clear, I think I'm agreeing with you :)

Richard Brown said...

:-)

Yes... it would be easy to take something from a basket and place it directly into a bag.... provided you held the bag separately or put it on the floor.

I suspect they think they have this one covered as it would require an unusual "flow" on the part of the shopper. i.e. goods wouldn't be flowing right to left with an occasional bag change.

But, as you say, the occasional item would be trivial to steal should one be so inclined.

Anonymous said...

They appeared a couple of weeks ago in my supermarket in Stockholm. Identical, but (1) they bark at you in Swedish, (2) Swedish supermarkets don't provide free plastic bags, so you almost always need a manual override at the start when you use your own, and (3) if you use Amex in Sweden, it needs someone to come along at the end and enter a supervisor code to validate that they've seen your ID.

I virtually had my own checkout operator by my side throughout.

Richard Brown said...

I guess the Swedish are using it in its "apply technology to *create* jobs" mode :-)

Anonymous said...

Actually used one of these contraptions the other day. It was in M&S though, so there weren't any bags in its bagging area! Luckily we managed to convince it that we weren't attempting any subterfuge so it wasn't that annoying.