I hate being behind a self checkout noob.
Why do people take cartloads of groceries to self checkout lines? Do you REALLY think you can scan and bag all of your items faster than the trained professionals working the registers?
I know some places, for whatever reason, don't have limits on items for the self checkout lanes, but exercise some courtesy and common sense. 10 items max, and no produce unless you know exactly what you're doing. Geez people.
I hate being behind a self checkout noob.
Yes no more than 10 items. And no children "helping" their parents!!!
I usually follow the 10 items etiquette unless the people checkout lines are ridiculous (like Wal-Mart at night). No effing way I am standing in line half an hour because they decided to only have 2 people working the registers...
I went to a Costco the other day that had a couple self checkout lanes. I love the idea in theory, but I was about ready to kill people after a couple of minutes of watching someone trying to figure out how to scan a flat of 12 giant muffins. I had two ing bottles of alcohol and should have been out of there in a couple minutes, max.
I love the self checkouts at my HEB but the ones at wal-mart suck.
I only use the self checkout lanes when I don't want people behind a register to see what I purchase.
Like my Trojan magnums, astro-glide, duct tape, rope, etc.
self check-out lines - LOL
I usually do my shopping at like 1 in the morning when the self-checkouts are closed, but still, there's been times when I felt like ending some lives over delays at the self-checkout.
Not to mention the n00bs that will put something else on the fancy conveyer belt (or take something off before it rolled to the end), causing the system to stop because it expects there to be exactly one item on it, causing one of the attendants to have to come over and reset the system, over and over. We observed this behaviour before Christmas and thought that Costco would have been better off having the numerous attendants just run registers.
Last edited by CubanMustGo; 01-07-2009 at 03:49 PM.
a few months back (I take that back...maybe a year ago) I went to Wal-Mart to grab a few things after work, it was like 7:30 by that time, and there were two girls in front of me with a cart load of stuff getting frustrated with the self check put...they gave up and left their cart load of crap just sitting there. I wanted to yell at them..but they probably would have kicked my ass.
I agree..10 items or less...well maybe 15. I go in the self check out line when I do my grocery shopping because it's usually a few frozen items, some bananas and cereal. That's it. It takes me like 5 seconds.
Bingo!
I'm glad people want little Timmy to get a feel for his job in 10 years, but unless there is nobody else waiting to use those machines, treat it like it's not a toy.
I agree that there should be a limit on all of these. 10 items seems reasonable. Anything more would probably require more than 2 bags and, therefore, should have a checker to take care of it.
It also bugs me when people use them to buy booze and cigarettes, so they have to wait for the cashier to come over and check their stuff anyways.
What I hate is when the thing messes up and it tell you to wait for the cashier. I was trying to avoid human contact here, dammit!![]()
no offense to the people that are employeed by this, but isn't the whole excercise of checking out really, really stupid?
stop and think, you get a cart, move the food from the shelf to the cart, remove the food from the cart to the register, reload back into the cart, load into your vehicle, unload at your home, and put away in your cabinets/refridgerator.
why can't there be something where you put your cart under a scanner that reads everything in your cart, it would help so many issues...just sayin'
They are working on doing just that.
Little RFID chips in every tag or something similar.
I like using the self-checkout when purchasing produce. Especially at HEB when you can print your own bar code. Nothing better than paying .99 cents/lb for a bag of Delicious Apples when in reality you have a bag of $2.99/lb Honeycrisps!
Several years ago, I saw a show on Food Network that talked about a chain of smart stores being tested in the mid-West. I don't remember all the details, but each cart had a touchscreen that acted as a map of the store, a grocery reminder (it would alert you of items that usually go together or are located in the same isle), and a barcode scanner. You scan each item as you put it in the cart, swipe a credit card when you're done, and walk out the door.
I don't know what happened with that, but I want.
Even better than that, I'd like to go to HEB.com, pick out all the items I wanted, show up at the brick and mortar HEB an hour later and have them bagged and waiting for me with a bill. I won't even have to leave my car...they just swipe my card, load my groceries and away I go.
that is the world i want to someday live in...all of this hoarding bundles and packages of food into a metal cart with wheels and then forming a line to exit is too cavemanish
why is someone just telling me this! i would pay double to hear someone's screaming kid behind me in line! which heb's does this work at
I don't think it exists. I'm making the suggestion right now....can someone get me the number to the patent office?
Albertson's in Dallas had something like this. You scanned your stuff as you bought it and then there was a special 'express' lane you went through to pay. Hardly ever saw anyone using it.
That should be caught by weight. Someone isn't doing their job.
3 lbs of Honeycrisps weighs the same as 3 lbs of Delicious.
my pants got all happy for nothing![]()
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