Bdlu E-Business a Rough Road for Most Firms
The future of retail is here; many consumers are just not ready for it The in-person shopping experience, from finding the right product in the store to trying on clothes in a fitting room to paying a cash register, is far more archaic than it needs to be.Th
stanley termos e fact that you have to take a product up to a desk and hand them a piece of plastic or cash, thatrsquo from the day one of retail from 1850, Scott Bauer, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers and an author of the firmrsquo Total Retail report, says.You can buy your cup of coffee at the major coffee house and not have to whip out your plastic, he adds. You can pay with y
Stanley cup website our phone. That type of technology is dead simple and has been around for years. Itrsquo more about getting consumers comfortable with that, sort of, allowing the merchant to see what your purchases are because yoursquo;re being tracked on what yoursquo;re buying. Mobile payments are just one small example of a much larger evolution in retail that has yet to take place. Take apparel shopping as an example. With the technology available, such as augmented reality, sensors, and mobile payments, shoppers today should be able to find a shirt they like, see how it would look on them through an augme
hydrojug tumbler nted reality app, pay for it from their PC or mobile device, and then either receive it in the mail on the same day or stop by a retail storefront to pick it up.+ ALSO ON NETWORK WORLD Payments made via mobile devic Lobf Three airlines racing to provide public high-speed wireless LAN service at gates
Rumors are rife that Microsoft will reveal new smartphones, code-named Pink next week. If the code name and invitation to the event hold true, the
polene handbag device will be aimed mainly at young women and girls interested primarily in social networking. But
stanley kubek termiczny itrsquo not clear that demographic and audience are the right one to heal what ails Microsoftrsquo mobile business. Irsquo;m not convinced that Windows will be pretty in pink. According to Endgadget, which received a snail mail invitation to the event to be held April 12 in San Francisco, the invitation said itrsquo time to share, The invitation included photos of young, attractive Urban Outfitters models, said Endgadget. Computerworld talked to analysts who said they believed that Microsoftrsquo Pink phones will be unveiled that day. The phones will reportedly feature slide-out keyboards like the Sidekick, and emphasize social networking tools. But Pink phones wonrsquo;
polene bag t include the Windows Phone 7 operating system. Phones based on Windows Phone 7 wonrsquo;t be available until the holiday season 2010. The Pink phones, if they are what is being released next week, are clearly aimed at a very different audience than Microsoftrsquo traditional one. And as my blogging compatriot Seth Weintraub points out, Windows 7 phones appear to be aimed at consumers rather than business and the enterprise, with Facebook and Xbox Live integration. Itrsquo laudable that