Tag Archives: locker
ShopPal is a Cute Robot Shopping Companion
Is the act of shopping getting a bit too lonely for you? Do you have no friends that you can take with you to the mall as you spend money? Never fear, a new friend is here. ShopPal is a robot that is designed to be your new shopping companion.
This boxy, 29″ tall robot automatically follows users around, and has colorful LED eyes, gold ears and arms to make it cute and accessible. Just push a button and you can engage ShopPal’s auto-follow mode, but when that isn’t handy you can use the robot’s handle to carry it. It’s ears flip open to reveal a large compartment inside to store items you’ve purchased. Simply scan the QR code on top of the robot and begin using features like voice control, compartment locking and unlocking and, and mobile charging as well. The robot is designed for use within the boundaries of a specific shop or mall, and has geofencing capabilities to keep it from working outside of its boundaries.
Shoppal’s makers want to make their robot available for users to rent at select shopping malls, with a proposed price of 30 cents for every 15 minutes of use, while select “VIP” shoppers will get free use of the little locker on wheels.
If you attend this year’s Consumer Electronics Show you can see ShopPal for yourself. I can’t imagine it being very useful in the real world, but it’s a fun idea.
[via Barrons via Trendhunter]
Disney, Fox, Warner and Universal may team up on downloadable movies
BenjiLock keeps your gym locker secure with only a fingerprint
Morrisons to open ‘hundreds’ of in-store Amazon Lockers
Locker Logic
Public lockers are particularly useful for passengers at airports and train stations, but the one-size-fits-all model needs some improvement! There’s no sense in paying the same amount for storing a small article as a much larger package and it wastes valuable space. That’s the idea behind the 1 for 2 Public Locker. You only pay for what you use!
Users adjust the dividing board in the locker by sliding it up and down to get the ideal volume or price to pay. A panel on the handle of the locker will display different colors, each indicating how much space is still available. A green panel and a hand icon signal that the current user can freely adjust the volume they need. When the panel displays yellow, it means that part of the locker has been used. When the panel shines red with a lock icon, it means that the locker has no available volume. Now, users can choose the the locker that best suits their needs and budget!
Designer: Chung Hsueh-Wei
Remember This?!
Another intriguing design by Stephan Siepermann, the Locky series is a clever twist on a familiar fragment that’s presented in a different and surprising material for a fresh look that’s all its own. The iconic industrial locker from our school days is reborn in handsome solid oak wood with a wooden padlock to match. No longer for books and backpacks, it makes for an ideal entryway coatrack or wardrobe. It also achieves the ever-elusive “warm” industrial aesthetic opposed to its stark metal counterparts.
Designer: Stephan Siepermann
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(Remember This?! was originally posted on Yanko Design)
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Amazon will Welcome Returned Items via Locker System
Amazon could let Londoners pick up their packages from Tube stations
London's Tube network is about to face some major changes that will not only affect its staff and passengers, but also -- perhaps -- Amazon shoppers. Plans are already afoot to shut down manned ticket offices across the Underground by 2015, in order to pay for 24-hour operation on major lines. Now, according to the Financial Times, Amazon is in talks with Tube bosses to find a way to turn all those abandoned little cubicles into pick-up points for packages instead. The idea seems plausible, given Amazon's other efforts to change the way deliveries are handled, but the retailer hasn't yet confirmed the FT's report. There's also plenty of scope for such a project to become unstuck -- not least as a result of promised industrial action by Tube workers, who want avoid job losses and keep ticket offices just as they are.
Filed under: Misc, Transportation, Amazon
Source: Financial Times (Paywall)
Google’s first batch of BufferBox delivery lockers arrives in San Francisco
There may be a few less places to find an Amazon delivery locker after Staples and Radio Shack announced they were removing them from their stores, but Google's competing offering is now getting a boost with its biggest expansion to date. The company announced today that it's bringing its BufferBox lockers to San Francisco, marking the first expansion of the delivery service into the US since Google acquired the Canadian company late last year. Much like Amazon's lockers, the BufferBox service simply lets you direct deliveries to a locker instead of your own address if you don't expect to be at home -- a service that remains completely free for the time being. This latest expansion also brings integration with Google's recently announced Shopping Express service and mobile apps, which can now be used to direct same-day deliveries to a BufferBox locker. Those in SF can find a full list of locker locations at the source link below.
Via: TechCrunch
Source: Google Commerce, BufferBox