A new smartphone app that provides detailed information about products on store shelves just by taking a look at the packages is about to hit store shelves, first in the UK and then in the US within the next few weeks.
According to project manager Amnon Ribak from IBM Research in Haifa, Israel, the new app will initially be sold to retail stores for use as a part of their customer loyalty programmes.
The new app, which IBM is calling the Augmented Reality Shopping Assistant, works when a store customer scans the shelves in a retail store with their smartphone. The app then recognises the packaging, finds each product in a cloud database, and presents a tag on the screen of the smartphone with basic information on each product showing on the phone’s screen.
The shopper can tap a tag and get more detailed information, including nutritional information or pricing of the same product in other sizes.
IBM had originally announced the app in July of 2012. The launch announcement took place at a press event at the CeBIT trade show here.
According to Ribek, IBM’s shopping app is designed to allow customers to flag areas of interest so that the app can note when products meeting the requirements show up in a phone image.
Someone could use a version of the app in a grocery store to highlight products that are low in fat, below a specific number of calories per serving or perhaps gluten-free.
The app could also be used to highlight products that are the best value.
In addition, the app has the ability to tell the retailer or the product manufacturer when out-of-date products are appearing on store shelves using IBM’s Smarter Commerce software.
Ribak said that while the app will initially be provided by retailers to enhance customer loyalty programmes, it would eventually be available as a stand-alone app.
Ribak did not say what mobile platforms would be supported initially, however he demonstrated the product on a Samsung Android device.
IBM is not releasing pricing for the Augmented Reality Shopping Assistant, although an IBM spokesperson told eWEEK that the retailer-specific versions of the app will be available for free.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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