HAND HELD PRODUCTS demonstrated its upgraded 8560 Image Kiosk, which is soon to be launched. The new Image Kiosk, to be released Feb. 28, includes an integrated mag stripe reader, a barcode scanner that can read driver's licenses and 128 megs of memory (64 flash, 64 RAM). Each unit now can support Ethernet or WiFi connections (instead of one or the other). Product manager Jessica Penizotta said Hand Held has sold 300 of the Image Kiosks, and has contracts to sell 6,000 more.
KING PRODUCTS plied its multipurpose Plynth kiosk with a three-dimensional digital sign mounted atop the unit's twin overhead rails. The new 3D technology, which makes video and still images seem to pop out of the sign, is available on screens up to 32 inches.
LG showcased its 42-inch M4201C-BA digital display, with 1366x768 resolution and 1600:1 contrast ratio as a sampling of its digital signage hardware.
"1600:1 is about two times the leading competitor's contrast," said Don Fasick, director of new business development. "It's not flat on the screen — it pops out at you."
MOVIEMATE offered its small-footprint DVD rental solution. The kiosk had a clear front, through which customers could see the machine's stock of movies. An RFID tag on each case enabled a stacking function so all the spines would face outward behind the glass. Above the controls, a 7-inch TFT screen showed attract loops and movie previews.
NANONATION operated a digital signage video wall, featuring six screens of varied sizes, with content pushed from a single computer with Nanopoint and CommandPoint management software. The company also showed its customer-driven digital signage, with which customers interacted via cellular phones, and a lift product demonstration activated when customers lifted RFID-tagged merchandise from shelving, and received information from the digital display based on the selection. The lift system also included a back-end that employees could use to receive training, product updates and other information.
NCR proffered its newly released EasyPoint Advantage. The ultra-compact kiosk is less than 3 inches deep, and weighs 11 pounds. In the NRF booth, it showed the enhanced Kinetics ResortPort software, which now provides enhanced guest services with WayFinding and an interactive mapping software solution from Kinetics designed to assist kiosk users with finding rooms, pools or other destinations at a resort property.
NETKEY showed its scalable custom kiosk software solutions. Bob Ventresca, Netkey marketing vice president, also confirmed that the company played a role in Circuit City's new kiosk deployment, but would not disclose any details. For other Netkey solutions, he said interest has been growing for human resources and gift registry kiosk software.
"We have a lot of retailers coming to us for gift registry," Ventresca said. "It's revenue-generating. So we work with a lot of them to enable gift registry in the store."
PAY BY TOUCH, a biometric payment firm, showcased its growing suite of self-service payment solutions and related devices, including biometric payment terminals and loyalty kiosks. Their Smart Shop payment solution offered customers the opportunity to do e-check, rather than card payments, to decrease interchange fees paid to card companies.
The Pay by Touch Rapid Enroll loyalty kiosk automates loyalty card enrollment using no paper forms, which Pay by Touch claims costs clients half as much as paper-based loyalty enrollments, including transaction fees.
Salesman Joe Cannon demonstrated Pay by Touch's biometric payment in a POS terminal configuration, with 8.5 by 11-inch thermal printer which printed coupons based on the customer's purchases. He called printing coupons by purchase history "the new way of doing things," saying that less than 20 percent of consumers read old-fashioned coupon circulars, which he called "the old way of doing things."
REAL DIGITAL MEDIA CEO Ken Goldberg demonstrated the company's NEOCast Media Player Z for delivering content to digital signage. The device featured a dual-core processor and Windows Embedded operating system. It played media on the sign by connecting to a server that can be managed through a Web-based interface, allowing users to change the sign's play list from anywhere they can use the Web. The device requires no in-store server to operate.
"What you end up with is a solution with a very small footprint," Goldberg said. "(Deployers) are not maintaining a server, they're not running a help desk. They take it out of the box, the marketing people get on a Web browser, and they're into the software."
REFLECT SYSTEMS, a Microsoft partner for digital signage, showed its digital signage at the Microsoft booth. Reflect's networking solution for digital signage revolves around the ReflectView software suite. ReflectView allows centralized back-end management of scalable digital signage networks. Gordon Blitch, business development director, said Reflect currently runs 60,000 screens in the United States, including Target stores.
SEAMARK offered its line of interchangeable kiosk mounting solutions. The system, built as an alternative to custom solutions which must be changed every time hardware is upgraded or moved throughout a store, mounted kiosks via backing plates which, through a standardized connection, allowed them to be moved to other Seamark mountings throughout the store. The system included the ability to let mounted kiosks swivel, or remain facing in a certain direction. Seamark also showed its adjustable-height wall mount solution which allowed a kiosk to move up and down a track, which also enabled ADA compliance. Mounts with internal friction pads for holding power supplies internally also were available, as was the option to run cabling through the tubes or clip them to the outside.
SLABB, recently rebranded in a minimalist style similar to that of upscale retailers, exhibited its new X7 kiosk, 160 of which are set to be deployed in Town and Country food stores for human resources applications, according to Brian Prezgay, Slabb's senior kiosk specialist. The X7 features a 19-inch touchscreen, and was built with a cleaner internal design, including more attention to cable management, than its predecessors.
SMART TECHNOLOGIES brought large format touchscreens, including a 40-inch display with integrated (rather than overlaid) touch hardware.
SYMBOL exhibited its large array of POS and customer-facing solutions, including its MK2000 price checking mini-kiosk with barcode scanner and Zebra/Swecoin thermal printer. The unit can be used for guided selling or gift registry interaction. There are currently 80,000 MK2000s in the field.
ULTIMATE TECHNOLOGIES showed its adaptable QwikUse kiosk solution, already deployed as self-service movie ticketing solutions at Kerasotes Theatres. The KwikUse can be deployed in a variety of customized configurations, including free standing and wall mounted.
VERSATILE offered its instant credit kiosk application for deployment in retail stores. The solution has been deployed in Wolf Furniture stores and other retailers.
WIPRO TECHNOLOGIES, purveyors of IT services and engineered solutions, touted its ability to conceptualize and create custom kiosk solutions. Wipro has built a variety of kiosk applications, including a printing kiosk that connects to business travelers' laptops, allowing them to print while on the road, and grocery kiosks that match wine with food.
The author is editor of selfservice.org.