Innovation Inc: Contact-free shopping and dining are taking off

The coronavirus crisis has forced companies to quickly adjust to conducting business online, spurring an incredible rush to cloud services of all kinds, as this newsletter has covered extensively. The swell of technological transformation isn't just happening digitally, though: Two recent stories show how brick-and-mortar businesses, too, have been adopting new technologies in-store that make shopping or dining during the pandemic more appealing to patrons.
For example, Thanx, a San Francisco-based customer engagement company that works with thousands of restaurants, just launched a system where diners can scan a tableside QR code to order their meal and pay. The tech drastically cuts down the amount of interactions that diners need to have with their servers — an appreciated safety precaution during the pandemic — while also making the process more efficient for restaurants. Advertisement"Tableside represents what we believe to be not only the culmination of that digital revolution but also necessary in this COVID world," Thanx CEO Zach Goldstein told Business Insider's Kristen Hawley.
Similarly, grocery chain Giant Eagle just launched its first checkout-free convenience store, in Pittsburgh, through a partnership with artificial intelligence startup Grabango.
Though the contactless technologies from Thanx and Grabango are both particularly well-suited to this moment in history, both companies say their platforms are the natural evolution of long-time digital trends and, as Thanx CEO Goldetein put it, "will become the new normal well beyond COVID."
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