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posted by Fnord666 on Sunday March 26 2017, @06:05AM   Printer-friendly
from the extrovert-v.-introvert dept.

Shops and retailers are taking over where street cameras left off, watching shoppers' every move.

According to a 2015 survey of 150 retail executives from IT services firm Computer Services Corporation, a quarter of all British shops and 59% of fashion retailers use facial recognition software. Such technology is vital as offline stores attempt to keep up with online retailers, said Duncan Mann, chief operating officer at retail analysis firm Hoxton Analytics. "Online retailers gather all kinds of information about shoppers and physical stores also want to understand how people behave in a shop," he said. But, he admits: "A lot of these technologies are kind of invasive."

Hoxton has come up with a novel way of measuring footfall - literally by filming people's shoes. Sherlock Holmes-like, its system can deduce a remarkable amount of information such as age, gender and social class of shoppers from their footwear. "We have cameras at about 50cm off the ground and it points down so it is less invasive than facial recognition," he explains. It is surprisingly accurate. It spots the correct gender 80% of the time, better than some facial recognition technologies, according to Mr Mann.

Looks like this tech will arrive just after Amazon has put them all out of business.


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 26 2017, @07:46AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 26 2017, @07:46AM (#484298)

    N900. If it works on your carrier's frequencies! They're built like bricks but they do run firefox with noscript&friends and however many tabs, and it's a physical kb. You control the apps. It's a debian fork by default or you can install whatever maemo's terminal node is right now. If you don't want the telecom radio on you can disable the hardware. If you want FM it's there, in hardware.

    And for battery usage it is supreme. There's a free tool to log battery voltage and commonly important resources (ie. cpu, io, and on/off/sleep state of peripherals). Ditto a per-process resource log/viz helper to look for the culprit, when the battery voltage graph shows sharp ramps for 15sec every 5min, drawing meaningful charge overnight. Oh, I could go on...

    Socially, just install an emulator and call it a game system if anyone asks. Say 'oh yeah it has a phone too I use that sometimes and the texting is pretty good for a game' and you'll look oh so avant garde with your swiss army knife game system.

    I hear good things about GTA04 too, but you have to print the case for it. You could probably ask here and get a lentil to ship you that part, if you haven't access yourself. Or I guess you could practice your whittling to fine precision.

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  • (Score: 2) by Unixnut on Sunday March 26 2017, @11:45AM

    by Unixnut (5779) on Sunday March 26 2017, @11:45AM (#484337)

    The N900 was released in 2009, and they are hard to come by in good nick. Not to mention I doubt many people would be satisfied with a single core 1Ghz arm nowadays.

    Was a complete knockout of a phone though, it could do things that even today, my latest Android cannot do (Especially loved the built in FM transmitter with RDS on the n900), but alas Nokia got taken over by Microsoft, and killed everything decent coming out of this area of research.

    I am looking towards the http://neo900.org/ [neo900.org] project to reincarnate the N900, but at the moment it is still too expensive for me.