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25 votes
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ThinkGeek is shutting down
19 votes -
Don’t know which toaster to buy? There’s a website for that: When did recommendation sites become such a central part of the online economy? And are they changing the way we shop?
8 votes -
Walmart wants employees to deliver products to your fridge - Available in three cities this fall
11 votes -
Big Tech wanted to dethrone credit cards. Why it failed, and who wins now.
8 votes -
The new recycling is called 'recommerce’
4 votes -
Grocery stores are packed with plastic. Some are changing
7 votes -
Avoiding "health washing" at the grocery store
7 votes -
Meal kits have smaller carbon footprint than grocery shopping, study says
17 votes -
The making of Amazon Prime - An oral history of the subscription service that changed online shopping forever
6 votes -
The hyper-specialist shops of Berlin
8 votes -
Buying from Amazon: Three steps to find what you need and avoid fake reviews | No Sweat Tech
7 votes -
Walmart unveils an AI-powered store of the future, now open to the public
6 votes -
The IKEA effect: how we value the fruits of our labour over instant gratification
6 votes -
Meal kit delivery services like Blue Apron have an overall smaller carbon footprint than grocery shopping because of less food waste and a more streamlined supply chain
10 votes -
The company that sells love to America had a dark secret
8 votes -
The rise of ‘zero-waste’ grocery stores
17 votes -
The zero-waste revolution: How a new wave of shops could end excess packaging
13 votes -
Iraq's billion dollar used car parts paradise
7 votes -
I just visited a retail marijuana store that uses Litecoin to accept debit cards
After all this time watching cryptocurrency from a distance, I have finally seen a real world use case. Marijuana is legal in this US state, however national banks are not allowed to service the...
After all this time watching cryptocurrency from a distance, I have finally seen a real world use case.
Marijuana is legal in this US state, however national banks are not allowed to service the marijuana industry due to federal law. Therefore all card processing is not available to the retail outlets. It’s only cash transactions at the retail level.
Until today. Today I was asked if I wanted to pay with a debit card. When I asked how, he said they used litecoin. So I imagine that the card is being run by a company which then converts it to litecoin to pay the merchant. Anyone have any clue on what that might cost the merchant as far as percentage?
I thought I would share this because after hearing all hype rollercoaster regarding cryptocurrency, I have finally seen a somewhat legitimate use of it in the real world.
Do you see any other use cases of crypto out in the wild these days?
13 votes -
'We need to keep our language alive': Inside a Uyghur bookshop in Istanbul
10 votes -
How supermarkets tempt you to spend more
12 votes -
Your very public Amazon shopping history is a window onto your soul
11 votes -
A eulogy for RadioShack, the panicked and half-dead retail empire
6 votes -
Google is rolling out AMP for Gmail to let you shop and fill out forms without leaving your inbox
22 votes -
Office Depot and tech support firm Support.com will pay $35 million to settle FTC allegations that they tricked consumers into buying costly computer repair services
7 votes -
Australia's Myer department stores to stop selling Apple products
5 votes -
Instagram adds in-app checkout as part of its big push into shopping
3 votes -
What exactly is Amazon? This is the question that has consumed me for the last ten years.
7 votes -
Why are so many farmers markets failing? Because the market is saturated
11 votes -
Why is customer service so bad? Because it’s profitable.
13 votes -
Protecting the 'unbanked' by banning cashless businesses in Philadelphia
12 votes -
What it’s like working as an Amazon Flex delivery driver
5 votes -
Millennial masterstroke: All credit to Afterpay in generation grab
5 votes -
Amazon to launch new grocery-store business, distinct from Whole Foods
12 votes -
Farmers markets lies exposed
6 votes -
Amazon announces "Project Zero", a program which will allow brands to directly remove counterfeit listings
11 votes -
'Something needs to change': Woolworths drops $1-a-litre milk in Australia
5 votes -
Etsy sellers say their bank accounts were emptied in major billing snafu
11 votes -
Online grocery shopping has been slow to catch on - We shop online for almost everything. Why not food?
11 votes -
Now your groceries see you, too
6 votes -
Game retailer GameStop says it can’t sell itself, stock dives 27% to fourteen-year low
6 votes -
I tried to block Amazon from my life. It was impossible.
13 votes -
Netflix, YouTube, Amazon and Apple accused of GDPR breach
27 votes -
Amazon unveiled Key for Garage—a system that allows Amazon drivers to unlock garage doors to make secure deliveries.
15 votes -
On the experience of entering a bookstore in your forties (vs. your twenties)
8 votes -
And then there were two: Morley Blockbuster one of the last in the world
4 votes -
As a US grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.
12 votes -
Prime and punishment: Dirty dealing in the $175 billion Amazon Marketplace
10 votes -
Instacart and Amazon-owned Whole Foods are parting ways
6 votes