Commentary

Walmart Files Patent For Virtual Reality Shopping System

Walmart has its sights set on virtual reality shopping.

The retail giant has filed a patent for a virtual reality showroom system, which would feature a 3D virtual simulation environment with a VR headset with sensors and rendering of physical objects on the screen.

The viewer could see images of shelves holding products and select products virtually. The headset also could be used to capture additional information, since it could include image capturing devices, accelerometers and gyroscopes, according to the filing.

The key is that the VR shopping system would be integrated with other Walmart systems. The VR system could communicate with databases of physical objects, which could be located at “one or more geographically distributed locations.”

In some cases, the user could be in a room with sensory feedback devices, which could control the temperature and output smells corresponding to the interactions with the physical objects. The sensors' devices also could simulate wind, rain, heat, cold, snow and ice, all of which could be within a kiosk.

The VR showroom could be in a retail store, such as in a room or kiosk, for customers to compare and contrast products using the VR system. An example in the patent filing is a customer setting a table using various china, glasses and centerpieces with products that could be changed for a different table setting.

Earlier this year, Walmart’s Innovation Lab, called Store No. 8, acquired the startup Spatialand, whose VR platform had been used for projects with Oculus, Intel, Reebok and Linkin Park. Walmart also has used virtual reality for employee training.

The patent filing provides at least one look at how physical retailers can leverage developing IoT technology. Whether the idea is ever implemented is yet to be seen, but now another potential use of VR in retail is detailed for the world to see.

1 comment about "Walmart Files Patent For Virtual Reality Shopping System".
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  1. R MARK REASBECK from www.USAonly.US , August 21, 2018 at 8:54 p.m.

    what happens to the RC  "Real Customer" ??
    Already experienced this overhead enrichment program.
    Case in point.  I was in a Walmart in east Tennessee this weekend,
    The Collateral damage for on-line ordering is already taking it's toll.
    I ran into twice a Walmart Superstar Super-Center Grocery Getter. (WSSGG)
    They have a large cart with multiple plastic containers and the  WSSGG has  several shopping lists tying to fill  the plastic buckets,  jamming the already  narrow aisles.  Then I went to the deli, which is already under-manned, for a half  a pound of Black Forest Ham (BFH).  The Meat Slicer Operative Engineer  (MSOE)  was obviously occupied filling orders, but there was no one else at the counter.   HMMMM.  She finally noticed me and apologized, but she had to get on-line orders done.  (So the blue plastic bin person can swing by to load it for the person shopping with their thumbs).    The reality will kick in that
    this does nothing but add to the cost of running the store.  So they pay people to stock the shelves, and now pay them  to pack them back in bags, and then we will have  a fleet of driverless delivery bots to Buy and Maintain, that they never had before.  And this won't get added into the price of groceries.
    It's NOT Progress, it's LAZINESS.

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