Touched a nerve I see.You must log in or register to see images

Touched a nerve I see.You must log in or register to see images

Oh yeh mate same primary school joke every day kills my soul. Just not the way you thinkTouched a nerve I see.![]()

Calm down. Poor sod.Oh yeh mate same primary school joke every day kills my soul. Just not the way you think
Anything to add or just here to stalk me again with your nursery time humour?

My first thoughts are always quality then price then convenience. If something new comes along that ticks the boxes I'm all for it. People have to adapt and workers the same. Transitions like this are inevitable it's a pity that big companies always see them as a way to make money through removing staff and reducing wages instead of truly enhancing the switch to new technology by relocating staff paying better wages with better training and therefore championing the new technology and making it a fantastic step forward for everyone.
Just Tryna save you from yaself.Calm down. Poor sod.![]()

They'll go with the convenience 100%The trouble with Amazon Fresh is they are not currently in the market, in how we currently know the market as Sainsbury's, Tesco etc.
It's a new concept, so there is no union and people to protect in Amazons invasive approach. Afterall one of the Union's many tasks is to protect jobs, but when does the consumer take responsibility. I'd say by using Amazon shops, you are condoning what in the long term will be the loss of thousands of jobs - simply because a competition war will break out, and Amazon will have the upperhand, no unions or employees to deal with in the new concept, they will benefit from savings of thousands of salaries, to which the current supermarkets will not be able to compete, thus they will have to go the same way or die, the unions involvement by that time is already too late, the damage is done.
Every single one of us is an independent union, be interesting to see whether people over the next decade, will choose saving people's jobs or the convenience that Amazon Fresh will offer.
They'll go with the convenience 100%
Am I right in saying that any group of workers can form a union?
This goes back to my last post though, why can't Amazon do it the right way, create jobs, good training, good pay and a truly class service?
Anyway, question for people, slightly astray from the thread topic, but it is in relation to automation, basically technology taking jobs.
Supermarkets for many decades now along with our corner shops, which are just virtually well known supermarkets but smaller now, have paid mums, young people that want to work in minimum wage jobs, and many millions of those jobs support people on the bread line.
I see today Amazon Fresh are going to expand their first store out of London and they will base a new one in Sevenoaks. My understanding if I have it right, is they are cashless and require no checkout operators.
I'll assume if this is successful or it continues to be so, then Amazon may attempt sometime in future, to expand into the bigger (super)market, so how many of you would use one if in a town near you?
Your spelling. I'd say that you're the one who needs saving chump.Just Tryna save you from yaself.
Nothing to add then![]()

Forgive me here, but aren't we swapping a checkout person with a delivery driver?
Or is this fresh food being delivered by a robot or something?
Amazon Fresh is automated stores.
They still have to deliver the order though?
Ah, an actual store then!
Not sure what the difference is, you still have to go so may as well go to a supermarket.
Yeh you said.Your spelling. I'd say that you're the one who needs saving chump.![]()
Yeh you said.
Earlier
Yday
The day before
Boring,
@brb ban blue from my thread if he don't have anything strike wise to say pls, he's ruining my thread with his drab miserableness.


I'm sure I'm not alone in believing that Amazon will not stop at little stores.