Microsoft

Microsoft is teaming up with America’s 2nd-biggest grocery chain to fend off Amazon

Software large Microsoft is teaming up with Albertsons, America’s 2nd-largest grocery chain, to put into effect a “frictionless” purchasing revel for clients. The deal comes as Amazon has been increasingly turning its attention to the grocery commercial enterprise, which acquired Whole Foods in 2017 and has reportedly planned to open hundreds of Amazon Go stores nationwide. The partnership will bring Microsoft Azure and Microsoft 365 to Albertsons shops, which Albertsons Companies’ govt vp and CIO Anuj Dhanda says will allow it to “remodel the customer revel in our shops and digitally,” using “cognitive technologies, artificial intelligence, and data technological know-how implemented at scale.”

Amazon

In line with Microsoft, the aim is to “cast off the friction customers revel in on the grocery store” byby making it easier to locate gadgets and reduce wait instances, even as supporting shop employees to claim their stock and assume they may need additional inventory. Albertsons has been operating to enlarge its era services, and the businesses say that the partnership has already added consequences. Its eCommerce platform now runs on Microsoft Azure, and last year, Albertsons rolled out a “one touch” app for its fuel stations (which runs on Azure), which permits drivers to drag as much as a fuel pump and gas up using paying with a mobile tool.

The era is presently being utilized in 27 stores, and the business enterprise says it’ll enlarge the pilot this year. Microsoft says that Albertsons will use its data technological know-how to improve its supply chain and logistics. Microsoft has made several inroads into the grocery and retail market in the final year. Last July, it teamed up with Walmart for a five-year deal to carry Microsoft Azure and Microsoft 365 to the retail large, while in January, it formed a partnership with Kroger, the largest grocery chain inside the United States, to build multiple excessive-tech grocery stores in Ohio and Washington that use virtual signs and symptoms and apps to allow clients to discover objects quickly.

Johnny J. Hernandez
I write about new gadgets and technology. I love trying out new tech products. And if it's good enough, I'll review it here. I'm a techie. I've been writing since 2004. I started Ntecha.com back in 2012.