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Ask HN: How to avoid skill atrophy in LLM-assisted programming era?

1•py4•45s ago•0 comments

Pretty much 100% of our code is written by Claude Code and Opus 4.5

https://twitter.com/bcherny/status/2015979257038831967
1•sysoleg•1m ago•0 comments

Stanford scientists reveal oldest map of the night sky

https://www.kqed.org/news/12070647/stanford-scientists-reveal-oldest-map-of-the-night-sky-previou...
1•dr_dshiv•3m ago•0 comments

AI and Society: The Three Phases of Technological Adoption

https://ure.us/articles/ai-and-society-the-three-phases-of-technological-adoption/
1•sschotten•3m ago•0 comments

OpenAI Prism

https://openai.com/prism/
1•davidbarker•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: LemonSlice – Give your voice agents a face

5•lcolucci•4m ago•0 comments

Ag-jail – Sandbox antigravity to avoid persistant/background process

https://github.com/M-Wham/ag-jail
1•mwham•5m ago•0 comments

Clawdbot is a security nightmare [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kSno1-xOjwI
4•carlos-menezes•6m ago•0 comments

Southwest's Open-Seating Era Comes to an End

https://www.wsj.com/lifestyle/travel/my-last-dash-for-open-seats-on-southwest-90aec391
1•JumpCrisscross•6m ago•0 comments

Show HN: AnalysisXYZ – Browser-based CSV/Excel analyzer (privacy focused)

https://www.analysisxyz.dev
1•kushagarwal2907•8m ago•1 comments

Ask HN: How do you manage memory and context across Claude Code sessions?

1•nadis•9m ago•0 comments

Prep Early to Land an Overseas Job

https://relocateme.substack.com/p/how-to-prepare-for-an-overseas-job
1•andrewstetsenko•12m ago•0 comments

The Doomsday Clock is now at 85 seconds to midnight

https://thebulletin.org/doomsday-clock/
2•pbhak•12m ago•0 comments

Show HN: An open-source starter for developing with Postgres and ClickHouse

https://github.com/ClickHouse/postgres-clickhouse-stack
1•saisrirampur•12m ago•0 comments

UPS to cut additional 30,000 jobs in Amazon unwind, turnaround plan

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/01/27/ups-job-cuts-amazon-unwind-turnaround-plan.html
4•belter•13m ago•3 comments

VibeCodingBench: Benchmark Vibe Coding Models for Fun

https://twitter.com/yq_acc/status/2016201908181205358
1•jiayaoqijia•14m ago•1 comments

Former astronaut on lunar spacesuits: "I don't think they're great "

https://arstechnica.com/space/2026/01/former-astronaut-on-lunar-spacesuits-i-dont-think-theyre-gr...
1•rbanffy•14m ago•0 comments

How to Enable ProMotion 120Hz Mode in Safari (Mac, iPhone, and iPad)

https://birchtree.me/blog/how-to-enable-120hz-mode-in-safari-mac-iphone-and-ipad/
1•alwillis•17m ago•0 comments

37signals Isn't Smarter Than You, but They Are Different

https://www.nateberkopec.com/blog/37signals-is-not-smarter-than-you/
1•gaws•17m ago•0 comments

The Peptide Craze, a Surge in Use of Off-Label and Non-FDA Approved Peptides

https://erictopol.substack.com/p/the-peptide-craze
3•ck2•18m ago•1 comments

Bankers at Morgan Stanley are eviscerating Tesla's "robotaxi" performance

https://bsky.app/profile/niedermeyer.online/post/3mdg6hlruzk2o
3•doener•18m ago•0 comments

Will It Rain

https://rainycheck.com/
1•slowinthehead•20m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a tool that broke my 15-year doomscrolling habit in one week

https://tolerance.lol
1•wduncan•21m ago•1 comments

Maia 200: The AI accelerator built for inference – The Official Microsoft Blog

https://blogs.microsoft.com/blog/2026/01/26/maia-200-the-ai-accelerator-built-for-inference/
1•rbanffy•22m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: After Brex's $5B exit, are Ramp customers misreading risk?

2•fintecheng•23m ago•0 comments

The GNU C Library is moving from Sourceware

https://lwn.net/Articles/1056206/
2•rascul•24m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Watermark – Browser based image/video watermarking with FFmpeg.wasm

https://watermark.akatski.com
1•a_void_sky•25m ago•0 comments

'ICE Is Going Too Far': OpenAI's Altman Weighs in on Minnesota

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/27/business/dealbook/altman-openai-minnesota.html
6•JumpCrisscross•25m ago•0 comments

Microsoft routing example.com traffic to a company in Japan

https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2026/01/odd-anomaly-caused-microsofts-network-to-m...
4•evolve2k•25m ago•1 comments

How to Reduce Your AWS Bill by 50%

https://costlyfy.com/blog/how-to-reduce-your-aws-bill/
1•rogo032•25m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Amazon to Shut Down All Amazon Go and Amazon Fresh Stores

https://www.wsj.com/business/retail/amazon-to-shut-down-all-amazon-go-and-amazon-fresh-stores-0301dfb7
158•gmays•2h ago

Comments

justonceokay•1h ago
I’m in an interesting place. Here in Seattle I am two blocks from one of the largest Amazon Fresh stores. It was built on the former location of a local grocer. The construction was almost complete before Covid hit, but Amazon shuttered the store during that time. As a result there was no groceries in my neighborhood from 2018-2023.

Now it seems Amazon is going to leave us a grocery desert yet again.

They were piloting smart carts at the location. The cart scans your items so checking out you just push the cart through a scanner that weighs it. But this invention was like a microcosm of Amazon’s whole fuckup with groceries. The problem with the store wasn’t that I couldn’t check out fast enough, it’s that it was a shit grocery store. They had popular products but they were missing all the unpopular, low margin products you need to actually cook (baking powder, shortening, tomato paste, soy sauce…). They only hire non-union jobs program people at the registers because Amazon believes that cashier is a sub-human role.

The previous store had an owner who would wander the aisles and chat with customers. The new store has Europeans with clipboards who watch you as you shop.

SirFatty•1h ago
"non-union jobs program people at the registers because Amazon believes that cashier is a sub-human role."

What grocery stores still have union workers?

The-Bus•1h ago
The UFCW claims they represent at least 800,000 grocery workers across the US.

I had a job as a union worker in a supermarket, and am glad that's still available to others.

https://www.ufcw.org/actions/campaign/albertsons-and-safeway...

crysin•1h ago
Jewel-Osco: https://www.local881ufcw.org/about-us/#local-881 Meijer and Kroger: https://ufcw951.org/about/
quietsegfault•1h ago
Literally all the grocery stores in my Northeast US city are unionized.
buildsjets•1h ago
My brother has worked as a stocker for King Kullen in New York for 20 years and is a union worker.

In the Seattle area where the poster is from, pretty much all the grocery stores are unionized. Workers at big stores like Safeway, Fred Meyer, QFC, and Albertsons, and local stores PCC, Uwajimaya are represented by UFCW3000. https://ufcw3000.org/shop-union

Additionally, Teamsters 174 organizes a lot of the grocery freight workers. https://teamsters174.net/warehouse-and-grocery/

seanmcdirmid•18m ago
Most grocery stores in the US are still heavily union. I don't think the unions ever left the grocery stores.
jacquesm•1h ago
So now you are off worse than before?
MattDamonSpace•1h ago
Not to be rude but there’s 4 Amazon Fresh locations in the greater Seattle area and each of them is next to multiple other large/small grocery options.

For instance, the one in north Seattle (Shoreline) is within eyesight of a Safeway, a Sprouts, two international markets and a chef wholesaler.

The other three locations are similarly crowded with options.

What food desert are you referring to?

guyrt•1h ago
Jackson St location is the only walkable option in its neighborhood. It wasn't very good (terrible selection, stocking issues, slowly increasing locked section) but it was convenient.
chronny903•1h ago
> What food desert are you referring to?

His food desert that doesn’t exist.

buildsjets•51m ago
Food deserts do exist, but Seattle's Central District is not one of them. This US government tool used to literally be called the "Food Desert Locator" until the current administration re-named it to "Food Access Research Atlas"

https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/food-access-research-...

It's really the suburban areas of Seattle that develop food deserts, likely due to restrictive zoning for commercial properties and minimum lot-size requirements that make sure that every grocery store is a long SUV ride away from the cu-de-sac neighborhood.

If the term Food Desert offends you, I can gladly switch to calling it Food Apartheid instead.

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/may/15/food-aparthe...

marshmellman•1h ago
I wouldn’t describe central district as crowded with options…
freedomben•1h ago
> They only hire non-union jobs program people at the registers because Amazon believes that cashier is a sub-human role.

The implication being that humans who aren't in a union are "sub-human" in your opinion? If so, that's pretty messed up man.

12_throw_away•48m ago
A giant, multinational, multi-trillion-dollar corporation that will only bargain with individual people living paycheck-to-paycheck? Huh, what a weird power imbalance!

Surely it doesn't have anything to do with their documented history of treating their blue-collar workforce like utter garbage.

freedomben•29m ago
I think Amazon are largely shitheads to their low level workers (and still assholes even to mid-level workers), and I am in no way defending them. I'm in fact sickened by them. I will never work for Amazon.

But the implication above was that the non-union employee is the "sub-human" option. I find that attitude pretty gross too. Humans are human whether they are union members or not.

pram•9m ago
The “implication” is that Amazon finds them ALL sub-human and thus would hire to reduce any kind of representation or organizational power.

Work on your reading comprehension dude.

nothercastle•1h ago
They never made sense to have but I’m sure someone made a huge career and got lots of bonuses for this initiative
chrisbolt•1h ago
Dupe: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46781444
bigwheels•1h ago
Thanks! Macro-expanded:

Amazon Closing Fresh and Go Stores https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46781707 - 14 comments, 37 minutes ago

mjr00•1h ago
> On April 4, 2024, it was revealed that Amazon's "Just Walk Out" technology was supported by approximately 1,000 Indian workers who manually reviewed transactions. Despite claims of being fully automated through computer vision, a significant portion of transactions required this manual verification. ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Go )

Wonder how much of this is due to economics since computer vision tech never reached the expected performance + outsourced workers got (relatively) much more expensive after COVID.

theanonymousone•1h ago
Why did "outsourced workers get (relatively) much more expensive after"?
mjr00•1h ago
Great question. I'm not an economist so I have no idea why. The outsourcing rates I've all seen have gotten way higher in the past ~10 years though.
Insanity•1h ago
Beyond just the usual inflation?

I'm not an economist either, but I also assume that as the country attracts more local talent for local companies, the competition for outsourcing becomes harder. (i.e, you now have to pay more than the local companies).

All just speculation on my part though, I really have no clue either.

PaulHoule•53m ago
People from Bangalore were telling me it was getting crazy expensive to live there (by Indian standards) circa 2013.
foxyv•1h ago
Essentially the thinking went. If everyone is remote, why not hire remote workers from countries that are a lot cheaper. Suddenly you had a hard time finding contractors and FTEs from those countries because everyone was hiring them. At the same time it got really hard for entry level developers in the USA to find work.

The supply/demand curve shifted and now those workers are becoming more expensive while domestic workers are becoming cheaper.

giraffe_lady•1h ago
India specifically is in the middle of a massive years-long labor movement that is changing the terms of work there and I believe shifting the degree of alignment with western corporate outsourcing though I'm not very informed about the details.

Scale is beyond comprehension though, there were 250 million people on strike one day last summer. This is not ever really covered in western media or mentioned on HN for reasons that are surely not interesting or worth pondering at all.

givemeethekeys•1h ago
Americans can’t afford to strike like that.
linkregister•19m ago
You're most likely correct; I originally started writing this comment to refute your statement, but found that my assumptions appear to be wrong.

Americans have the nearly the highest nominal and PPP income of OECD countries as of 2024, only behind Luxembourg, Iceland, and Switzerland [1].

India experiences substantially higher shelter and food insecurity and poverty rates than the United States.

However, tech workers in Bangalore are paid an order of magnitude higher than prevailing local wages in other sectors, at around ₹2M (₹20 lakh) [2]. Median annual rents for 2BHK (2 bedroom) apartments appear to be around 1/10th of that figure at ₹3 lahk in desirable neighborhoods [3].

It appears to be reasonable for a technology worker to be able to perform a sustained strike. I have never personally traveled to Bangalore, though I have lived in places where cost of living is under a tenth of median American income.

I invite correction by people with first hand knowledge about cost of living in Bangalore.

1. https://www.oecd.org/en/data/indicators/average-annual-wages...

2. https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bengaluru/median-te...

3. https://www.birlaevara.org.in/best-areas-in-bangalore-for-re...

leosanchez•13m ago
> It appears to be reasonable for a technology worker to be able to perform a sustained strike.

I don't think the strikes are done by tech people at all. Just normal workers.

thinkingtoilet•1h ago
Another case where AI = "actually Indians". It's funny how often this has happened.
Dylan16807•32m ago
Maybe. I'd really want to know what percent of items (not transactions) needed review. 1,000 people to oversee how much revenue?

Theoretically if it was 99% computer and 1% human, that's enough to mess up the economics but it's not a bait and switch like some companies have done.

Cornbilly•1h ago
It's great that they faced essentially no consequences for this. A sure sign that we have a functional and sane market.
colinplamondon•1h ago
Why would they face consequences? Every store has video surveillance that can be reviewed.

They trusted their tech enough to accept the false-positive rate, then worked to determine / validate their false positive rate with manual review, and iterate their models with the data.

From a consumer perspective the point is that you can "just walk out". They delivered that.

acdha•43m ago
If the stock price goes down, I won’t be surprised if there’s a shareholder lawsuit claiming that they misrepresented their level of AI achievement and that lead to this write-off by keeping operating costs and error rates high. The whole business model really assumed that they could undercut competitors by lower staffing.
nayroclade•1h ago
I always found the "Amazon 4-Star" name funny. Presumably when it was first pitched internally it was called "Amazon 5-Star", then they realised that meant they basically couldn't sell anything, since nothing popular gets a full 5 stars. So they changed it to "4-Star", which just sounds awkward, and lacks the suggestion of top-quality that "5-Star" would. Instead, it's like the "Amazon Not-too-bad" store. I was amazed that they actually went ahead with it.
boredtofears•1h ago
Also funny because there are many product categories on amazon where if its not above 4.5 its probably shit
giraffe_lady•1h ago
Shoulda just bit the bullet and gone with "4.8-star." I'm sure they talked about it and yeah it's goofy and awkward but it would get the meaning across and maybe show a bit of a sense of humor and that's exactly why they never ever could.
ainiriand•1h ago
Good sense of humor at Amazon... Yeah right.
paulddraper•1h ago
Yeah it’s kinda like a dollar store but instead of focusing on the upside (cost) it reminded you of the downside (quality).
eithed•55m ago
When did naming things have to reflect reality? ie it's "Burger King" and not "Bearable Burger"
PaulHoule•54m ago
It was a pretty good burger until 2013 when they changed the machine they used to cook the burgers. Now it's worse than McD's and that's saying something.
nebula8804•34m ago
Wait that explains so much! Do you know more about the change?

I've been weirded out by the fact that their jr burger buns are now super shiny as if they are spraying something on them. I know this is processed food, but no burger bun should be able to reflect sunlight the way their burgers now do...

calvinmorrison•53m ago
who is this appointed this beef monarch anyway?
adolph•29m ago
"'Amazon Not-too-bad' store" sounds pretty reasonable. Maybe a too-clever work around for the 5-Star problem would be to call it "100-Star," which would be 4 in binary notation. Or they could call it "5th-Star" since 4 stars is the fifth number of stars b/c the range of starts is zero indexed.

  Ordinal : Cardinal
  1 : 0
  2 : 1
  3 : 2
  4 : 3
  5 : 4
  6 : 5
s08148692•1h ago
Shame, shopping there felt like magic. I hope the technology is developed in future without having to rely on remote workers validating transactions. Definitely felt like the future of shopping
amelius•1h ago
In what ways?
slipnslider•1h ago
Isn't the same tech used in stadiums? At least in Seattle we can just walk out without paying, even alcohol. Obviously we have to scan our CC or something similar to get in but I always thought it was using the same Amazon tech.

So even though these stores are closing, the tech is widely used and likely expanding and succeeding

minimaxir•1h ago
The Amazon Go stores in San Francisco were weird. They always had no people shopping in them, which would make sense given the increased efficiency, but it amplified the "am I stealing?" vibe. And the cost of goods wasn't made any cheaper than comparable stores in SF despite the touted increased efficiency.
frogperson•1h ago
LOL, any found efficiency doesnt go to the consumer. The evidence is the widening wealth gap over the last 40 years. Its trickle up economics.
jgbuddy•9m ago
does competition not naturally drives competitors to reduce margins?
1980phipsi•1h ago
The lack of people in them was the thing about going to one that always felt weird to me.
_fat_santa•1h ago
I don't live around any Amazon Fresh stores so I never saw them though I did see the technology in use at several airports (though I've never personally used it). IMO I think places like airports are the best place for something like this, people are usually in a rush so not having to wait in line to checkout is nice and you don't have to worry about security as much because everyone there is a ticketed passenger (only saw them post-security) and even if someone did try stealing they wouldn't get very far.
onetokeoverthe•1h ago
not get far? at an airport?
vel0city•1h ago
I saw these in several different airports. It usually had multiple people staffed at the gate to get in and out meanwhile most of the other snack vendors often only had a single person employed.

So you spend a few hundred thousand dollars extra on all the cameras, many millions on all the design, pay all the overseas contractors to manually review the transactions, and you still end up with twice the in-person staff than the average store in the airport.

wolvoleo•1h ago
Hmm Amazon fresh was useless anyway. It was this weird niche of grocery delivery but for small urgent orders. I just don't have that need like ever, if I need a bottle of shampoo or a head of lettuce urgently I'll just go to the corner shop.

Edit: oh oops I see this is about physical fresh stores, we never had those in the first place. Here in Europe Amazon fresh is a weird service for quick small grocery orders. For the bigger ones they partner with a local supermarket ("dia" here in Spain). But I never do grocery delivery because I never make any plans, I just make my life up as I go along :)

But Amazon fresh here is expensive and still slow (2hrs) so really not good for anything.

Amazon go I'm not even sure what that is.

dangus•1h ago
What you’re talking about is the delivery product, not the brick and mortar grocery stores, which are not much different from your typical big chain standard grocery outlet.
wolvoleo•1h ago
Yeah we don't get those here, sorry. Didn't know they even existed
MikeTheGreat•1h ago
> Amazon go I'm not even sure what that is.

And now you don't have to!

Ba-dump-ching! I'll be here all week, folks! :)

direwolf20•1h ago
Amazon go I'm not even sure what that is, must be something like Pokémon go to the polls.
jgbuddy•8m ago
Yeah these are all going to be wrapped up into their same day delivery service. Amazon fresh was very expensive and required a fee on top of prime which unsurprisingly nobody wants to do
g947o•1h ago
These bastards drove out some nice stores near me (supposedly the lease ended and did not renew) and rebuilt the buildings in order to open an Amazon Fresh location. That Amazon Fresh store never opened. Now we have a giant empty storefront nobody uses.
barbazoo•1h ago
But for a brief moment there was a chance it would make the shareholders more wealthy. Surely that’s worth it. /s

Wondering what the municipality’s responsibility there wrt zoning.

bumblehean•1h ago
Same here. A local grocery store and several other local businesses got bought out and demolished so Amazon could build a new Fresh store.

I guess Amazon pulled out of the project halfway through, since for the last ~2 years there's been a half-finished building just sitting there completely abandoned in our town center.

happyopossum•54m ago
Wait, how does a store that never opened drive out an existing store? That’s not how commercial leases work…

Given that a supermarket abandoned that location, and Amazon never opened on their either, perhaps that location or the lease price simply doesn’t work for a grocery store?

nebula8804•27m ago
Reminds me of the time they made towns all around the US do a dog and pony show to attract "HQ2" and then just located it where Bezos wanted to be all along. I remember AOC getting it right all along, she did the most milktoast of pushback in her district and it caused Amazon to huff and puff and just walk away(causing many property speculators to lose out). She got raked over the coals but a few years later and the place HQ2 ended up didn't fare so well. AOC was vindicated.

My hope is that more towns learn from your experience and don't tolerate this nonsense anymore.

timmg•1h ago
My wife will be heartbroken. We moved recently and she loves shopping at Amazon Fresh. (Though part of the reason was that it was never busy :)
MikeTheGreat•1h ago
I don't know what your life/lives are like, and far be it for me to tell you how to live, but if your schedule allows it try shopping later at night.

I show up at CostCo, on weekdays, like 30 minutes before closing time and it's _wonderful_. Few people, nobody blocking lanes while they consider their choices, etc. Same goes for Safeway, Fred Meyer, Trader Joe's, etc.

It doesn't work so great if you've got young kids, or you want to come home from work and just stay home (reasonable), but it's worth considering :)

SeanAnderson•1h ago
Well, that article made me nervous for a second! I love my Amazon Fresh grocery delivery. I started using it during Covid, but could never go back. It's so nice having groceries feel automated instead of a semi-daily chore. I eat much healthier and the rationale for using DoorDash evaporated.

Absolutely zero interest in a physical version that lets me check-out easier, though. So, I can see why they're making this switch.

dylan604•1h ago
> It's so nice having groceries feel automated instead of a semi-daily chore

One of a my previous jobs had a grocery store on the way home. I took to stopping in pretty much daily. It allowed for a bit of decompression after work before coming home. It was very convenient to always have exactly what was needed for that night while being therapeutic at the same time. After switching jobs, losing that was probably the most noticeable thing about the new job

dangus•1h ago
I’m not surprised about Amazon Go but I’m surprised about Amazon Fresh.

They almost seemed like an extension of Whole Foods to a more mainstream suburban market, and I thought they had solid foot traffic.

kotaKat•1h ago
Curious thought - will they be shutting down other “just walk out” powered stuff like Hudson Nonstops in airports?

I also know some Amazon warehouses had an entire Just Walk Out powered concessions area in their breakroom for purchasing snacks in partnership with one of their canteen vendors.

count•24m ago
Nah, they're still actively selling/implementing the backing service/tech for other orgs.
kotaKat•22m ago
That’s kinda what I figured. At this point it seems like they all have the same general configuration of coolers and shelves and the same cameras all angled in the same setup everywhere so I assume it’s all down to one very strict CV model or something…
otikik•1h ago
Oh no! Anyway
Bluecobra•1h ago
Doesn’t surprise me. I frequently shop at Amazon Fresh in store and it’s a mediocre experience. It’s a poorly run store with no visible manager making sure things are in order. You constantly have to work around employees fulfilling online orders and they aren’t helpful. I always find expired groceries/produce on the shelf so I have to spend a lot of extra time inspecting each item. The only reason I put up with their nonsense is that some of their prices are insane and they have easy returns, for example $0.85 for a box of Barilla pasta. They actually don’t accept returns in store and just refund you automatically in the app (Returnless returns). It’s pretty silly and rife for abuse.

I also found a loophole with the Amazon.com return grocery credit. The systems are separate for the $10 off $40 coupon and you just scan a QR code in the store to get it. It turns out you can just take a photo of their QR code and reuse it over and over again.

liveoneggs•1h ago
The delivery shoppers are especially bad at whole foods. There really must be a critical mass where having a grocery warehouse makes more sense than these people meandering around.
Bluecobra•55m ago
Yep, my local Amazon Fresh store felt like it was already a distribution center with the cold fluorescent lighting, gray shelves and gray concrete floors.
cjrp•14m ago
See Ocado, although things aren't going so well for them at the moment.
PaulHoule•55m ago
Wegmans opened a store at the Brooklyn Navy Yard just to show people in NYC what a real supermarket looks like. I mean, you might be impressed with Whole Foods if all you know are those bodegas that have around NYC but if you've been to a real supermarket Whole Foods, Amazon Fresh and such are not impressive at all.
ceejayoz•53m ago
I'm in Wegmans' home town, and the enshittification process has hit them hard in recent years.
tmoertel•50m ago
What changes have you noticed?
ceejayoz•38m ago
My store used to have a big bread oven, desserts made in-house, fresh prepared food made in woks etc. right next to the buffet table, etc. All gone now; the coffee shop got replaced by robots, they tried to close the seafood counter (with enough negative feedback they reversed it), etc.

It's all made centrally now, for 3x the price and half the taste. All the kids went and got MBAs and the third generation family business curse hit hard as a result.

I've heard locals say "Bob Wegman loved people, Danny Wegman loves food, and Colleen Wegman loves money".

jinushaun•23m ago
No! Wegmans was amazing when in lived in NY. We would actually go out of our way to shop at Wegmans and plan our weekend around it.
ceejayoz•22m ago
Yeah, it'd be our first stop whenever we came home from a trip; we even got Christmas presents from the store one year for being (embarassingly) one of their higher-spend customers. The magic has gone; places like Kroeger and Whole Food have caught up.
aqme28•50m ago
I think this is why Lidl is taking off in parts of the US.
moregrist•28m ago
I don't know the Wegman's in NY at all, but the one I used to use in the Boston area was ... okay?

It was a good grocery store with decent produce, a good frozen section, some nice specialty items, and some decent prepared meals. I would put it at roughly the early-2010s era of Whole Foods with slightly better prices. Now that I'm no longer working near there, I don't miss it much.

So I've never understood the hype. But I've also been told that the Boston stores were pretty mediocre compared to the ones in NY and especially Ithaca.

bee_rider•15m ago
If you live in MA the standard options are Star Market and Stop and Shop, right? New England supermarket chains are already perfect.

I think the comment you are replying to is playing up a specific characteristic of, like, deep-in-the-city NYC (it looks like Wegmans has a place in downtown Manhattan?). I also read it as slightly tongue-in-cheek. People in NYC know what grocery stores look like, I think. They just don’t fit in dense areas.

hshdhdhj4444•22m ago
This comment completely misunderstands why NYC (and the core of most major cities) is not impressed by a supermarket.

Wegmans is popular because Wegmansnis good. But if you have a local baker, a local grocer, a local deli, and a small grocery store within the same block, all within walking distance of your apartment, you don’t need to deal with the hassles of finding stuff within a massive supermarket.

You get the highest quality products from people who specialize in those products.

Further, when you don’t have to drive 20-30 mins to go to a grocery store but the stores you need are within a 5 min walk, or more likely, right by the subway exit when you’re returning from work, you buy stuff as you need it, rather than stocking up for days.

Thats why Wegmans opened a store in Brooklyn Navy Yards in an area that’s close to no mass transit, because supermarkets are valuable in car centric areas and not as useful in walkable dense neighborhood.

craftkiller•12m ago
While that is true for the quality-based things like deli/baker, there is one advantage to massive grocery stores that the stores inside the city can't compete with: selection. Every time I leave the city, I make a point to go to a suburban grocery store and walk down their massive spacious aisles to find new/different products that simply aren't stocked inside the city because shelf space is so limited. Entire aisles dedicated to chips!
belval•7m ago
> all within walking distance of your apartment, you don’t need to deal with the hassles of finding stuff within a massive supermarket.

Is that really a thing though? I feel like arguing for quality is a strong argument, but between walking between small shops at the end of my work day and just doing one supermarket feels more efficient.

Finding stuff within a supermarket is also not hard once you've been once or twice.

ghc•6m ago
> the stores you need are within a 5 min walk, or more likely, right by the subway exit when you’re returning from work, you buy stuff as you need it, rather than stocking up for days.

Yeah, so for me that changed after having kids. Once I had to spend 30 minutes a day running around to various stores because we were always running out of everything it wasn't fun anymore.

Furthermore, specialist stores charge higher prices for the same goods because they don't have the pricing power of a large supermarket. It makes a material difference once you have a family.

Urban supermarkets are great because they give you the option of getting everything in one place when you're pressed for time, and they're usually not as large as suburban ones. Mine has a direct entrance from the subway station, so I don't even have to go aboveground.

mgce•7m ago
Strong disagree, and I used to go to that Wegmans regularly. It's fine. Solid market. Whole Foods is equally fine, and excels in some ways. Neither is obviously better.
randycupertino•50m ago
I feel like they artificially made their prices super low for the last couple years and intentionally operated at a loss as a business tactic to force out competition and kill off local grocery stores. There were instances of their prices being lower than Walmart or other budget stores. The avocados were $0.25 each and carrots were half price of ones in Safeway, even ground beef was weirdly cheap. One time as a comparison I put the same items in my cart for Amazon fresh and Walmart and it was $21 at Amazon fresh and $36 at Walmart. WAY cheaper than Instacart too.
lelandfe•20m ago
> operated at a loss as a business tactic to force out competition and kill off local grocery stores

Wouldn't surprise me. I know a guy who invented a device for truckers that became ubiquitous in truck stops across the US. This would've been like 2014.

He refused to sell on Amazon, so Amazon duped his product and sold it at something crazy, like half price, until he agreed to list (at which point they dropped their competing product)

felixgallo•11m ago
I'm not aware of any Amazon product lines or organizations that specializes in devices for truckers. Can you provide a listing?
spike021•48m ago
> You constantly have to work around employees fulfilling online orders

To be fair I've noticed this in multiple supermarket chains the last few years. Although they aren't usually employees, they are instacart runners or whatever.

I go fairly often to a Sprouts grocery store and there are times I need to avoid multiple people clearly doing an Instacart run with 2+ carts full of items.

Shelves are often emptier than they used to be also at these times.

RIMR•41m ago
For a while, they had two stackable 10-off-40 coupons, and a 2-off-10 coupon, and it activated $36, so you could buy $36 worth of groceries for $14.
ChrisArchitect•1h ago
Earlier: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46781444
danans•1h ago
These stores were solving for an Amazon problem (brick and mortar stores without the expense of workers), and not any significant customer problem.

They often put them in places, hoping that people would be attracted by marginally lower prices and brand extension, all while removing one of the primary appeals (for most people) of in person grocery shopping: impromptu community socialization, even if it is simply greeting the checkout worker.

I'm not surprised they failed.

jedberg•1h ago
I don't know about other areas, but here in the Bay Area (or at least Silicon Valley) our Whole Foods has subsumed all the services provided by Amazon Fresh (and Go really never worked). So we're not really losing any services, just the brand name.
testfoobar•53m ago
I miss the old Whole Foods.
DrinkingRedStar•58m ago
Doesn't surprise me either. Anecdotal story coming, but there is physical location on Philadelphia, and I stopped by as I needed an item for dinner that night, and it was on my way home.

Store was kind of bare, and poorly organized. But the kicker is they didn't accept any form of mobile wallet! They had an identical POS system to wholefoods which takes it just fine.

So I quickly put my items back and headed to Giant.. Haven't been back since

thijson•41m ago
They have a good price on take out pizza. Unlimited toppings, and with Prime membership it's $8 something for a large pizza. It was probably their loss leader to get people in the store. I felt like the store was usually pretty empty when I was there. I wonder if Amazon will keep Whole Foods too.
benbristow•57m ago
They literally only put them in unaffordable areas. Like the only one I know is in a residential area of Southwalk in London not far from the TATE Modern museum. I don't even live in London.

Been in one once for the novelty as they've never been useful.

advisedwang•56m ago
The technology lives on, as Amazon "Just Walk Out". But rather than general grocery stores, it is used for concessions at stadiums and places like that.

I guess it turned out that the need more human intervention than they hoped, so the cost is too high for regular stores. However at places where a premium can be charged for high throughput or a low friction experience then the cost of the human intervention can be recouped.

a-dub•42m ago
amazon fresh never really made much sense to me alongside wfm.
vlaksh365•40m ago
I guess that is curtains for the Amazon Go kiosks in Seattle's Climate Pledge Arena? That whole arena was setup as a poorly veiled Amazon store...
golbez9•25m ago
In my town they redeveloped an empty corner lot at a busy intersection just for the Amazon Fresh store. I guess it'll go back to being empty again...
deepflow•17m ago
We have Żabka Nano which is self-serve cashierless shop in Poland. You just swipe you card at the entrance, get whatever you want and walk out. I think they use computer vision system to detect the products taken from the shelves. It kinda amazes me because it's what Amazon promised but failed to deliver.
wagwang•14m ago
If we lived in a high trust society, you could just trust people to scan their own items and walk out.