Panera Bread pilots Amazon’s palm-scanning technology to streamline payments

Share post:

The American bakery-café chain Panera Bread has announced that it will be testing Amazon’s palm-scanning technology in two of its St. Louis locations.

The pilot program aims to give customers a more personalized and faster experience when connecting to their loyalty program and making payments. Amazon One, the company’s contactless technology, has already been installed in over 200 locations both inside and outside the company.

In the coming months, the new agreement with Panera Bread is expected to expand to 10 to 20 cafes. To use the technology, customers must enroll in Amazon One and link their MyPanera account.

Amazon’s deployment of contactless technology, according to Vice President Dilip Kumar, reflects rising demand despite macroeconomic challenges. While Amazon has not provided specific growth figures, as of June 2022, more than 69 locations in the United States and the United Kingdom already had the technology.

Over 50 of the installations were with independent retailers, stadiums, and university customers, with the remainder located in Whole Foods and other Amazon locations. Kumar explained that expanding the deployment of the technology was part of Amazon’s business model of selling software and devices as a service.

Amazon has declined to disclose the value of the transaction, but Kumar stated that the business model would be similar to selling software and devices as a service.

The sources for this piece include an article in Reuters.

Featured Tech Jobs

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Related articles

Research Raises Concerns Over AI Impact on Code Quality

Recent findings from GitClear, a developer analytics firm, indicate that the increasing reliance on AI assistance in software...

Microsoft to train 100,000 Indian developers in AI

Microsoft has launched an ambitious program called "AI Odyssey" to train 100,000 Indian developers in artificial intelligence by...

NIST issues cybersecurity guide for AI developers

Paper identifies the types of cyberattacks that can manipulate the behavior of artificial intelligen

Canada, U.S. sign international guidelines for safe AI development

Eighteen countries, including Canada, the U.S. and the U.K., today agreed on recommended guidelines to developers in their nations for the secure design, development, deployment, and operation of artificial intelligent systems. It’s the latest in a series of voluntary guardrails that nations are urging their public and private sectors to follow for overseeing AI in

Become a member

New, Relevant Tech Stories. Our article selection is done by industry professionals. Our writers summarize them to give you the key takeaways