Skip to main content

Apple’s location-sensing iBeacon tech comes to Macy’s, offers discounts and more

macys becomes first trial ios 7s ibeacon serving promos iphone shopkick
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Your brick-and-mortar-store shopping experience could be on the verge of changing big time if Apple’s location-sensing iBeacon technology for mobile devices takes off.

Macy’s has just become the first retailer to try out the tech, using shopBeacon devices that work with Apple’s iBeacon innovation.

Recommended Videos

Built by shopping-app company Shopkick, the device uses Bluetooth Low Energy to connect with an iPhone, as well as some Android devices, to alert shoppers entering a store to various location-specific deals, discounts, and recommendations, and can push things like coupons to your device, too.shopkick app

It can also provide smartphone users with reminders, so say you’re at home browsing a store’s products and you ‘like’ one of them, your Shopkick app, via the shopBeacon device, will remind you that the item is available in store when you go inside.

The shopBeacon device, which costs around $40, is about the size of a bar of soap and would be placed at various spots around a store. The number of ShopBeacons required depends on the size of the premises.

The system is currently in a closed beta trial at Macy’s Herald Square in New York and at its Union Square location in San Francisco.

If the trial proves a success, the system will be rolled out to other retail partners in the coming months.

Apple has said little about its iBeacon technology since introducing it earlier this year as part of its new iOS 7 mobile operating system, though a number of reports earlier this week suggested it’s close to rolling out something similar to shopBeacon at its own retail locations to connect with iPhone-equipped shoppers entering its stores.

How does the idea of an iBeacon-based shopping experience sound to you? It could help you to score a few discounts, and offer up additional information about products in the immediate vicinity as you make your way around the store.

Then again, maybe it sounds like a largely pointless innovation to hassle and distract you on a shopping trip. Either way, let us know in the comments below if you want to try it.

[via WSJ]

Topics
Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Samsung’s budget Galaxy Z Flip FE will keep this spec from the Galaxy Z Flip 6
Someone holding the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6, showing the inner display.

The Samsung Galaxy Z Flip FE is expected to launch sometime next year, most likely toward the end of the second quarter of 2025. We don't know a lot about the budget-oriented flip phone yet except that it's expected to use the Exynos 2500 chip. Now, another leak suggests it will keep the same display as the Galaxy Z Flip 6.

Ross Young, a known tipster and supply chain analyst, responded to a comment on X and stated that the Z Flip FE would have the same panel as the Z Flip 6. For reference, that's a 6.7-inch AMOLED panel with 2640 x 1080 resolution, a 120Hz variable refresh rate, and a maximum brightness of 2600 nits.

Read more
Here’s our best look at the sequel to one of 2024’s best budget smartphones
heres our best look at oneplus 13r sequel to 2024 budget smartphone 2 leak

One of the most anticipated new phones for 2025, the OnePlus 13R, is expected to arrive soon. We have our best look yet at this successor to the OnePlus 12R, thanks to fresh images from tipster @MyseryLupin.

The OnePlus 13R is anticipated to be similar to the Chinese-only OnePlus Ace 5. However, the newly released images indicate that this rebranded phone may not launch in the same green and gold options available for the OnePlus Ace 5. Instead, we might see black or dark gray variants.

Read more
Does your Samsung Galaxy S22 have a bootlooping problem? You aren’t alone
Galaxy S22 Plus in green seen from the back.

The Samsung Galaxy S22 series is great, but many users have been plagued by bootloops for a year or more. If you're finding yourself among that number — don't worry, you aren't alone — Samsung does offer a potential fix. A quick search of the r/SamsungGalaxy subreddit shows multiple posts reporting bootloops from the One UI 6.1 beta update and more posts from a year or more ago. This is far from an uncommon issue.

The primary fix for this problem is to send your phone to Samsung for a replacement motherboard, although this comes at a cost since the S22 series is no longer under warranty. However, another Reddit user — u/HenryTan — shared an update that Samsung will cover the cost of repairs. It might be a matter of luck, but u/HenryTan suggests emailing the Samsung CEO for a faster response. They also admitted that being a Samsung Care member could have influenced the decision.

Read more