Category: News
Emotion Vending Machine
Just as other vending machine, the user can choose on the emotion vending machine a list of products. If, for example, the user selects “scared”, “ecstatic”, and “terrified”, he obtains a musical cocktail.
World Biggest Vending Machine – A Store
WHEN is A vending machine not a vending machine? When it’s an entire shop! UNIQLO’s new store in Tokyo’s Harajuku district becomes the world biggest vending machine.
First car vending machine just opened
There’s now a vending machine for cars. No, we don’t mean a micro vending machine that sits in your back seat. We mean an actual machine that spits out cars. That you can drive away. It’s bonkers.
Contraception vending machine
Vending machine offerings at a Pennsylvania university are expanding beyond the world of junk food and into the world of contraception after a survey found that 85% of students supported doing so.
Facebook vending machine, coke or tool
Facebook CIO Tim Campos is hoping a series of custom-made Facebook vending machine that dispense computer accessories instead of snacks and sodas will be liked by employees.
Age Verification Vending Machine
With the full-scale rollout of Japan’s cigarette vending machine age-verification system just around the corner, a Sankei Sports news reporter has confirmed the existence of a minor flaw…
Medicine vending machine at supermarket
Two Sussex supermarkets have begun a year-long trial of vending machines to dispense prescriptions, allow patients to collect medicines without speaking to a pharmacist.
Vending machine facial recognition
Now it’s no longer your mom reminding you not to eat that Twinkie. Vending machine facial recognition technology could deny would-be snackers from buying certain foods.
Vending machine price adjust with temp.
Coca-Cola continues to try out new vending machine technology, this time in Spain where its vending machine price adjust with outdoor temperature.
Vending operators’ Fraud Liability Reduced
The sluggish changeover to chip credit cards by U.S. retailers hasn’t gone unnoticed by criminals. It’s estimated that counterfeit-card fraud will rise to $4.5 billion in 2016.