| Check yourself out at Home Depot 
 Tuesday, December 3, 2002 Posted: 9:32 AM EST (1432 GMT)
 
 ATLANTA, Georgia (AP) -- The Home
 Depot's do-it-yourself clientele can
 now do it themselves at the
 checkout counter as part of a
 technology upgrade the company
 promises will make for shorter lines
 and faster service.
 
 The touch-screen checkout counters have
 been used in supermarkets since 1995.
 Nationwide, more customers are
 embracing self-scan checkouts at grocery
 and discount stores, prompting big
 chains to increase the number of
 do-it-yourself registers.
 
 But they'll be a first for a home
 improvement store chain.
 
 "It should add a lot of value to the
 company because it will reduce the need
 for additional personnel and increase
 their ability to service their customers faster," said Nathan Lewis, an analyst with
 Jackson Securities Inc. in Atlanta.
 
 Moving from full-time to part-time
 
 The technology also could help Home Depot with a proposal it announced earlier
 this year to shift more employees from full-time to part-time status, Lewis said.
 
 Four self-service checkout terminals are being set up in about 800 city locations to
 replace two or three employee-operated stations. The company also is buying
 performance software to assess cashiers' skills.
 
 Sixty percent of Home Depot staff are full-time. The other 40 percent are part-time.
 
 Company spokesman Don Harrison said the retailer's move to self-checkout is not
 an attempt to cut staff.
 
 "Nobody is losing a job or being displaced as a result of this," he said. "We can
 always use help back in the aisles waiting on customers. Will it mean a shift toward
 more part-time work? I don't know."
 
 Holding customers' hands
 
 The nation's largest home improvement store chain has partnered with NCR Corp.
 for the equipment and Microsoft for its Windows software. The technology is called
 FAST, for Front-end Accuracy and Service Transformation.
 
 The Home Depot self-checkout terminals walk customers through the process, with
 computerized voices talking to them as they scan their items. Customers can
 choose between English or Spanish.
 
 At one Atlanta Home Depot store, restaurant manager Mike Clark, 35, used the
 self-checkout to buy a snow shovel and a rake in less than three minutes.
 
 "I look at it like you are getting four machines for the price of one employee," Clark
 said. "It's very efficient."
 
 Optimal Robotics Corp. of Montreal sold the first self-checkout scanner in 1995, and
 has since put more than 5,000 units in grocery and retail stores.
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