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Talk:Shelf front: Difference between revisions

1,009 bytes added ,  30 March 2004
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::Umm...No. [[retail shelf]] is where the products and their id tags are, [[shelf front]] is where we hope to bring [[Consumerium Services]] to the [[consumer]] in the future. --[[User:Juxo|Juxo]] 15:01, 29 Mar 2004 (EEST)
::Umm...No. [[retail shelf]] is where the products and their id tags are, [[shelf front]] is where we hope to bring [[Consumerium Services]] to the [[consumer]] in the future. --[[User:Juxo|Juxo]] 15:01, 29 Mar 2004 (EEST)
:::So 'shelf front' is more abstract?  But can it ever mean anything other than the (concrete) [[retail shelf]]?  If not, the two should be in only one article.  If 'shelf front' can include things like [[sidewalk vendor]]s or [[county fair]]s or [[flea market]], I think it needs a different name, since those don't have 'shelves' they have 'displays'.  So a [[retail shelf]] could be one [[display front]], a [[vendors table]] could be another, [[ebay]] could be another.  But I think you mean only an actual physical place where the goods are, and are taken from?  In which case [[storage location]] is most accurate actually.  The [[retail shelf]] is then one of many [[storage location]]s - and some storage locations (like [[grocery bin]]s for [[produce]]) are automated with [[friendly retail]] capacities for [[Consumerium buying signal]], even if it's just to run the little sticker on the fruit past some scanner.
:::Be more specific about the [[use case]]s here.  It's just too abstract now.
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