Pepsi Creates a Social Network Vending Machine 80
RedEaredSlider writes "Now even vending machines are getting in on the social media act. Pepsi has rolled out a new machine that can send a soda to a friend, using a Facebook-like functionality. From the article: 'Along with buying a soda with either cash or credit, the Social Vending System allows people to send a user a soda as a gift. All they have to do is enter the recipient's name, mobile number and a personalized text message. Consumers can even send a video along with the gift. Once received, the recipient will learn where they can redeem it.'"
Free soda (Score:3)
how far would you go to get a free soda?
I could see a lot of malls and other establishments that want more foot traffic buying into this.
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how far would you go to get a free soda?
The irony is that Americans pay to receive text messages, such as the code for their "free" drink.
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Seems like most Americans that receive text messages, particularly those that would use the social features of a socially-networked vending machine, have unlimited text messaging plans at this point. The marginal cost of the free drink is zero. Plus, what makes you think a text message would be required?
Good point about unlimited text plans, I hadn't considered that. As for why I think a text message is required, I quote TFS: "All they have to do is enter the recipient's name, mobile number and a personalized text message."
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If you're going to go this far, it seems it would be much more logical to have it tied to one of those 2d (or 3d) barcode systems via email than a text message. Maybe it's just a ploy to get cell phone numbers for marketing.
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you: No thanks.
PepsiBot: You are a bad person. Not much of a friend, are you?
you: What?
PepsiBot: FuzzyCat369@hotmail.com recently sent you a soda. You should reciprocate.
you: Oh, well, yes
PepsiBot: Please enter FuzzyCat369@hotmail.com's real name, address and telephone number so that we may ensure delivery of the soda certificate.
And if you think your friends won't cough up your personal information in exchange for a soda or shiny trink
Re:shiny (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't you know, how hard it is to get mobile numbers of people? They're not in the usual standard listings...
But Pepsi will be happy to sell their data for a fee!!
The FBI must love this - think of the consequences on the Witness Protection Program!
Better than being sent Shrubbery on Facebook (Score:2)
"Why don't you boys have yourselves a Pepsi!"
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Dear NewYorkCity3411,
Your friend, IHateNewYork7682, has sent you a Pepsi. To redeem your free Pepsi, go to any Pepsi vending machine on reka Amderma, in Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Russia.
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I hope (Score:1)
This social networking fad eats itself.
How many different media outlets are we expected to join? Do I have to watch for cameras leeching my password off a soda machine outside Walmart now?
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Bubbly (Score:3)
I call "social networking bubble". Where can I short-sell?
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Yup. We're officially in another bubble. Yee haw.
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Where can I short-sell?
US Treasury Notes
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Would you take investment advice from someone who confuses "where" with "what"?
How to ask and answer smart questions (Score:2)
Would you take investment advice from someone who confuses "where" with "what"?
No, but I would take investment advice from someone who knows 1. investing and 2. asking and answering smart questions [catb.org]. Here, the replacement of "where" with "what" reframed the discussion from the step to the goal [catb.org].
Random free soda (Score:1)
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how would I know Pepsi isn't just keeping the money I give them to get some stranger a free soda?
[you] did you get that free soda i sent you?
[friend] no?? you sent me a soda?
[you] yeah I sent one to you via the pepsi machine
[friend] I didn't get anything.
[you] odd.
After this situation occurs enough times, I imagine people will figure out that it doesn't really give their friends a soda and they'll stop using it. So there's some financial incentive for pepsi to actually deliver the drink correctly.
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If a consumer is feeling particularly generous, it can even buy a soda for a complete stranger through its "Random Acts of Refreshment" service. This sends a Pepsi to any other social vending system.
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Social bubble needs to burst (Score:2)
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When will the social networking hoopla simply die?
When humans stop wanting to interact with other humans? Technically, going out to a restaurant with friends is social networking, right?
Re:Social bubble needs to burst (Score:4, Insightful)
When will the social networking hoopla simply die?
When humans stop wanting to interact with other humans? Technically, going out to a restaurant with friends is social networking, right?
Other humans? What human are you interacting with when your little geek fingers are furiously typing in your latest tweet or facebook entry? You are interacting with a machine, which is interacting, via the network, with another machine in Salt Lake City or Prineville. Social it may be, if we allow a generous stretching of the definition, but it is a damned far cry from "human interaction".
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Great. Send a friend a soda. When will the social networking hoopla simply die?
I'm sure it will fall flat now that the lid's off.
Finally! (Score:1)
Forget 'Have a Coke and a smile,' it's time to 'Have a Pepsi and a concussion!'
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Have we learned NOTHING from Maximum Overdrive?
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We learned not to let Stephen King direct.
Hm. (Score:3, Interesting)
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How long until we get a story about how someone totally empties one of these without paying for a single one?
Wow, that guy must have a lot of friends who know he likes Pepsi.
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Wow, that guy must have a lot of friends who know he likes Pepsi.
Verizon is currently running an ad campaign asking people to send email and text messages to some 110 year old woman, so she can have "a happy birthday".
Sure, a mailbox stuffed to capacity and a phone that can't be used because it is so busy getting incoming text messages, that would make a happy birthday for me, for sure.
How long until Pepsi does the same thing? "Send Velma a can of Pepsi for her birthday....". Hope she's not a diabetic.
Or better, someone does something like the old classified ad trick
Option to convert Pepsi order to Diet Pepsi order (Score:2)
How long until Pepsi does the same thing? "Send Velma a can of Pepsi for her birthday....". Hope she's not a diabetic.
Couldn't Pepsi just expose a preference for people to convert incoming Pepsi orders to Diet Pepsi or Pepsi Max orders?
Coins (Score:3)
I've had quite a few times that I didn't have change and wanted a soda. If I could send myself a soda (paid by credit card, or Google Checkout, or whatever) and walk up to a machine and enter a code to get it, I'd probably do it. Other vending items would work as well.
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I don't know where you live, but I know at my university virtually all of the vending machines take debit and credit cards.
And despite possessing a significant level of slashdot-induced paranoia about such things, I must admit that the RFID enabled ones are actually kind of neat: You just pick your drink, wave your card/wallet at the machine, and grab your beverage at the bottom, and off you go. Perfect for those "my next class is on the other side of campus and I forgot my personal jetpack" times.
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Perfect for those "my next class is on the other side of campus and I forgot my personal jetpack" times.
Yeah, buy three cans of pop, shake them really hard, and strap them on your back. Zoom zoom zoom, almost like a Mazda. Kinda messy for all those around you, and you have one hell of a carbon footprint...
Amazing (Score:2)
Previously, I had to buy two sodas, and then hand one of the sodas to friend.
With the magic of social networking and Pepsi, now I only have two buy two sodas, enter a phone number, enter a greeting, record a video, and send a free soda code to a friend's mobile device, which they can use to access the same machine and retrieve a free soda.
I'd like to buy the world a Coke... (Score:1)
...but we were beat by a Pepsi
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Not really. Carnegie Mellon is the one that put the first Coke machine on the internet.
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~coke/history_long.txt [cmu.edu]
And there are more (old page)
http://cseweb.ucsd.edu/users/bsy/coke.html [ucsd.edu]
Retribution feature request (Score:2)
Can I press a different button to have someone DENIED a soda next time they put their money in a Pepsi machine?
No refund. Nada.
Some friend (Score:5, Funny)
A real friend would send me a Coke.
free beer? (Score:1)
Dumb idea for soda, but could have possibilities if done with beer.
Some gift. (Score:2, Insightful)
Someone sent you some high fructose corn syrup, I mean, some corn sugar!
With friends like these...
probably some of the first customers will be (Score:1)
Student athletes competing for a spot on the team, sending repeated gifts of vending machine sodas and cream pies to their rivals a couple weeks before cut day
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Low-tech? (Score:2)
This seems a lot like the way the car wash works at my local gas station. I buy a car wash at the pump and it prints out a redeemable code on my receipt; the only difference being that the code is sent via SMS inst
Opt in to SMS Marketing (Score:1)
It's a great idea for Pepsi, but outside of the novelty of sending a Pepsi to someone by SMS, I don't really see this becoming very popular. Maybe in Middle Schools?
7UP? (Score:1)
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Anyone else picturing that 7UP commercial with the machine on the tank treads shooting cans at people? I know I am, I would be happy to buy Pepsi for friends if I'm able to launch the soda at them from the machine.
I remember those. I seem to recall the Mythbusters (Well, M5 Industries) made the effects for that one.
Nuka Cola Caps? (Score:4, Insightful)
This begins to explain the idea behind bottle caps as currency I suppose....
If I pay extra... (Score:2)
can I get the machine to withhold soda from someone? Better yet, can I get the machine to travel to a friend's house and steal their soda? I'd pay extra for that!
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Forget Amazon wishlists, by me a Soda! (Score:1)
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social (Score:2)
- Being holed up in your room in front of a big bright blue screen
- "Liking" things that you would scoff at if presented to IRL
- Wasting your time watering plants that probably won't result in anything tangible whatsoever
- If you manage to get out of the house, stare at the small bright blue screen all the way until you reach another big bright blue screen
- Tasing someone who pokes you in reality
- AND NOW, going to the vending machine, dying of thirst and bleeding out of your parch