Finally found out what OS do grocery stores use on their POS systems.

TommyVercetti

Diamond Member
Jan 4, 2003
7,623
1
0
POS = Point of Sale (check out counters).

I was at HEB (a grocery store in Texas), and was at the check out counter. Suddenly the check out machine just froze. So she called a supervisor who unlocked a cabinet and pressed the reset button. The machine reset, and it was a Dell PC. It went into scan disk and then booted up Windows 95. I can't believe they still use Windows 95.

I always suspected some speciality operating system, or at least some kind of UNIX.

One more mystery solved!
 

Freejack2

Diamond Member
Dec 31, 2000
7,751
8
81
Dunn and Dunn (Aka Dumb and Dumber) used Windows NT back in 2000. No clue what they use today. A lot of Point of Sale systems are Windows based.
 

Paulson

Elite Member
Feb 27, 2001
10,689
0
0
www.ifixidevices.com
They run different ones around here... they have single pc's running off of some specialty os (made by the company [Ex. cub foods, supervalu]) and those independent terminals send all their data back and forth to a windows NT or 2000 server (because they're all networked)

At least that's what I know...
 

MichaelD

Lifer
Jan 16, 2001
31,528
3
76
Originally posted by: Paulson
They run different ones around here... they have single pc's running off of some specialty os (made by the company [Ex. cub foods, supervalu]) and those independent terminals send all their data back and forth to a windows NT or 2000 server (because they're all networked)

At least that's what I know...

Yep, that's pretty much it. All those boxes do is:

1. Scan UPC.
2. Reference database for price
3. Keep running total of items/cost
4. Send receipt file via serial port to thermal printer
5. Log transaction to server


Not really all that CPU/HD/memory intensive at all. Any Windoze OS would do fine...but 95 IS just a bit freakin' old.
 

Eli

Super Moderator | Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
50,419
8
81
The U-Scan machines at the Fred Meyers here in Portland use Windows 2000.. saw them rebooting a couple a while back. :)
 

DanJ

Diamond Member
Oct 15, 1999
3,509
0
0
Best Buy uses NT4 as well. Was fun back in the day I could make it crash at will. Think my best was 5 registers in a 6 hour period.

Wasn't my fault though, system was too slow, if you typed really fast and entered sales really fast it'd just die.
 

GigaCluster

Golden Member
Aug 12, 2001
1,762
0
0
Fiesta Mart around here runs graphical P.O.S. software on top of X on Unix/Linux. I found that amazing.
 

agnitrate

Diamond Member
Jul 2, 2001
3,761
1
0
We just got new registers 2 weeks ago at my store. They run Windows 95. Our old registers must have been about 15 years old and were 66 mhz chips. I miss those old guys :(

MichaelD is right. Those registers only report to the servers in the back. We have 2 pimped severs in the back that log everything and do it all for us.

-silver
 

BurnItDwn

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
26,280
1,787
126
The Company I work for (large drugstore chain that is actually growing and opening new stores all the time) uses DOS on the POS controllers (IBM 4683, 4693, and 4694 series registers)

Most of the stores have 486 or early pentium boxes to controll all the regs in the store (usually between 9 and 15 registers per store, though some have only 2 or 3 if they only have a pharmacy and no store front, and other large stores have close to 20 (especially the ones in Puerto Rico))

It is a heavily modded version of Dos ... but I believe its based off of Dos 6.2 .... (could be based off of 5 though)
 

GeekDrew

Diamond Member
Jun 7, 2000
9,099
19
81
I saw one of the terminals at Burlington's Men's Wearhouse was a linux terminal...
I know that some at Kroger's are Win2k... same w/ Reisbeck's.
I have the POS machine at the family office running on WinXP... (just an MS Access POS solution i whipped up)

Drew
 

amdskip

Lifer
Jan 6, 2001
22,530
13
81
The Walmart I work at has a server room with a bunch of loud Dell servers runing NT and I think there is a 2k in there too. When you scan cds in electronics, it grabs the file on the server too. Every register has a cat 5 back to Cisco switches in the front with like fiber/cat 5 running to the back.

Edit: Taco Bell had a unix system that I worked on here.
 

tcsenter

Lifer
Sep 7, 2001
18,815
484
126
POS terminals use propietary ROM based operating systems and embedded microprocessors, like PDAs and other information appliances. Its the central POS management system which is PC based and typically uses off-the-shelf OS like DOS, UNIX/LINUX, or Windows.

IBM PCDOS still works fine for smaller retail sites unless you have like 30 terminals you need to serve and are driving some higher-end database/inventory management/tracking stuff.
 

Occifer

Golden Member
Mar 27, 2002
1,002
0
0
Originally posted by: Eli
The U-Scan machines at the Fred Meyers here in Portland use Windows 2000.. saw them rebooting a couple a while back. :)

The can return machines use some flavor of windows as well. I assume it would be the same one. I have seen them blue screen on many occasions.
 

BatmanNate

Lifer
Jul 12, 2000
12,444
2
81
When I worked for the K marche we had IBM POS's and they ran NT4, IIRC. The RMU system was all Unix though.
 

cHeeZeFacTory

Golden Member
Apr 23, 2001
1,658
0
0
I work at a financial aid office for my university, and they use win95. They would by brand new dell systems, and down grade the thing to win95. Jeez
rolleye.gif