Amazon, one of the biggest retailers in the UK, have come offline for their first supermarket experience.
But instead of opening a store similar to ones already found on the UK high street, the e-retailer have made significant changes to the classic model.
Their version contains no checkouts, either human or self-service, at all.
This Amazon Go store is in Seattle, USA, and opened to the public today.
Shoppers with the Amazon Go app on their phones can enter the store, choosing items from the shelves while being watched by cameras.
They then leave the store with their goods – and technology means they will be billed for their purchases automatically, without having to scan anything.
Open five days a week from 9am-9pm, the shop sells ready meals as well as fresh groceries.
It takes up 1,800sq ft of space in the centre of Seattle.
Talking about why they created such a unique shop, and tried out non-internet based selling, Amazon said they wanted to provide a shopping experience where consumers do not wait in line.
Reports suggest Amazon have been testing the shop since late 2016.
This is not the first move the company have made into bricks-and-mortar shops.
Last year Amazon announced that it was buying Whole Foods for £10billion.
It also operates a chain of physical bookshops in the USA.
In October, Amazon said revenues from Whole Foods had significantly bolstered results in its third financial quarter to the end of September.
Overall group revenue rose by 34 per cent to $43.7bn, beating analyst expectations, while sales at Whole Foods hit $1.3bn.
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