The UX of the Dash Button is great, shopping for laundry detergent is boring, just one press and it's over. Managing your personal finances has zero to do with the dash button user experience.
The whole point is pushing the button provides no immediate feedback at all. People are used to pushing a button doing something immediately, not pushing a button and *MAYBE* something happens 48 hours from now.
As such, these buttons are unlikely to gain any kind of popularity.
The immediate feedback is the button push and knowledge you ordered the laundry soap. Also, there's no *MAYBE*, the purchase is sent and the soap will arrive later. (Most people don't wait for the empty box to get more soap and so don't need it to materialize on the spot, they put it on a list and get it later. Much the same logic as the button.)
Actually great UX for everyone else (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:4, Interesting)
I can tell you didn't RTFA.
The whole point is pushing the button provides no immediate feedback at all. People are used to pushing a button doing something immediately, not pushing a button and *MAYBE* something happens 48 hours from now.
As such, these buttons are unlikely to gain any kind of popularity.
Re:Actually great UX for everyone else (Score:2)
I think it will catch on somewhat.
Re: (Score:2)
The immediate feedback is the button push and knowledge you ordered the laundry soap.
"Knowledge" is not feedback.
The button push is only feedback that the button was pushed. It does not indicate that pushing the button had any effect.