Not surprisingly, this would have other perks: it could provide faster connections for the rest of the store and provide a speedier data link to people in and around the store.

This isn't guaranteed to take place, although both sides have an incentive to put 5G in stores. For Walmart, this could turn its stores into medical hubs for communities where dedicated clinics (not to mention wired internet providers) are rare. You'd have a reason to visit Walmart for more than your prescription.

For Verizon, this would fit a familiar strategy: it's determined to find uses for 5G that it can sell to companies, and it doesn't get much bigger in the US than Walmart. Verizon's existing 5G network is extremely finicky, with short range and poor penetration through walls, but it's also very fast and low-latency -- potentially ideal for stores that want speedy, responsive data without relying on wired broadband. That it could also fill gaps in coverage for everyday users is almost a bonus.