Comment Re:Some questions (Score 1) 491
It should also be noted that much, if not all, signal generation on the satellite is going to be traceable to an atomic clock.
It should also be noted that much, if not all, signal generation on the satellite is going to be traceable to an atomic clock.
Why do the books need to be piled on in the first place? Does it make students somehow better? Does it help them get a job after highschool - in a world where a college degree doesn't get a job anymore?
Instead of calling B.S. on whether parents should not help with homework, let's call B.S. on the whole notion of homework in the first place.
What would have been a lot more meaningful of Fluke to do would be to cancel the trademark.
I wonder if it should have been granted in the first place. Yellow rubber meter holders existed far before 2000 when this color trademark was granted. Which means that Fluke may have not been entitled to it in the first place. Maybe the fine legal minds on Slashdot can help explain it to me.
I understand Fluke's desperation at wanting to stop low cost meters from undercutting their business, but let's face it, China has been undercutting everyone's business. I don't see what makes them so special to avoid it other than making better products, certainly not through a yellow rubber holder that's been used since nearly the beginning of digital meters.
I spent five minutes trying to figure out if Slashdot once again misspelled something, i.e. "porno."
Really, thanks OP for your pursuit of the truth here. This is part of the technical excellence that I came to expect of the Slashdot of the days of old. Good job.
Does anyone else remember when IBM would be the one to do something like this?
RadioShack can branch out all it wants, as long as its stores continue to offer the core services (hacker parts, electronics, and knowledgeable staff) front and center.
The sad fact is they have lost that core demographic that would shop there. They have found workable replacements for whatever Radio Shack used to sell them, and even at cheaper prices that the internet can offer.
I have a difficult time seeing how it is not too late. There are a few corporate businesses that struggled in the past, closed stores, and then were able to make a comeback after restructuring and reinventing themselves. But for the vast majority, it just signals the beginning of the end.
If I had a hand in Radio Shack, I'd fire anything that called itself a manager, and get rid of positions in corporate that seem to be merely taking up space. Maybe that's what will happen with all these store closings. Get rid of quite a few district managers.
Somehow Ironic that they will be forced to go through now what they forced countless salesman to do - walking the plank of unemployment.
However, if you notice, every store is focussed on the upsell. It's more rare that I walk into a store and be left alone than it is where I walk into one and they try to upsell me.
It happens online too. Look at Amazon's "ad ons."
Retail store fronts simply are not needed at all for electronics any more. They simply are not going to be able to stay in business with a guy walking in once a week to buy a pack of resistors.
The thing that Radio Shack needed to do like days of old was not necessarily sell parts, but rather innovate. Like what others dealing in electronics have. It's not that Digikey dropped their minimum (though I never thought that was big deal) but that they had every part being made, and then built a robot system that could pull parts faster, more accurately, and cheaper than humans. Something Radio Shack should have spotted, if they weren't more than a bunch of salespersons worried about bagging the next cell phone sale.
It was, and remains to be, beyond them.
People need to be stop being pollyannaish about the old days of electronics coming back, because there is no reason for it to.
Everybody who is the type to buy electronics does so now online. It is impossible for Radio Shack to stay open with a customer walking in once a week to buy a pack of fuses.
This is a story about the transformation of electronics as much as it is Radio Shack mismanagement. Depending on cell phones for short term profit instead of innovation was the death knell for Radio Shack. You can browse old threads about Radio Shack and see that this is no surprise. I think it also marks the path that others will take when they focus entirely on short term gains and not try to look ahead.
As I said in another comment. Radio Shack should have been the inventor of Arduino. Not another me-too place. And who is going to spend $100 for a Raspberry Pi?
Radio Shack is simply not needed. Quite honestly, it's probably beneficial for employees that they close their doors as well, because they can now move on to another place that will treat them a little kinder.
Since when do people repair electronics? Electronics are not like cars where people are going to find a way to repair them. When electronics break, they are sent to a land fill and replaced as expeditiously as possible. And used as an excuse to upgrade.
I'm not saying that it is right, just what the market has morphed into. It makes no sense to have an "Autozone" for electronics now.
Actually around the holiday season Radio Shack mall stores would outperform the strip mall stores by miles because of all the RC toy sales (and gift giving). And people would also always buy a pile of batteries to go with them. During the same time, people who would show up at the strip malls were people looking to buy a pack of resistors or fuses.
Malls can charge higher rent because of the demographic and foot traffic in a mall far outstrips that in a strip mall. Sales people always wanted to work in malls because they would easily get more commissions.
However, if you worked in a strip mall, you always worked for minimum wage.
I welcome ex-Radio Shack employees to chime in, as I know that is not far from the truth.
Around the time I left they had started putting part in "bins". And they started sending in secret shoppers. If an employee didn't ask every customer about a cell phone AND a satellite dish they were fired. Even before that turnover was like a fast food place.
They resented their employees worse than a fast food place. My thoughts is that management had to blame someone for their poor sales, and as they say crap rolls downhill. So it was the poor lackey at the bottom to catch it. Employees were probably blamed for stealing when it was shoplifters that could not be stopped. That kind of nonsense.
Also lots of Arduino stuff.
If it would have been the Radio Shack of old, they would have been the ones to invent the Arduino But they're not. All they are now is a bunch of stuffy managers making a death bed repentance.
Everything you mentioned can now be found online for cheaper, and everybody is now used to getting it that way and probably prefers not having to drive to the store and having it delivered to the doorstep anyway.
Amazon will probably be able to pick up the slack with same day shipping in the near future for a lot of these items. But even then I don't mind waiting two or three for the USPS.
This restaurant was advertising breakfast any time. So I ordered french toast in the renaissance. - Steven Wright, comedian