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#1
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In article m, "Ryan, KC8PMX"
writes: I think, because of credit checks, they need that for certain things like cell phones, satellite dish service, and any credit card sign-ups. But again, there should be some way that this could either be written down by the customer and also the sales rep should have some way of either calling the information in, in a way to protect privacy, such as keying the social security number via touch-tone pad. If you have a major credit card there should be no need for a SSN. If you qualify for a MasterCard or Visa, you sure as hell should qualify to buy a satellite dish or a cell phone. I used to support Rat Shack but since they have gone the way of only computers, cell phones and satellite dishes and barely anything close to radio anymore, I probably won't be shopping there much anymore...... The demise of Radio Shack and it's transition to just another mass-merchandise consumer electronics store is one of the saddest stories in American retail for us radio enthusiasts. Remember when Radio Shack employees actually KNEW something about the products they sold? Back when you could go in and say "I want to put up a base CB antenna....what's the best way to do it and what do I need?", and they would actually know the answers? Remember when you were a kid and wanted to learn about electronics? Radio Shack had a whole line of P-BOX kits to choose from. You could build radios, small transmitters, motors, etc. And when you were ready to engineer your own project from scratch, Radio Shack carried a full line of electronic components and books to show you how to do it. Sadly, like everything else in this country, all that matters is the almighty corporate dollar. The suits decided they could bring in more bucks by shutting out the hobbyists and selling satellite dishes and cell phones instead. They could increase those stock dividends by hiring minimum wage flunkies, rather than experienced personnel. A few more cents were wrung out by dropping Radio Shack's unique line of merchandise (Archer, Nova, Tandy, Micronta, Clarinette, Realistic, etc.) and simply selling the same national brands that everyone else does. The Radio Shack of today is simply a smaller, less efficient, overpriced version of Best Buy or Circuit City. Few original products, nothing for the electronics enthusiast, and salespeople who would have a problem replacing a blown fuse in a power cord. Sad indeed. |
#2
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Should point out that other companies fill the parts need a heckuva lot
better than radio shack ever did and the operate over the network or 800 numbers w/o the need for 17000 or whatever it is today "stores" in the high rent district of malls. The sad thing was Tandy getting its mitts on Allied Radio. But then it was still weird moving to Melbourne, FL in 1980 and finding there was still a Lafayette Radio store here (space now occupied by DRS Optronics). "SouthDakotaRadio" wrote in message ... In article m, "Ryan, KC8PMX" writes: I think, because of credit checks, they need that for certain things like cell phones, satellite dish service, and any credit card sign-ups. But again, there should be some way that this could either be written down by the customer and also the sales rep should have some way of either calling the information in, in a way to protect privacy, such as keying the social security number via touch-tone pad. If you have a major credit card there should be no need for a SSN. If you qualify for a MasterCard or Visa, you sure as hell should qualify to buy a satellite dish or a cell phone. I used to support Rat Shack but since they have gone the way of only computers, cell phones and satellite dishes and barely anything close to radio anymore, I probably won't be shopping there much anymore...... The demise of Radio Shack and it's transition to just another mass-merchandise consumer electronics store is one of the saddest stories in American retail for us radio enthusiasts. Remember when Radio Shack employees actually KNEW something about the products they sold? Back when you could go in and say "I want to put up a base CB antenna....what's the best way to do it and what do I need?", and they would actually know the answers? Remember when you were a kid and wanted to learn about electronics? Radio Shack had a whole line of P-BOX kits to choose from. You could build radios, small transmitters, motors, etc. And when you were ready to engineer your own project from scratch, Radio Shack carried a full line of electronic components and books to show you how to do it. Sadly, like everything else in this country, all that matters is the almighty corporate dollar. The suits decided they could bring in more bucks by shutting out the hobbyists and selling satellite dishes and cell phones instead. They could increase those stock dividends by hiring minimum wage flunkies, rather than experienced personnel. A few more cents were wrung out by dropping Radio Shack's unique line of merchandise (Archer, Nova, Tandy, Micronta, Clarinette, Realistic, etc.) and simply selling the same national brands that everyone else does. The Radio Shack of today is simply a smaller, less efficient, overpriced version of Best Buy or Circuit City. Few original products, nothing for the electronics enthusiast, and salespeople who would have a problem replacing a blown fuse in a power cord. Sad indeed. |
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