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>I'm still salty about the bafflingly stupid decision to become little more than a cellphone store.

That was a little after my time, but back in the 90s my second job after I got tired of being a dishwasher was at Radio Shack.

During the brief time I worked there if I sold a single Tandy Sensation! (had to say it with the exclamation mark) the profit on that sale would exceed, by a lot, every single component we sold the entire month, and as an awkward teen I sold a lot of Tandy Sensation!s per month.

At my store, when I worked there, electronics parts took up about a quarter of the square footage of the store but was practically none of our revenue.

The only people buying electronics parts were church AV guys trying to fix a worn out 1/4" jack or blown capacitor in an amplifier.

Can't pay rent on those guys.

As an outsider I watched the parts shelves go from most of the back of the store to a single set of drawers to nothing and I can't say I blame Radio Shack. A lot of time was spent inventorying a mindboggling array of components, none of which sold in volumes great enough to justify the expense or the space.






The ability to have those parts was lost without the access and distribution enabled by widespread internet.

I would walk to to my local radio shack at least once a week for different parts for a few years as my friend and I were constantly modding our consoles, breaking our computers, and making little gadgets.

I’d love a place I could walk into now and get a breadboard kit or a potentiometer, and it’s just not there.


Microcenter still does but it costs 50% more for worse quality parts and the selection is still not great. Handy if you need flux or solder in a pinch though

My nearest Microcenter is about 200 miles away, but maps did return a similar local shop I’ll have to check out!



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