RadioShack Gone

The government has no competition! It will never go out of business when something better comes along.

The only competition is a little between states, and the option for people and companies to relocate to other countries... which the big ones do.

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John Larkin         Highland Technology, Inc 
picosecond timing   precision measurement  

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com 
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
Reply to
John Larkin
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They constantly kept jumping onto the wrong bandwagons... and mostly those that would profit others and degrade them even further.

Heathkit could never survive the current situation either.

The closest thing no is rasberry pi, in some respects.

I have a cubox-i to buck against that proprietous f*ck-up too.

Reply to
DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno

Folks in the US are so stupid.

Some of that 80 probably ends up in Pakistan.

Reply to
DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno

Idiot. back then that was ALL that was DOABLE. It had nothing to do with affordability.

Goodyear Tire STAYED on a daily batch processed mainframe and 300 baud modems and daily updates were sent to that mainframe from EVERY Goodyear store running, up until just a few years ago. Seriously.

Even you sales ticket got phoned home on an accoustic modem. Literally.

Reply to
DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno

This is actually a lie.

One "cheaper" way back then was to use a BBS, because they breached long distance rates and requisites by placing key BBS "servers" near crossover points between telephony zones. There were simply a few propagation delays to wait on, and of course zero security.

Otherwise, BBSes would never have taken off either.

Reply to
DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno

Always wrong:

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18 KBPS in 1984:

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The 300 baud FSK was mostly acoustically coupled, to get around the prohibition against wiring directly into the Bell system. Carbon mikes were horrible, the main limit on baud rate.

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John Larkin         Highland Technology, Inc 
picosecond timing   precision measurement  

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com 
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
Reply to
John Larkin

I've never done that.

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Compare that to a PDP11, or a Univac.

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John Larkin         Highland Technology, Inc 
picosecond timing   precision measurement  

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com 
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
Reply to
John Larkin

+3
Reply to
John S

"leased lines"

Yeah... there were consumers everywhere using those.

You're an idiot.

Reply to
DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno

So your argument that the service provided by our current broadband infrastructure is actually cheap is that 30 years ago you had to fly tapes around, and you can currently purchase a computer that is better than one designed ~50 to 70 years ago

It's ironic that you say that in a dynamic economy new companies kill old companies, since in Silicon Valley it seems the number 1 goal of every startup is to eventually be bought out by some member of an oligopoly...

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Reply to
bitrex

So price gouging is OK as long as the market will bear it ? Let's take this a step further, the unemployed should get everything for free and millionaires should have to pay a thousand bucks for a loaf of bread.

Now there's a warped situation that would have about the same result as true socialism. Nobody would work. Why ?

Reply to
jurb6006

The running joke around the lab here was everytime you bought a battery at Radio Shack, they would always ask you what you needed it for.

Seriously? For a "AA"? What, were they going to try to upsell us to a "AAA"?

Reply to
mpm

Drugs often cost a small fraction of the USA price when sold in poor countries.

That makes sense for a product that has an enormous development cost but a tiny production cost. In each market, the drug is priced to maximize profit. If the USA price were the same as the African price, they'd never get the R&D costs back. Even in the US, some drug companies heavily discount drugs, or give them away free, to people who can't afford them.

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John Larkin         Highland Technology, Inc 
picosecond timing   precision measurement  

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com 
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
Reply to
John Larkin

Yup, with an adapter.

Actually I had a battery card. Anyone else remember those ?

Reply to
jurb6006

Obviously. Most electronics keeps getting cheaper.

Wired DSL is cheap and getting cheaper; remember when 56K was fast? About three orders of magnitude improvement in not too many years. I can watch a HD movie on Netflix for a fraction of the cost of going to a theatre, or renting a VHS tape. And I can drink beer while I watch it.

I don't have to drive to a university library to look up technical stuff.

I have a terabyte USB hard drive right here that costs under $100.

A very good digital camera costs, in real dollars, a fraction of the cost of an optical SLR, and there's no film to buy and process.

My HP35 calculator cost a month's salary when I bought it.

I guess you can spend a bunch slurping 10s of gigabytes into your cell phone every month, but why does anybody need to do that?

Remember National Union? Transitron? RCA?

The biggest tech companies on the planet (Apple, Google) were nobodies

20 years ago. And they did not much grow by acquisition.
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John Larkin         Highland Technology, Inc 
picosecond timing   precision measurement  

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com 
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
Reply to
John Larkin

They probably want to know what's so special about your application that you'd buy their overpriced junk. The clerk probably hadn't seen anyone in a week and wanted to talk to someone.

Reply to
krw

So you don't think it costs more to do business in the first world?

No, unlike you, I'm not a communist.

Reply to
krw

Higher bandwidth, too.

Reply to
krw

Very illogical thinking. The part that matters is, "In each market, the XXXX is priced to maximize profit." Why does it matter how much it cost to develop or what the product is? They spent the money to develop it whether it was a nickle or a billion dollars. How about we crack open your designs and allow others to copy them? It's not like you spent a billion dollars to develop them.

All products are priced to maximize profits. How else should they do it?

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Rick
Reply to
rickman

People vote with their feet too, though they're more limited in what they can do than are companies.

Reply to
krw

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