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In reply to the discussion: Great Memories: What Happened to RadioShack? The Store That Taught America How to Build Things [View all]eppur_se_muova
(41,826 posts)2. Lafayette Electronics closed its doors even earlier -- corp. mismanagement.
All the places I used to buy parts are gone now.
There used to be a Mallory Capacitor Company factory here in town, in a wonderful old Art Deco building. It's gone too.
What happened to RS is sort of what happened to Bausch & Lomb -- once a major player in all manner of optics, they sold all their glass factories and formulas and specialized in (high profit margin) contact lenses. Now they only make contact lens solutions, because that's where the profit margins are. B&L helped the US Army in WWI by developing quality optical glass for binoculars when it became impossible to get from European makers. A lot of history forgotten now.
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Great Memories: What Happened to RadioShack? The Store That Taught America How to Build Things [View all]
LiberalArkie
Yesterday
OP
Lafayette Electronics closed its doors even earlier -- corp. mismanagement.
eppur_se_muova
Yesterday
#2
Back in those days, you could go in there with a thing you needed to replace,
House of Roberts
Yesterday
#3
My husband still misses that store. He could get components for his various projects.
Ritabert
Yesterday
#5
Find your nearest Repair Cafe, a non-profit which can work on anything from broken zippers
Wonder Why
Yesterday
#18
I know because I am one of the volunteers. However, I'm on indefinite hiatus until I have my leg back.
Wonder Why
22 hrs ago
#36
Laz used to manage a Radio Shack in a little rural strip mall near a military base.
haele
Yesterday
#17
We purchased our first computer, the TRS 80 from Radio Shackwhen our son was 7 or 8 yrs old.
scarletlib
Yesterday
#19
The video is AI-generated and narrated, on a channel that's almost completely AI, adding about one AI video
highplainsdem
19 hrs ago
#41
If I had a time machine I would go back to the 70's and buy up all the vari-loop coils I could get my hands on
yaesu
Yesterday
#29
I miss stores like RadioShack, and this makes me feel a certain way. Mostly nostalgia.
Oneironaut
Yesterday
#30
A very happy memory is buying a breadboard, some LEDs and other components for my son when he was in elementary school.
NNadir
Yesterday
#32
It's the tech bro capitalist philosophy -- if people are buying that crap, they will sell it.
hunter
16 hrs ago
#44
Anyone remember when they gave a 10% discount to shareholders and lots of people, including yours truly,
Wonder Why
22 hrs ago
#37