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posted by janrinok on Wednesday February 04 2015, @01:53PM   Printer-friendly
from the and-it-grew-and-grew dept.

According to Bloomberg Amazon is in talks to buy some of RadioShack's stores:

Amazon has considered using the RadioShack stores as showcases for the Seattle-based company’s hardware, as well as potential pickup and drop-off centers for online customers, said one of the people, who asked not to be named because the deliberations are private.

RadioShack is on the verge of declaring bankruptcy, and according to other reports, it has also been in talks with wireless carrier Sprint about selling some of its stores. The deal with Amazon may not happen, but nonetheless, it shows where Amazon is headed.

To head off competition from Wal-Mart—one of the few retailers that could pose a legitimate threat to Amazon—and to expand its operation, the company has adopted a new hybrid business model, combining e-commerce with offline services.

Originally spotted at Wired, and also linked at HackerNews.

 
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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 04 2015, @03:11PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 04 2015, @03:11PM (#141147)

    I got sick of the security guards harassing me as a teen in the 90s

    This is what I dont get... Malls should be begging for kids to come in. They are your next source of 'where do I buy something' people.

    My local mall did the 'if you are 16 and under and no adult get out' recently.

    That place is now *dead* most of the time. A year or two before it was usually semi busy. The appearance of dead will kill your business too... 'no one shops there'. Most of what people buy is fad junk. The perception of 'not with it' will kill your store. Sort of like radio shack did.

    The local kmart to me is usually semi busy. But put a target or a walmart near it and it will be GONE. I only go into it because it is 2-3 bucks cheaper for some things I buy regularly.

    Radio shack 'going away' will not be much of a problem for most of these malls. The floor space they had in each mall was fairly small anyway (kb toys was usually bigger and they are long gone). They will slot in some clothing boutique store. Something like a sears or jcpenny on the other hand...

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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 04 2015, @03:42PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 04 2015, @03:42PM (#141159)

    > This is what I dont get... Malls should be begging for kids to come in.

    Same reason people are bigots about any other superficial characteristic. Some kids are trouble-makers and it is deceptively easy to blame their trouble-making on the fact that they are kids. Never mind that the over-whelming majority of kids that didn't cause trouble being even stronger counter-evidence. The idea that root causes are rarely obvious to the naked (and ignorant) eye is just too complex for many people to ever even consider.

    • (Score: 3, Funny) by Immerman on Wednesday February 04 2015, @06:40PM

      by Immerman (3985) on Wednesday February 04 2015, @06:40PM (#141258)

      The root causes... so you're saying the actual problem with troublemakers is roots? Excellent! From here on out all eaters of potatoes, carrots, peanuts, and other root crops shall be banned from our stores. I predict that we'll have completely eliminated shoplifting, loitering, and harassment within the year. Thank you for your gracious explanation of the real problem, I owe the future of my business to you.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 05 2015, @02:33AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 05 2015, @02:33AM (#141393)

      Maybe most kids just want to have fun, but until they recognize and destroy their growing troublemaker cancer they must be held responsible.

    • (Score: 2, Interesting) by tftp on Thursday February 05 2015, @05:10AM

      by tftp (806) on Thursday February 05 2015, @05:10AM (#141421) Homepage

      Some kids are trouble-makers and it is deceptively easy to blame their trouble-making on the fact that they are kids. Never mind that the over-whelming majority of kids that didn't cause trouble being even stronger counter-evidence.

      In the modern politically correct world you cannot ban a few kids - you have to either ban none or to ban all of them.

  • (Score: 5, Interesting) by sjames on Wednesday February 04 2015, @07:58PM

    by sjames (2882) on Wednesday February 04 2015, @07:58PM (#141290) Journal

    Part of the problem for all of the stores is the way they DON'T handle warranty issues anymore. At one time, if your new-ish TV broke, you take it back to the store you gought it from, talk to the manager for a minute or two and walk out with a new one of the same or similar model.

    Now they want nothing to do with it. At most they'll ship it off to Asia for you where you'll never see it again. Given that, why not buy it for less online? If they would actually stand behind the product, they might remain relevant.

    The simple fact is that they have cut so many corners trying to wring out more profits for less work that there's little to no point in them anymore.