Fry's Visits |
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Sunday, July 17, 2005
Yep, been to Fry's a bunch of times. Nope, I haven't been posting. Baby steps... I'm going to update with my latest trip and then fill in a few of the previous trips as I sort through my receipts later this week. I'm back to the "Fry's on Friday" trips, even though the random 1 Day Only Wed/Tues deals are enticing. Not a lot in the flyer actually attracted me, save for noticing that they were using the new Harry Potter book as a loss leader ($13.99 on Saturday) and this is the third week they've been pimping a relatively expensive Intel dual-core CPU/MB combo. The 400GB Seagate is on sale yet again. I've somehow managed to fill another drive, but I'm holding off on getting anything new until the SATA drives start dropping a bit. Went with J, so I decided to make it a quick trip. Their selection of mini-fridges leaves a lot to be desired, but I guess it's not a big product (no pun intended) for the American market. I have seen that Europeans / Asians have a much greater selection of smaller "dorm size" refrigerators due to space concerns. Regardless, passed on what was available. Also browsed past the wine storage units.... maybe for the next place. Ended up grabbing what I came in for, ink for my Epson Stylus Photo R200 printer. Strangely they only had 3rd party cartridges for the R2/300 series AND they were completely out of Cyan. Picked up the magenta, light magenta, yellow, and light cyan carts produced by a company called Print-Rite. Haven't given them extensive testing, but so far so good. Plus they don't have that weird 'paint' smell that I've gotten from carts I've ordered from Ink4Art. Cost was approximately 30% cheaper than the Epson branded stuff. Oh, one "store has changed" note. The video cards have been pushed back to behind the computer section, similar to the Sunnyvale store. What was there is now filled with laptop bags. Probably a good choice in terms of consistency, but if an employee is trying to get a laptop buyer to load up on accessories as well, he has to lead his/her customer through TWO aisles to get the bag and then portable mouse/portable power adapter, etc. And given the layout of the store, the employee will have to basically lead the prospect away from the cash registers to get to the next area. Not a great strategy IMHO. Why not put all the laptop-related goodies in the same area (on either side of the aisle)? Oh well, I guess Fry's never really was a place for great store layout... just thinking about ways they could increase their bottom line. And yes, I do realize that this is based on the assumption that the Fry's employee actually helps a customer find accessories for the laptop. Total Time Spent: 10 minutes Total Money Spent: $35.96
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