Looks like I’m spoiled for choice. Temu has exactly the same for 11.29. Not that I’d be purchasing from either place; it’s just another example of Amazon’s enshittification.

  • biofaust@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I deleted my Amazon account last month. No more Goodreads and IMDb is just another plus.

    Extracted my ebooks from my Kindle with Calibre, so I am fine.

    Feeling good and less targeted and bombarded.

  • ptc075@lemmy.zip
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    3 days ago

    My co-worker & I have the exact same lunchbag, except the label has a different gibberish name on it. Yup, both from Amazon.

  • FinishingDutch@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    This shit frustrates me to no end. These days I just look on Aliexpress first, just so I’m aware what the usual drop shipping item actually goes for.

    It’s very annoying that platforms like Amazon tolerate this. Because it’s actively driving me away from them. I want to see good quality items, not the same Aliexpress shit priced ten times higher. But I can’t FIND the good stuff because the platform is literally full of garbage.

  • sramder@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    It’s missing the random “Amazon’s Choice” badge on one of the 20 identical choices 🤣

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    3 days ago

    I will not defend Amazon. But the lack of local retail/price gouging which is shipping in Canada keeps pushing me to Amazon.

    I need a role of 3D printable filament or an SD Card. The nearest store is 1-2 hours away and costs twice as much for the convenience, buying from the manufacturer may not possible and if it is shipping cost just as much as the product.

    I would love it if there was competition, but there isn’t and Amazon knows it. So for the most part I just buy from brands I know are safe.

    • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 days ago

      I have a few local electronic shops.
      It’s just that they dont have what I need or are way more expensive.

      It is almost impossible to buy RAM or a CPU in person outside of specialty shops.
      SSDs or HDDs are only available in low capacity (<2TB) and/or low spec (M.2 Gen3).

      Nothing of use for an enthusiast.
      The only worth they have to me are as a appliance seller (e.g. TVs, household appliance, general use audio equipment)

        • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 days ago

          MediaMarkt and Saturn (our largest electronics retailers) first merged then were bought up by JD.com (chinese retailer)
          Any other shop is a small chain/one-man-army type of shop which usually don’t have what I need :/

          Recently discovered a decent camera shop by coincidence while traveling :) That was cool.
          They are both physical and online. And they werent pushy about their products. Which is great!

  • BonesOfTheMoon@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Almost everything on Amazon is cheap trash, and they promote the hell out of all that trash instead of products of any quality. I am also so sick of the click funnels where you search for a specific item and they just give you pages full of knockoff trash as search results even if you go to a specific brand store. It’s nonsense.

    • Squizzy@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I stayed away for a few years, ended up buying a fair bit more frequently when doing up the house just due to cost and delivery but the site does look exactly like any other slop store now. It looks like chinavasion or alibaba.

  • foggy@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    People need to realize that Amazon has them locked in.

    I needed a tall mini fridge for a garage. Cheapest I could find was fucking $700.

    I went into a nearby home appliance store and got the same one for fucking ~$200. Granted I had to pay for an $80 delivery, but it still beats the shit out of every option for a 7 cu ft fridge on Amazon.

    • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Every dipshit with a freshly minted MBA thinks they’re going to go and disrupt the appliance industry by putting it online and snatching it out from under all those antiquated local dealerships run by out of touch old men who can barely operate a computer. They think they’re going to go from zero to nationwide tomorrow, and they’re so smart because nobody’s thought of it before.

      It turns out that dealing with the final mile with appliances is killer, and extremely difficult logistically. That makes the entire operation much more expensive than anyone thinks at first glance. Not just in terms of raw dollars and cents paid to disinterested common carriers to move your product from A to B (who also won’t install the stuff or even bring it inside your customer’s house) but also in damaged and returned products and angry screaming customers who will be initiating credit card chargebacks all the time whenever anything goes wrong.

      All of those little local dealerships have had decades to figure out how to move a refrigerator from their warehouse to your kitchen and how to remediate the situation if it all goes pear shaped on delivery day, and all of them only service their local territory for a reason. The further you stretch without some physical presence in where you’re stretching to, the more impossible it becomes to control the logistics.

      So yeah, that’s probably in no small part why your fridge would have been so expensive. Amazon is among the latest figuring this out the hard way, and you can’t just slap a refrigerator or a stove in a bubble mailer and dump it on somebody’s front porch.

      • brbposting@sh.itjust.works
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        3 days ago

        Tangentially, this reminds me of some advice I read on whole home water filters. Get this one or get that one. but get it from a local business who’s been in your area for years and years. You will have a problem with it. You are going to need someone to call. And they say, just plan for that from the start.

      • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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        4 days ago

        Local appliance dealers likely also have a dude who in a pinch can just carry most appliances where they need to go.

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      4 days ago

      Not to be that guy but there’s no way in hell that $700 is true. There are pages of fridges for less than $400 that are 7 cu ft.

      Here’s one for $300

      I mean, fuck Amazon and all that jazz, don’t get me wrong - I just feel like it’s worth noting the hyperbole. It’s not that bad, at least from an end consumer perspective.

      Amazon is admittedly powered by greed and the tears of the proletariat but they do a good job keeping the customer happy.

      • Jhex@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        my 2 cents… not everybody sees the same prices at Amazon… that is part of their dynamic gouging

        • Krudler@lemmy.world
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          4 days ago

          Just to add an anecdote… My friend is beyond millionaire as her father started a retail giant. Anyways, she has money coming out her ass and the prices Amazon shows her are almost consistently 30%-50% more than what they show me. Because they know she’s rich AF and they know I’m fairly poor.

          e: grammar

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              4 days ago

              I don’t know what kind of setup my GF’s phone had going, but she loved hands-free features like “hi Google” or whatever it was.

              I specifically remember having a chit chat verbal conversation with her on her patio while her phone was laying there… and the next day products started getting recommended to me on my phone based on that convo.

              My phone at the time was turned off and in my backpack in the house. Somehow the back end logic sewed everything together.

              • foggy@lemmy.world
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                4 days ago

                I was studying classical guitar. I was practicing piece and literally YouTube video results on my PC for learning the piece before searching for it.

                Only network traffic to indicate was downloading a .PDF on my chrome browser on my phone. This was in like 2012.

    • IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works
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      4 days ago

      Everyone is free to set their own priorities, but for me, I’ll just not purchase a thing at all, rather than buy it off Amazon. Most people buy too much crap they don’t actually need anyway.

      • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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        3 days ago

        Yeah, just get a couple of smooth ones, rub them together to take off any edges of necessary. Or sandpaper but that costs more.

  • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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    4 days ago

    The internet was so good in 08. You searched for stuff, found exactly what you needed, and were done.

    Poor kids today will never know anything other than ad ridden bot corponet.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      The internet was so good in 08. You searched for stuff, found exactly what you needed, and were done.

      Shit was bad in 2008, too. The degree to which drop shippers had consolidated down to one mega-wholesaler rather than a dozen crappy fly-by-nights hadn’t happened yet. You got a dozen different flavors of crap rather than just one. But it was still crap.

      Poor kids today will never know anything other than ad ridden bot corponet.

      Under an Amazon keyword search, sure. You can still find good quality products outside of Amazon. You can even find it inside Amazon if you know what you’re looking for.

      The difference between 2008 and 2025 is primarily that Amazon’s algorithmic tools have degraded to the state of Yahoo or Sears.

      • devedeset@lemmy.zip
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        3 days ago

        In 2008 you could do a web search and have relevant real results right on the first page. Maybe an ad or two.

        Now it is effectively:

        • AI summary
        • ad
        • ad
        • ad
        • link that is effectively an ad
        • link to AI generated website
        • link to AI generated website
        • link to an actual decent result
        • link to a questionable result
        • link to AI generated website
        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          In 2008 you could do a web search and have relevant real results

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_bombing

          Google had (mostly) solved this problem by 2007. I couldn’t name another search engine that could claim the same.

          But the process of Spamdexing has been an ongoing war of the websites since the nineties. Google never fully solved it, they just did a better job than most up until the big executive shift in 2018.

          The spam site takeover of your search results in the modern day is as much a consequence of modernization in Spamdexing as it is any search engine’s own failures. None of those AI content mill sites existed to index 20 years ago

        • kossa@feddit.org
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          3 days ago

          You can change search provider and have the experience back ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

          • devedeset@lemmy.zip
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            2 days ago

            I use DuckDuckGo and it is better in general, but still has a big pitfall with AI generated websites. I’ve used some others like SearXNG but those feel experimental at best. I’m willing to hear about viable alternatives.

            • kossa@feddit.org
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              2 days ago

              Kagi is where it’s at. Changed my search experience for the better like crazy.

      • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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        4 days ago

        You think normal people today go outside the 5 walled garden corpo sites?

        They dont.

        They are terrified of an html website. I dont have tech friends irl, so trust me. The real internet, the original non corpo net, is only for ultra nerds now.

        If you seriously think the internet is better now than 08 ish, well I dont agree.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          If you seriously think the internet is better now than 08 ish, well I dont agree.

          I think it’s heavily predicated on what you’re using the Internet for. In the business world, we’ve improved system redundancy, backup/recovery, and transfer speeds by leaps and bounds.

          Back in 2008, I was in my car driving to Dallas to escape Hurricane Ike, with a trunk full of server hardware needed to keep our business running. Datacenter proliferation has fully eliminated the need to do anything like that again.

          We have significantly more high speed broadband. We have superior wireless connectivity. HTML5 is much better than it’s predecessors. We’ve modernized APIs and broadly adopted JSON for transmission. The hardware is so much better, from phones to routers to raspberry pis for self-hosting.

          I get you don’t like the current content of big Web 2.0 publishers. But you’re really missing the forest for a few big ugly trees

    • devedeset@lemmy.zip
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      3 days ago

      I forget the exact proposed bill, it might have been SOPA (or something else threatening net neutrality), and it might have been around 2010. That made me think “they want to make the internet into cable TV”. And we’re pretty close to that being reality in a way.

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    4 days ago

    Amazon is just a drop shipping marketplace where everything comes direct from the exact same warehouse in China.

    • dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Exactly. Once you know about “white box” goods and the robust Chinese manufacturing chains that support it, you can’t unsee it.

      What blows my mind is that Amazon is just accelerating this, and at times, embracing it with their own brand. They’ve gone from being a whole-ass shopping mall to end-of-days-K-Mart in just a few years.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Hey now. China’s been churning out much higher quality merch of late. And the American Tech Giants have been increasingly wrapped up in US trade war politics. So a lot of this shit now comes from the Philippines, India, and Bangladesh.