Snag Sweet Tech Deals


Scoring consumer tech bargains has gotten harder but are still there for the savy, reports The New York Times.

Due to innovations like supply-chain management and just-in-time production, “there are fewer Oh-my-god bargains,” said Ron Boire, executive vice president and general merchandise manager for Best Buy, “but now all customers are getting a good price instead of a few customers getting a great price.”

To get a good deal, be patient, diligent and avoid impulse buying. The old grey lady (that
s how cool media types refer to the NYT) advises watching Gizmodo, Engadget, News.com and Twice.com. Also, use NexTag to monitor price history charts.

A constantly downward sloping line suggests that the manufacturer has control of inventory and prices are dropping at a natural “electronics just get cheaper” pace. That means there’s not much you can do. Anything you buy will be cheaper a month from now. But a flat line that also shows some abrupt drops, however small, suggests a struggling product. A need to outflank a competitor with price promotions or trim growing inventories can cause that pattern. If the line is flat for a while, hold off buying. It will drop soon enough. It always does,
informs the article.

Then you can be smiling like hip Minnesota Best Buyer shopper, Dilya Gumerova (pictured). Happiness is a warm cathode-ray tube, newly purchased and deeply discounted.

Waiting for Just the Right Moment to Take Out the Wallet [ New York Times ]

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