Techmoca
No Result
View All Result
Techmoca
No Result
View All Result
Techmoca
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Fry’s Electronics is shutting its doors for good

February 24, 2021
Reading Time: 5min read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Fry’s Electronics, one of the last big brick-and-mortar electronics store chains in the United States — and a Silicon Valley institution in particular — is permanently closing nationwide, local broadcaster KRON4 has confirmed, following a report from Bill Reynolds and another from Matthew Keys.

The company’s Facebook page is also gone and its Twitter feed has been set to private — it was public earlier this evening, though it hadn’t tweeted in quite some time.

If you’ve ever visited a Fry’s anytime in the past two to three years, none of this will come as a surprise.

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, the family-owned business had been pushed to the brink of extinction by online retailers like Amazon, Newegg and more. Initially, the company started a campaign to price-match any item you could find online. It added a children’s toy aisle, huge racks of As Seen on TV gadgets, even perfume. But things got worse. By 2019, what used to be a paradise of gadgets, computers, components, video games, audio equipment and appliances had turned into ghost warehouses filled with empty shelves.

The Horn of Plenty is barren. pic.twitter.com/ycE0EBLHpD

— Harry McCracken (@harrymccracken) February 17, 2020

It turned out the company had been forced to switch to a consignment model, only able to attract suppliers willing to get paid for their goods after Fry’s managed to sell them. Many suppliers weren’t.

YouTuber star Bitwit famously conducted a video investigation that showed the depths the once-great stores had sunk to — and how the company shipped extra inventory to its Las Vegas store just in case journalists stopped by during CES 2020.

Soon, the company began closing its stores — and not just any stores, but major ones in the heart of Silicon Valley, like its cowboy-themed store in Palo Alto mere steps away from where my dad used to work on the Danger Hiptop (known better as the T-Mobile Sidekick) and many big tech startups still do business. That Palo Alto store closed in December 2019. I used to ride my bike to the company’s Egyptian-themed, pyramid shaped store in Campbell, which abruptly closed last November.

Egyptians? Cowboys? Yes, setting foot into a Fry’s Electronics was an experience with a capitol “E” — when I moved to the Bay Area in 1990, one of the very first stores was laid out like the insides of a (now-vintage) computer — you’d walk down the aisles of the motherboard, bumping into giant human-sized capacitors and resistors as you’d go. The Egyptian store had fake columns, mummies and sarcophagi; laptops were laid out on huge stone slabs held up by statues of black panthers. That Palo Alto store which closed? Fake horses and hot air balloons hanging from the ceiling.

Here are a few of the other locations:

Fry’s Electronics @ Burbank, CA (opened 1995) pic.twitter.com/Kj5yqorQ7K

— Froyo Tam #BlackLivesMatter (@FroyoTam) February 24, 2021

“Going to a Fry’s store is entertainment in itself; for a geek, it could be recuperative,” wrote former Apple exec Jean-Louis Gassée in a 2019 blog post. I wholeheartedly agree — I’d even occasionally grab some food, either a packet of discount astronaut ice cream or one of the many, many selections from their tremendous candy shelves attached to the checkout line. They’d even do cheap hot dogs and soda in the parking lot, some summers when I was growing up. The company’s Black Friday doorbusters were a Silicon Valley event, too, with lines around the block for $200 laptops and $60 routers.

The most magical place in the universe:
The Fry’s store in Campbell. pic.twitter.com/gUGHYGN5Do

— SwiftOnSecurity (@SwiftOnSecurity) November 18, 2017

There was the little matter of Fry’s famously bad customer service, though. Rare was the day I’d find an employee who knew anything about their products, checkout lines were long, returns were incredibly slow, and the company was well-known for taking product returns, slapping on a discount label, and sticking them right back on the shelf. They’d also try to check every item against your receipt as you left, something that (unlike Costco, where you sign a member’s agreement) you didn’t need to let them do.

(I can’t figure out where to fit it, but there was also the amusing incident where a Ferrari-driving VP was found to have embezzled $65 million.)

The writing has been on the wall for Fry’s since last April, I would say, when reports surfaced that its San Jose store might be replaced with an office campus — reports that often neglected to mention that Fry’s corporate headquarters also occupied the same address.

For a lot of readers, I bet this news is more of a nostalgia trigger than a real loss. But for me, it feels like we’re at the end of the era of gadget stores, now that the one I grew up with is gone. Over the years, we’ve lost Radio Shack, Toys R Us, The Sharper Image and Brookstone, the Bose stores, Circuit City, the Microsoft Store and more. In the Silicon Valley we also lost CompUSA and Micro Center, and stores like Halted (known for actual circuits, not computers) and WeirdStuff Warehouse (a wild experience itself, read my thread) have long since closed their doors as well. Some of the bigger ones have become zombie brands, but they’re effectively gone. (Micro Center still has stores outside the Bay Area.)

I’m trying to think of any Silicon Valley electronics stores left, save Central Computer and of course Apple and Best Buy. If you think of any, let me know in the comments below? I might like to visit while that’s still an option.

————————

Originally published at https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2021/2/24/22298616/frys-electronics-going-out-of-business on February 24, 2021 5:02 am.

Related Posts

Hasbro reorganizes to support big growth from ‘Dungeons & Dragons’ and ‘Magic: The Gathering’
News

Hasbro reorganizes to support big growth from ‘Dungeons & Dragons’ and ‘Magic: The Gathering’

February 26, 2021
Singapore-based Raena gets $9M Series A for its pivot to skincare and beauty-focused social commerce
News

Singapore-based Raena gets $9M Series A for its pivot to skincare and beauty-focused social commerce

February 26, 2021
Biggest tech IPO of 2020: Airbnb soars to $87B market cap in trading debut
News

Airbnb reports massive loss in its first earnings report post IPO

February 26, 2021
This ‘WandaVision’ leak might spoil the show’s biggest surprise
News

This ‘WandaVision’ leak might spoil the show’s biggest surprise

February 26, 2021
Zscaler shares pop on stronger than expected quarterly earnings
News

Zscaler’s shares rise on stronger-than-expected earnings

February 26, 2021
Zscaler shares pop on stronger than expected quarterly earnings
News

Zscaler shares pop on stronger than expected quarterly earnings

February 26, 2021

Recommended

The VC and founder winners of DoorDash’s IPO

Dating juggernaut Match buys Seoul-based Hyperconnect for $1.73B, its biggest acquisition ever

February 10, 2021
Verizon prepaid customers can now access fast 5G Ultra Wideband

Verizon prepaid customers can now access fast 5G Ultra Wideband

January 25, 2021
Report: Apple aims to get its self-driving car on the road by 2024

Report: Apple aims to get its self-driving car on the road by 2024

December 22, 2020
The VC and founder winners of DoorDash’s IPO

Google’s treatment of AI ethics researchers continues to stir up controversy

February 20, 2021
Hisense’s huge 85-inch 4K TV is only $1,000 at Best Buy today

Hisense’s huge 85-inch 4K TV is only $1,000 at Best Buy today

January 4, 2021
iOS 14.4 now available with bug fixes and a new Unity watch face

iOS 14.4 now available with bug fixes and a new Unity watch face

January 26, 2021

© 2020 Techmoca. We aggregate tech news around the world

No Result
View All Result
  • Homepages
    • Home – Layout 1
    • Home – Layout 2
  • Reviews
  • Devices
  • Games

© 2021 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.