
10-29-2004, 03:54 PM
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Mystic
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,887
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Best Buy wins by default.
Which isn't to say they do a great job or anything, but lets face it; who else is out there?
CompUSA?
Circuit City?
Sears?
RadioShack?
I imagine there are some good local boutique operators and regional players (Fry's?), but on a national basis I can't think of anybody that comes even close.
At least Best Buy commercials promote the *technology* to non-techies...
As for online, most online vendors are more "pull-customers in" than "push-technology out" operators. So they work if you *already* know what you want. The nature of the medium, I guess...
As for me, well, I'm a techie; I already have a vision of where I want to be. To me *all* existing DM products are transitional tech, to be used as short-term solutions that position me to the final stage, which I see as being at least three years away.
(Hint: "packets is packets", TCP/IP everywhere...)
As I've said before, I think it is way too early to crown winners in *any* category. And without clear, long-term leaders, it is hard for *any* retailer to be much of an evangelist since they can't honestly promote anything clear and concrete.
It may be this fuzziness on the retailers' behalf that is leading the bigger vendors like Sony and Samsung to open up their own stores to promote *their* specific visions.
(And no, I don't count Apple in this category; Apple stores are *reactive* in nature, not pro-active like the Sony and Samsung operations.)
We'll just have to muddle through for the next few years until the fog lifts and we see who the real long-term winners turn out to be.
(Aside from the music and Movie studios, of course.) :?
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