frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Open in hackernews

What Happened to Fry's Electronics

https://dfarq.homeip.net/what-happened-to-frys-electronics/
53•jnord•1h ago

Comments

HardwareLust•1h ago
I know it's a damn shame. Back in the day when we actually went out shopping in stores that was always one of favorite places to go, even if just to walk around and check out all the cool shit they had.
dogline•1h ago
I would drive hours to get to the nearest Fry's to me, to pick up some new gear. Being able to browse everything and look around was great. For me, online ordering of parts probably hurt Fry's, but the real reason was after a while, you were never sure if the video card you were buying was new, or actually a return item, and after a couple times having to drive all the way back for something that was missing parts, the whole thing just seemed way too risky. Amazon and Newegg nailed that door shut.
k310•1h ago
> So when they finally closed, there were some people who were sad, but there were also people who were happy to see it go.

Good lord. The nearest Radio Shack (17 miles away) closed, so to get a resistor or cap, it's "order online". That's about as environmentally sound as nuclear testing above ground (perhaps a slight hyperbole there).

But not all that far-fetched. One time, I visited my daughter's place and found a broken wire in the thermostat, so I drove to the Shack, got a cheap iron and solder and fixed it. (When there WAS a Radio Shack)

I replaced my old Nikon F2 with a refurbished FM that cost less than the repairs. Go to buy some color slide or black and white film. Same store (and lucky to have one within 50 miles). "We don't carry those"

"America Online" ... indeed.

bombcar•1h ago
Walmart has you covered at least for cheap soldering irons: https://www.walmart.com/ip/EverStart-Soldering-Iron-Model-51...

The various "components, available" of Radio Shack was quite interesting; we still had (have?) one in town long after they mostly went away, and they still had a dusty old collection of various components.

groundzeros2015•53m ago
> environmentally sound

Don’t they just put in an envelope? The mailman comes by anyway

dyauspitr•42m ago
Spending $3 to ship a $0.05 part across the country should give you an idea of what a waste of resources it is.
ZekeSulastin•28m ago
That’s less than the cost of a 34 mile round trip to and from Radio Shack, especially these days.
cortesoft•40m ago
> Good lord. The nearest Radio Shack (17 miles away) closed, so to get a resistor or cap, it's "order online". That's about as environmentally sound as nuclear testing above ground (perhaps a slight hyperbole there).

I wonder if this is true?

Let’s say you were to buy the item from a store. Suppose the store is five miles away. You drive to the store, buy the item, and drive home. You used 10 miles worth of gas, plus the wear and tear on the car (meaning it has to be replaced 10 miles earlier than it would have otherwise).

Now, suppose you order it from Amazon. A worker picks it off a shelf in the warehouse, puts it in an envelope, and puts it on a truck. The truck drives to your house to deliver it.

Even if they JUST delivered your package, it should be basically a wash in terms of energy, right? You had to drive from your house to the store, they had to drive from the distribution center to your house. There would be a bit extra packaging, but I am not sure how many gallons of burned fuel an envelope is equivalent to.

However, if you had say, an Amazon delivery, then that delivery truck is not just driving to your house. It is driving to dozens of houses along a route to deliver your goods.

If you imagine the alternative, where each of those deliveries instead has to have the owner drive to a store, that could be hundreds of miles of saved trips because of the delivery drivers only taking one trip.

Animats•31m ago
> Now, suppose you order it from Amazon.

You do not order electronic parts from Amazon. You order them from Digi-Key or Mouser. They're organized to ship efficiently from a huge inventory of small parts, and they buy directly from manufacturers, so the supply chain is solid. If you order a Panasonic resistor, you will get a Panasonic resistor, not some random floor sweepings. (This does not apply to DigiKey's "marketplace", which is third party resellers. DigiKey does claim to monitor their resellers, and DigiKey, not the reseller, handles customer complaints.)

jeffbee•25m ago
To a close approximation the prices of things are proportional to the "soundness" of the scheme. If Digi-Key can afford to put $20 worth of stuff in a box and send it to me overnight, that's their business, not mine. Someone is putting the fuel into FedEx planes full of Digi-Key boxes and somehow that cost is being amortized over all the boxes in a way that is acceptable to all parties.
kappi•1h ago
Most of the employees of Frys were from Bangladesh. Now the connection is clear-> Ausaf Umar Siddiqui
cbsmith•50m ago
He was a Pakastani-American, so I'm not sure that really explains it, nor do I recall that being the case.
WillPostForFood•8m ago
He was born in Pakistan when Bangladesh was part of Pakistan, so possibly?
bsder•59m ago
This article completely fails to mention any of the horrific interpersonal dynamics of the family members who owned Fry's which, I suspect, was the primary reason why the chain had no way to arrest its downfall.
toast0•42m ago
I had seen a rumor that personal finance issues of one of the family members lead to loss of business credit which lead to the consignment model which lead to no inventory which lead to the end.

No idea if that's true, but it seems plausible?

duskwuff•38m ago
Another important detail which the article glosses over is that, when Frys' supplier relationships started failing around 2019-2020, their product selection absolutely went to hell. When I visited a store in 2020, they had zero hard disks in stock - internal, external, mechanical, SSD, you name it, they didn't have it. I don't think they had any computer motherboards, CPUs, or memory, either. Plenty of cheap, generic shelf-fillers like hand sanitizer and light bulbs, though!
throwup238•23m ago
In that era I remember they had mostly fidget spinners. I think the staff were really bored at that point because half the fidget spinner inventory was in those clear plastic security boxes for what was a useless $10 toy.
duskwuff•4m ago
I have a collection of photos from a trip I took to a Fry's shortly before its demise. Some of the things I saw on display were:

- Multiple aisles of cheap, no-name hand sanitizer

- Pepper spray

- Cheap LED bulbs (the screw-in kind, not components)

- Desk fans

- Bluetooth party speakers (really big ones that looked like oversized roll-aboard luggage)

I don't remember seeing any fidget spinners - but I wouldn't be surprised if some of the shelf-filler items were stocked on a store-by-store basis. It certainly didn't give me the impression of a carefully planned operation.

classichasclass•57m ago
I miss them. Spent lots of time looking at stuff and always found something neat. Plus, the store facades were fascinating: https://oldvcr.blogspot.com/2021/02/so-long-frys.html
Anon4Now•50m ago
If you find business autopsies interesting, YouTuber Michael Girdley does pretty decent videos about them. Here's his Fry's one:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxPRkOdBmck

floam•42m ago
I found a flip phone in the fry’s parking lot, my dad turned it in to security, who accepted it with a smirk. I had gone through it and wrote down the phone number belonging to the phone. We called the number a week later and the guy said not only did they not have it in their lost and found, so he had to buy a new phone, but he spent hours with Verizon to make some kind of charges that hit after losing it go away. Maybe 2002 - 2003.

This was not a surprise

sghiassy•41m ago
In Portland Oregon back in 2000s we had - Incredible Universe - CompUSA - Fry’s (later on)

I’d beg my dad to drive me to them on a Friday night. Great times!

ddtaylor•36m ago
When I would go there for many years I wondered what the hell that giant globe was for!
ddtaylor•41m ago
Fry's had an interesting warranty program that I really enjoyed and their employees would build a PC for you with the parts you purchased for free or help you put it together. This made it really nice for someone who was about to drop $2,000 on some parts and didn't trust their hands to break some pins etc.

Their warranty was transferable and they let you know about it. They would print the warranty paperwork out twice and give you a sticker you could put on the inside of the case for whoever ended up having the PC later it was still valid as it was the parts under warranty.

This meant that if you had a part that later on went out, like a motherboard, you could tell them the warranty information or show up at the store with the PC and they would figure it out. I thought this would be garbage like how Apple or Best Buy just wants you to buy a new one and try to scam you out of warranty replacement, but they actually would replace the part as needed and if that part no longer existed they would replace it with a similar one. I took a PC back there that had a motherboard under warranty that stopped working and that motherboard no longer existed, so they dutifully went and found a motherboard that had those same minimum features and substituted it without a cost.

egl2020•38m ago
The surge in laptops contributed, too. The opportunity or need for expansion cards, additional memory or storage upgrades, and peripherals disappeared or shrank.

I used to think of the sales staff as the United Nations of Fry's. It was always thrilling to see someone starting their American dream, even if the service was haphazard.

DeathArrow•17m ago
>The surge in laptops contributed, too. The opportunity or need for expansion cards, additional memory or storage upgrades, and peripherals disappeared or shrank.

We were once able to upgrade CPUs, RAM, video cards, HDD, network cards and replace batteries in laptops, too.

Does anyone remember?

sahila•5m ago
Sure but I don't mind the current outcome. I want my laptop to be small and light and if the tradeoff is the ram and battery have to be glued, I'd take it.
Hobadee•37m ago
The Egyptian Fry's in Campbell was my local store. Fry's was amazing - you just had to know that the salespeople were on commission and avoid them. I never had one come up to me in line and try to get a commission, but that honestly doesn't surprise me. As a nerd, I would even sometimes go and just help random people there - the salespeople sure didn't help anyone there!
otterley•31m ago
Fry’s would frequently accept returned items, and instead of returning them to the vendor to refurbish them, they would simply re-shrink wrap them and put them back on the shelf with a different colored price sticker. The item could be fine, or it could be damaged, have parts missing, etc.

A term was coined for this: “re-Fryed.” As in, “don't buy that video card! It’s been re-Fryed!”

linuxhansl•30m ago
Fry's was mentioned in Douglas Coupland's "Microserfs". I loved that book and thoughts Fry's was cool even before I set foot in one.

Years later I entered a store, and somehow it was already nostalgic then :)

So weird, I haven't thought Fry's for the past 20 years.

> There was something about wandering the aisles and seeing the merchandise and getting ideas

That. Exactly.

jsemrau•26m ago
In that sense, at least for me, it was a third place where we could roam to get inspired and connect. We lost that. I was in Akihabara last weekend. And its the same in a way. While there are still a few, most tech stores are now phone/laptop stores that don't sell parts. Making the hunt for tech really boring.
raintrees•30m ago
I learned early on not to trust anything with a sticker that claimed warranty supported by Fry's (that meant it was a return and tested No Problem Found and sold as is).

Too many return trips eats up any profit reselling parts to my clients.

But it was a blast back in the day when I could get shrinkwrap tubing, RAM modules, individual electronics components (resistors, capacitors, etc.) personal care items like combs, brushes, snacks, etc.

And then there were the books... With a cafe built into the store. I spent a lot of time and money at a number of the Silicon Valley Frys locations.

jdkee•26m ago
Now do MicroCenter.
AceJohnny2•23m ago
I'm kinda shocked to see MicroCenter surge again. The one on Steven's Creek feels like a mini, less seedy, Fry's (I may be biased from Fry's terminal years).

Nevertheless, it still took me 10 minutes to get the attention of the otherwise omnipresent salespeople to let me pick up a UCG, and I ended up getting the rest of my setup at Central Computers.

giantrobot•23m ago
After Fry's went out of business for a while I thought I missed them. What I really missed was the 2000-2009 era Fry's.

In that era the stores (the ones I visited at least) had surprisingly robust stock. Well into the 00s I found SCSI cables, ADB devices, and even old software from the 90s. If I needed pretty much any random component for a PC, Mac, or electronics I could probably find it at Fry's. No other stores had that sort of selection.

By the 2010s Fry's was far inferior to NewEgg and the like. Trying to shop there became a frustrating experience. Even just browsing the aisles got worse. When they went consignment only there was no reason to step foot in one. It was aisle after aisle of nothing.

dboreham•10m ago
Around 2005 the Lawrence (Arques) location had every length of every color of Cat5 patch cables, on hand.
diputsmonro•20m ago
I loved Fry's in their prime, probably the early 2000s. I think what made them special was largely a product of the time. Personal Computing was booming and new products you'd never seen before were coming out every day, and this one mega store had everything. It was fun just to walk around and survey what was going on in that moment in time.

From my perspective the main things that killed it were online shopping, as the article mentions, and computing just becoming more boring, at least from a hardware perspective. Once the iPhone came out, that became many people's primary computing device or computing peripheral. Everything you needed was just an app or software which you could download online. The great mass of consumers just need a laptop and a few commodity peripherals, and they can get all that at Walmart. Then Newegg came along and really ate the PC hobbyist market.

Eventually Fry's succumbed to the GameStop effect - their primary market is completely eaten out by online competition, so they fill their retail space with cheap garbage to make ends meet. The last few times I visited my local Fry's it was more empty shelves and cheap bargain bins than anything I was interested in buying.

It was a sad end, but not surprising. I just don't think you can justify having large specialty stores anymore when online shopping is so convenient and the options are so much more plentiful.

roger110•5m ago
About the iPhone making computing boring: PC video game market got much stronger in the late 2000s and 2010s. Maybe the share of people using phones as computers went up, but also the number of people heavily using computers in general did. I'm not saying that playing video games makes someone a PC enthusiast, but it means they buy the parts.

I think it was just online shopping that killed Fry's, like you also said. Especially all those expensive parts that far outweigh the shipping costs.

Also idk how Gamestop was a thing once even all the console games went onto non-physical media.

dboreham•19m ago
I remember all three incarcerations of the original frys location on Lawrence. The first one was the most magical. Nothing like it apart from Akihabara (also now not like it once was).
system2•14m ago
The last years of Fry's were weird. I remember the huge baskets full of strange USB gadgets, handheld fans, flashlights, batteries, and cables. Nothing nearly useful. Every Fry's store was like that.
dzink•14m ago
I’ve been missing the local Fry’s and recently learned that MicroCenter has opened a store in Santa Clara. It felt like heaven! It was pure fun to meet all fellow enthusiasts who would swarm the demo DGX Spark to figure out if a couple of those would be better than a Blackwell. That’s my happy place now and I didn’t even spend a dime on the first visit.
donatj•12m ago
Coming from the Midwest I visited Fry's for the first time in early 2020 weeks before COVID. I had always heard amazing things about the store, for years. It was on my short list of places to visit on the west coast. That place was not a healthy operation. Close to half the shelves were empty, the place was generally a mess and needed a deep clean, and worst of all the employees seemed entirely disinterested in helping me.

When news came that they had shut down I was entirely unsurprised.

COVID might have sped things up a little but that location at least was on its last legs.

klodolph•8m ago
It was not healthy in 2015 either, which is around the last time I visited.
sgammon•11m ago
Amazon
notepad0x90•7m ago
There were just horrible in their last years. easily one of the worst places I've shopped at. Multiple locations too.

Microcenter is around now, they're not as bad but they suck. They force their cashiers to ask and demand for your personal information (phone number,address,etc..). At least online retailers won't give you dirty looks when you give them dummy info.

People are nostalgic about these places, but if they can't realize their disadvantage and at least provide decent customer experience in person, it's probably best if they went away. I wish there was a costco-like decent brick-and-mortar electronics store (costco is famous for treating it's employees well, and then having them treat customers well, as well as their wide range of high-quality items). I can order just about any piece of electronics, including things like resistors and get it within a day or two most of the times. it sure beats fighting traffic, and vying for salesperson's attention for help about an item, standing around a locked cabinet hoping someone would have the time to come and unlock it for you, so you can give them your money, standing in lines and the aforementioned cashier experience. These problems are not inherent. They are direct effects of mismanagement (except the traffic part).

upbeatlinux•1m ago
Sacramento Fry’s off Northgate was my go-to store circa ’98. Whenever a friend wanted to build a PC, that’s where we went. The employees were great — the salespeople, not so much.

I still made the trip every holiday season until around 2017 but it had been going progressively downhill since about 2007. The expanded café, the drastic reduction in books and magazines, PC parts getting strip-mined and never restocked, audio/video media slowly disappearing — you could feel the shift.

I miss the SacBee flyer and the last-minute Christmas gift runs. Egghead Software, CompUSA, RadioShack, Borders (one of the only reliable places to find 2600), Tower Records...it was a different time.

Submerged Canoes Offer New Insights into Ancestral Traditions Waterways (2025)

https://www.wisconsinhistory.org/Records/Article/CS17431
1•1659447091•1m ago•0 comments

Show HN: 1Password Replica (Security Challenge)

https://github.com/rajksarkar/vaultkeeper
1•davinci123•1m ago•0 comments

The war against PDFs is heating up

https://www.economist.com/business/2026/02/24/the-war-against-pdfs-is-heating-up
2•petethomas•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Add price tags to 50 product photos in minutes (no Canva/PS)

https://pricetaggenerator.com
1•oliveroll•4m ago•0 comments

Nvidia's Insane AI Found the Math of Reality [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNsSzX0L4Es
1•surprisetalk•7m ago•0 comments

Addition Under Pressure

https://twitter.com/DimitrisPapail/status/2024555561199480918
1•vismit2000•8m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Riverse – Local AI agent with memory that grows over time

https://github.com/wangjiake/JKRiver
1•collenjk•8m ago•0 comments

SaaS Is Dead. I Buried It in 15 Days. Here's the Proof

1•htuzel•8m ago•0 comments

The writing was always the cheap part

https://passo.uno/real-cost-of-documentation/
1•theletterf•9m ago•0 comments

Is LipoVive Legit? 2026 Reddit and Health Forum Roundup

https://www.morningstar.com/news/accesswire/1138075msn/lipovive-reviews-shocking-2026-report-what...
1•makugats•10m ago•1 comments

Agents of Chaos

https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.20021
1•nextos•10m ago•0 comments

Socialist Excellence in New York City

https://pluralistic.net/2026/02/24/mamdani-thought/
1•pabs3•16m ago•0 comments

Data center developers asked Trump for an exemption from pollution rules

https://grist.org/regulation/these-data-center-developers-asked-trump-for-an-exemption-from-pollu...
4•billybuckwheat•17m ago•0 comments

Fry's Food and Drug

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fry%27s_Food_and_Drug
1•pinkmuffinere•21m ago•0 comments

Show HN: AgentPass – Identity layer for AI agents (passports, email, trust)

https://github.com/kai-agent-free/AgentPass
1•kai_agent•23m ago•0 comments

Agent context management: ephemeral vs. durable classification

https://sparkco.ai/infra
1•sparkco123•23m ago•1 comments

AI_ATTRIBUTION.md: A Standard for Tracking Creative Control in Human-AI Coding

https://ismethandzic.com/blog/ai_attribution_md/
1•blueblahblue•25m ago•0 comments

vLLM WideEP and Large-Scale Serving Toward Maturity on Blackwell (Part I)

https://blog.vllm.ai/2026/02/03/dsr1-gb200-part1.html
1•roody_wurlitzer•26m ago•0 comments

Webgrid Eval: LLM vision + tool-use on Neuralink's cursor control task

https://github.com/ofou/webgrid_eval
1•ofou•31m ago•0 comments

You Can't Buy a Data Center

https://timlig.com/posts/ai-supply-chain-crisis/
1•anujsharmax•32m ago•0 comments

I rebuilt Game Boy on web using 1 prompt and 5 parallel agents in 48 hours

https://github.com/s0s0s0/Browser_GBA_Emulator
1•chakmanli•32m ago•1 comments

SQL Has Problems. We Can Fix Them: Pipe Syntax in SQL [pdf]

https://storage.googleapis.com/gweb-research2023-media/pubtools/1004848.pdf
1•advisedwang•32m ago•0 comments

Built a Clone of Expedia but Better

https://travelwithsira.com
1•malwaregeeeek•33m ago•2 comments

Turing Completeness of GNU Find: From Mkdir-Assisted Loops to Standalone Comput

https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.20762
2•todsacerdoti•36m ago•0 comments

DataClaw: Publish your Claude Code chats to HuggingFace with a single command

https://github.com/peteromallet/dataclaw
1•woctordho•37m ago•1 comments

Hegseth threatens to blacklist Anthropic over AI-controlled weapons [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBF2GTTK1JU
2•stevenjgarner•38m ago•1 comments

The Eternal Promise: A History of Attempts to Eliminate Programmers

https://www.ivanturkovic.com/2026/01/22/history-software-simplification-cobol-ai-hype/
1•dinvlad•38m ago•0 comments

Cyclical Generative Mania – a satirical pharma site for an AI-induced condition

https://www.generativemania.com
1•darknoodle•41m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Reduction Blockprint Planner/Simulator

https://reduction-planner.hirson.xyz
1•gh5000•44m ago•0 comments

Spotify Announces the "Music-Streaming Urn"

https://newsroom.spotify.com/2026-02-24/liquid-death-eternal-playlist-urn/
2•firexcy•45m ago•1 comments