Micro Center [
Store Locator] is offering a
Micro Center In-Store Coupon for their
JLab JBuds Pro Wireless Signature Earbuds (Red) for
Free when you
supply your email address in the provided field on the promotional page. Visit any participating locations to redeem by showing the barcode on your phone or print email and show at register at time of redemption.
Thanks to community member
jmatthews13 for finding this deal.
Note, this is an in-store only coupon and cannot be used online.
Deal Instructions- Click this link here
- Supply your email address in the provided field
- Note, be sure to confirm you're not a robot in the reCAPTCHA field
- You'll receive a unique email w/ barcode number for redemption
- Visit any participating Micro Center location [Store Locator]
- Show your unique barcode on your phone or print email and show at register at time of redemption for your free JLab JBuds Pro Wireless Signature Earbuds (Red)
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I do remember when Fry's opened in Downers Grove, IL. Huge place with great deals. I was like a kid in a candy store. Bought my first LCD TV there. A couple of years ago I purchased an open box Samsung Tab S3 tablet for $170 out the door and a couple of months later a Denon AVR-X4400 Receiver for $698.xx, both after there "code" word which entitled you to a 20% off coupon. Last time I stopped by I wish I hadn't, the place was depressing. Going to miss that store.
That being said, Micro Center in Westmont, just down the road from Fry's, has some great pricing and the place is always busy. Last time I stopped just to pick up the 128GB micro SD card for free I had to wait outside in line. Place was packed. And like the Target credit card they take 5% off your purchase of items your buying. With some of the CPU deals they have had in the past, sweet deal. Picked up my 3800X for $266 + tax after the 5% plus off during the AMD Event last February. Also picked up the 2600X for $79.
Having a micro Center nearby is a nice way to get the bug to build another computer.
WB
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I do remember when Fry's opened in Downers Grove, IL. Huge place with great deals. I was like a kid in a candy store. Bought my first LCD TV there. A couple of years ago I purchased an open box Samsung Tab S3 tablet for $170 out the door and a couple of months later a Denon AVR-X4400 Receiver for $698.xx, both after there "code" word which entitled you to a 20% off coupon. Last time I stopped by I wish I hadn't, the place was depressing. Going to miss that store.
The devils are its worst customers. They buy products, apply for rebates, return the purchases, then buy them back at returned-merchandise discounts. They load up on "loss leaders," severely discounted merchandise designed to boost store traffic, then flip the goods at a profit on eBay. They slap down rock-bottom price quotes from Web sites and demand that Best Buy make good on its lowest-price pledge. "They can wreak enormous economic havoc," says Mr. Anderson.
Fry's started in relatively affluent areas catering to engineers and technical people. A different class came in once it was all dumbed down and then you have things like a wall full of motherboards with return stickers. They should have started charging restocking fees, the business was broken windows theory the story.
Back when it was still in business, I recall going to them only if I needed something that day and couldn't wait for an online order from Amazon, NewEgg or NECX and such to arrive, or because they were running a nice sale on something I could use. Otherwise, waste of my time and anything I needed and could wait for was cheaper online.
One thing I like about MC is their tinkerer/hobbyist section, sort of a Radio Shack on steroids. It's still way cheaper to buy such things online, especially eBay. But it's nice to know that if I need something that day, they'd probably have it. And their prices on some items are actually very competitive, like house brand Arduino boards and add-ons, or Raspberry Pi's. I'd also rather buy literally hands-on devices like keyboards from them, since they have a bunch on display (or used to before covid).
Another thing that a lot of customers might not have known is most (perhaps all?) stores actually had dedicated corporate sales desks. In our store it was most visible as a desk in one corner of the store near the front door - where you would also go for special orders if you were interested in figuring out that maze - but there was a lot more to it than that. In fact we actually had a small cubicle farm completely out of sight of the retail sales floor that was staffed by a few 9-5'ers who were tasked with maintaining corporate accounts. It was a big part of the company's business but not enough to keep us afloat.
There were a lot of things that were done right, though - and could have saved the company if someone had put in the effort from above. We had the most knowledgeable employees in consumer electronics at the time - we actively poached employees from Best Buy, Circuit City, Ultimate Electronics, etc - and we kept them by paying above-market wages. It was not uncommon to have customers come to us from other local stores when the other chains couldn't solve their problems. If we would have used the corporate purchasing system as a building block for online sales (we didn't) we could have been a huge seller in consumer electronics and had a presence there before Amazon was even selling books on the subject. We also had a pretty good inventory system (especially for checking cross-store inventory) and a pretty decent distribution network which could have been leveraged for better product delivery if we had put in the effort (again, we didn't).
Another thing that a lot of customers might not have known is most (perhaps all?) stores actually had dedicated corporate sales desks. In our store it was most visible as a desk in one corner of the store near the front door - where you would also go for special orders if you were interested in figuring out that maze - but there was a lot more to it than that. In fact we actually had a small cubicle farm completely out of sight of the retail sales floor that was staffed by a few 9-5'ers who were tasked with maintaining corporate accounts. It was a big part of the company's business but not enough to keep us afloat.
There were a lot of things that were done right, though - and could have saved the company if someone had put in the effort from above. We had the most knowledgeable employees in consumer electronics at the time - we actively poached employees from Best Buy, Circuit City, Ultimate Electronics, etc - and we kept them by paying above-market wages. It was not uncommon to have customers come to us from other local stores when the other chains couldn't solve their problems. If we would have used the corporate purchasing system as a building block for online sales (we didn't) we could have been a huge seller in consumer electronics and had a presence there before Amazon was even selling books on the subject. We also had a pretty good inventory system (especially for checking cross-store inventory) and a pretty decent distribution network which could have been leveraged for better product delivery if we had put in the effort (again, we didn't).
Another thing that a lot of customers might not have known is most (perhaps all?) stores actually had dedicated corporate sales desks. In our store it was most visible as a desk in one corner of the store near the front door - where you would also go for special orders if you were interested in figuring out that maze - but there was a lot more to it than that. In fact we actually had a small cubicle farm completely out of sight of the retail sales floor that was staffed by a few 9-5'ers who were tasked with maintaining corporate accounts. It was a big part of the company's business but not enough to keep us afloat.
There were a lot of things that were done right, though - and could have saved the company if someone had put in the effort from above. We had the most knowledgeable employees in consumer electronics at the time - we actively poached employees from Best Buy, Circuit City, Ultimate Electronics, etc - and we kept them by paying above-market wages. It was not uncommon to have customers come to us from other local stores when the other chains couldn't solve their problems. If we would have used the corporate purchasing system as a building block for online sales (we didn't) we could have been a huge seller in consumer electronics and had a presence there before Amazon was even selling books on the subject. We also had a pretty good inventory system (especially for checking cross-store inventory) and a pretty decent distribution network which could have been leveraged for better product delivery if we had put in the effort (again, we didn't).
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https://slickdeals.net/f/14876461-free-morpheus-hp4500-360-bluetooth-headphones-from-microcenter
Then OP should give credit to the original poster.
Should always check that out. You don't know what you missed. I always check.
Transmission range for audio depends entirely on the strength of the transmitter and quality of the antennas.
Codec quality comparisons with graphs and samples exist, even sbc is beyond most headphones let alone based on the sources they are fed.
Bluetooth doesn't get a default audio quality boost until 5.2.
Low bandwidth aac/sbc will always have longer range than hidef codecs.
This is all irrelevant at $20.
Then no idea why one of the biggest, long-time audio manufacturers that make Harmon, Akg, jbl, etc say so.
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