Samsung via eBay has select
Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 (Various, Refurbished) on sale for the prices listed after applying coupon code
SAMSUNG15 at checkout.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
sxw88 for finding this deal.
- Note: Certified - Refurbished: The item is in pristine, like-new condition. It has been professionally inspected, cleaned, and refurbished by the manufacturer or a manufacturer-approved vendor to meet manufacturer specifications. The item will be in new packaging with original or new accessories.
Available (prices after coupon code
SAMSUNG15):
- Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 (Refurbished)
- Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 Classic (Refurbished)
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Top Comments
Y'all really having that much trouble understanding this man? Belt = watch band. There are 2 lengths sold by Samsung: a small/medium (130-190mm) and a medium/large (145-205mm).
DA, if I was a betting man, I'd bet on small/medium here. But it might depend on what was ordered and if it wasn't used before "refurb". I'm betting on having to buy a band for my thick wrists if I bite. I've been eyeing these for a while.
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I hope they fixed the battery. It's no fun charging mid day. The ones at TMobile and best buy seemed to have the same issue as well. 8-10% battery drain per hour. And this was over weeks not days since it does adapt to your usage.
I suppose this is not a viable option for an upgrade.
I did figure out a good way to report the item with eBay's limited system. Choose "Listing practices", then "Other listing practices", then "Item location misrepresentation". Click Continue, and it'll give you a text box where you can say "Items do not exist. Seller taking orders and cancelling, but not removing listings."
What the hell are you talking about? We have that technology in spades, and it has existed for longer than online sales have been commonplace. It's called inventory management: counting how many of something you have and putting that in the damn database. The system tracks sales and stops selling them when it thinks you're out. You might accidentally be off by a few or someone might fat-finger an entry, but you don't get so out of whack you sell thousands more -- or even hundreds more -- unless somebody royally farks up. And on multiple listings? Nah, Samsung just didn't bother, or eBay's setup for big sellers' storefronts is utter crap -- I'd believe either story. And worse, whoever is cancelling the orders somehow doesn't have the sense, or more likely, the authority to remove the damn listings, because of bad management.
Brick and mortar stores use it to determine what to reorder without anybody doing a thing. The POS system records the sale at the register and updates the database, and a reship order is automatically generated as needed. How do you think Walmart can tell you if your brand of underwear is in stock at your local store and/or nearby stores? They also run a major inventory once a year to catch any misalignment in numbers due to unreported loss (e.g. breakage), thefts, or clerical errors (less common nowadays with automation) which is called "shrinkage". For a huge store like Walmart, 1% shrinkage is considered acceptable, which means for every 100 items they expected to have in stock, only 1 is missing when they do a count. If you want to boggle your mind, figure out how they count every item while the store is open and they're selling a million dollars in goods per week, and shelves still have to be restocked with incoming goods.
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I did figure out a good way to report the item with eBay's limited system. Choose "Listing practices", then "Other listing practices", then "Item location misrepresentation". Click Continue, and it'll give you a text box where you can say "Items do not exist. Seller taking orders and cancelling, but not removing listings."
What the hell are you talking about? We have that technology in spades, and it has existed for longer than online sales have been commonplace. It's called inventory management: counting how many of something you have and putting that in the damn database. The system tracks sales and stops selling them when it thinks you're out. You might accidentally be off by a few or someone might fat-finger an entry, but you don't get so out of whack you sell thousands more -- or even hundreds more -- unless somebody royally farks up. And on multiple listings? Nah, Samsung just didn't bother, or eBay's setup for big sellers' storefronts is utter crap -- I'd believe either story. And worse, whoever is cancelling the orders somehow doesn't have the sense, or more likely, the authority to remove the damn listings, because of bad management.
Brick and mortar stores use it to determine what to reorder without anybody doing a thing. The POS system records the sale at the register and updates the database, and a reship order is automatically generated as needed. How do you think Walmart can tell you if your brand of underwear is in stock at your local store and/or nearby stores? They also run a major inventory once a year to catch any misalignment in numbers due to unreported loss (e.g. breakage), thefts, or clerical errors (less common nowadays with automation) which is called "shrinkage". For a huge store like Walmart, 1% shrinkage is considered acceptable, which means for every 100 items they expected to have in stock, only 1 is missing when they do a count. If you want to boggle your mind, figure out how they count every item while the store is open and they're selling a million dollars in goods per week, and shelves still have to be restocked with incoming goods.
Battery tech is the last big hurdle we need to overcome for us to be living in the sci-fi future.
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