The Buy It Now products I find better than Amazon a lot of the time. If there's a random PC part I need or something for vintage computing I will always go to eBay first.
Any of the bidding or used hw sales I just stick with Reddit r/*swap subreddits.
I tend to agree - Amazon was king but now I can usually find cheaper products on Ebay and faster shipping to my locale than Amazon. Unless its an industrial lego piece coming from China - but then the price is insanely better.
I can't figure out what benefit Amazon brings these days... They seem like the most expensive option for anything not mainstream.
This is almost universally my thought when I see these lay off numbers. These companies are choosing to keep 250% of their headcount from 4 years ago heading into a recession. Why?
After looking through their financials though, I don't even know. They made like 3B in EBITDA In 2020, but then had a very strange financial statment in 2021 and now they lost 3B in EBITDA in 2022.
It seems like up until 2020 they were making enormous amounts of money
> This is almost universally my thought when I see these lay off numbers. These companies are choosing to keep 250% of their headcount from 4 years ago heading into a recession. Why?
You had me up until the "heading into a recession" part. How can you speak so definitively/in absolutes?
I anecdotally found that the less a person understands finance and economics, the more likely they are to make extremely confident absolute statements on their state and future direction.
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[ 4.2 ms ] story [ 41.0 ms ] threadThe Buy It Now products I find better than Amazon a lot of the time. If there's a random PC part I need or something for vintage computing I will always go to eBay first.
Any of the bidding or used hw sales I just stick with Reddit r/*swap subreddits.
I can't figure out what benefit Amazon brings these days... They seem like the most expensive option for anything not mainstream.
1) Why? What did they all do?
2) How on earth are they only laying off 500?
After looking through their financials though, I don't even know. They made like 3B in EBITDA In 2020, but then had a very strange financial statment in 2021 and now they lost 3B in EBITDA in 2022.
It seems like up until 2020 they were making enormous amounts of money
You had me up until the "heading into a recession" part. How can you speak so definitively/in absolutes?
I anecdotally found that the less a person understands finance and economics, the more likely they are to make extremely confident absolute statements on their state and future direction.