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Took too long to load.

I bet you are getting a lot of traffic to an image heavy hobby site

Site loaded almost instantly for me. Paging through some catalogs was very fluid also.
It did some circular redirections and crashed in my browser. Painful, slow, and full of ads.
the 1989 issue has a cell phone for $1499 USD

that's $3,433.91 in 2024

Amazing. The most expensive currently available iPhone is $1600 and thousands of times more powerful/capable. It would take pages and pages of products from the Radioshack catalog to even approximate what a modern phone can do.
Ah, the good old days :-) See "the 8-bit guy's" video on just how many pages and pages full of products have been replaced by smartphones, which came in like a wrecking ball to to Radio Shack's business model, alas.
Lazy Game Reviews, not 8-bit Guy. LGR also has done similar lookbacks at vintage toy and computer store catalogs, examining listings of and prices for videogames and such.
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What a trip down the memory lane. Thank you whomever did this.
Very cool!

Makes me wonder if there's a future for online, virtual stores setup just like a physical store with HQ 3D models (bonus: with other customers/store reps). One of the fun experiences of shopping in a real store (at least, as I remember from childhood) is seeing curated products you'd weren't even looking for or didn't know existed (and wanting them!)

One of the benefits would be information density, e.g. "oh, what's that I see down the isle". There's only so many products you can fit on a 2D plane.

Ha, actually, I dont like the idea of having another reason to not leave the house.

So many first pitch VR concepts where this with sooo many references to the IKEA scene in Fight Club. I really hope this isn't the direction
Buggy as hell website with popup ads. If they could simply put PDFs on the Internet Archive, that would be far less obnoxious.
Man, looking at those 70s catalogs and their wood paneled everything is amazeballs. We had so much Realistic audio equipment growing up with that glorious wood. It is interesting seeing the transition from the 70s being audio-centric to the 80s being all about computers.
Awesome website, well done! Great trip down memory lane. Looking at the 90's era catalogs highlighted the astounding deflationary power of technology. Many devices are the same cost right now that they were back then. Plus, look at all the alarms, photo and video cameras, radios, walkmans, dvd players etc. that have been replaced by a single smart phone. It certainly feels like it was the era of "peak electronics".