Yes, the electronics/appliance selection, when one needs it, can be slightly lacking. Costco appears to reduce costs by often stocking exactly one option for a given thing. E.g., I'm in the market for a toaster as my old one died (a 2012 basic 2-slot model, $20 at Costco). My local Costco now seems to only have an upscale 4-slot model for $50. I'm considering my options and living a toaster-free life at the moment, but even two options would be nice.
It's hard to beat the prices on bulk foods, though, which keeps me going back (and I like voting-with-dollars for well-run, customer-friendly stores). Perhaps it's just the bulk-commodities mindset from the food aisles leaking over into electronics that causes the above.
This is true. In fact Costco frequently stocks models of electronics that are exclusively sold through them. For example, many TVs you buy there are slight variations of popular models that only Costco sells. They even have distinct model numbers that you'll have a hard time finding info about on Google. The manufacturer makes up costs by defeaturing the TVs. Frequently they reduce the number of ports or withhold smart TV features. This is actually great for me because I seldom want all the bells and whistles. I'd like as much money spent as possible to go to size and quality of the display.
Since the Smart TV shit started, I've moved to just buying large PC monitors and using them with my PC. (It helps that I'm a cable cutter. There's nothing interesting on TV that's not streaming somewhere.)
I do not understand this. Buy the TV as it is bigger and cheaper. Just do not configure the WiFi and do not plug the Ethernet in. I have 2 Samsung’s that are set at just out of the box with no internet.
Some smart TVs will find an open AP if you don't otherwise configure them for internet access, hence the swing to dumb TVs and monitors for people who want to guarantee no logging of their viewing habits.
At some point I realized I did not even want to use the TV apps and did not care to maintain the PC with Kodi on it. I just switched to an AppleTV for everything and paid for MrMC (Kodi port for AppleTV that supports SMB/NFS mounting). So much simpler.
My experience is that the Costco exclusive models of many electronic products are not feature reduced but are identical to the non Costco versions except bundled with accessories or services not included with the non Costco versions.
For example Ring security systems and cameras sold at Costco usually include additional sensors or things such as additional Ring chimes plus a free year of service.
Back in the day, I haven't bought one in years and can't speak to the current situation, printers sold at Costco almost always had unique model numbers because Costco insisted printer manufacturers include USB cables and full ink or toner cartridges instead of starter ones. So if HP sold a model 420 everywhere else they would sell a model 425 at Costco which included the cable and full ink cartridges but the printer itself was identical to the 420 sold elsewhere.
A couple of years ago I bought an electronic keyboard for my daughter. It had a different model number than the keyboard normally has but the keyboard itself is the same feature wise as sold other places but it came bundled with a stand and a couple of other accessories which would have been extra elsewhere.
But often it's not. You can find threads on AV forums comparing Costco only models to their common models. Though maybe this has changed a bit as I haven't shopped for a TV for a few years.
They don't always remove features. Really it's more about making the comparison between the products just fuzzy enough that the other retailers can't give the manufacturers a hard time for offering Costco a cheaper deal. And in some cases just trying not to devalue their brand elsewhere.
Costco doesn't sell the same Dyson vacuum as everywhere else -- instead of a "Total" they sell an "Absolute" or some other equally confusing nonsense.
The difference is they remove a single (non-motorized/cheap) attachment, and throw in two different ones and a couple other accoutrements. And sell it for $100 less.
The part that's not included in their package can be purchased retail from Dyson for less than $100.
Other retailers can't use this to put pressure on Dyson. Dyson doesn't look like they're overcharging everywhere else.
Wow -- the engineering cleverness is actually really incredible (using heat expansion of the nichrome wire to automatically lower the bread! fully mechanical closed-loop monitoring of bread surface temperature!). Tempting.
It's hard to beat the prices on bulk foods, though, which keeps me going back (and I like voting-with-dollars for well-run, customer-friendly stores). Perhaps it's just the bulk-commodities mindset from the food aisles leaking over into electronics that causes the above.