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Wal-Mart and Target are the 'curated' everything stores. My biggest disappointment with them is that they never have what I want.

I think I'm OK with Amazon being Aliexpress for the US market. Sometimes I want to get random crap from the depths of Shenzhen, and Amazon is that. What is unfortunate is that they can't get "real" brands to sell there, because of their counterfeiting issue. The "mistake" Amazon made (that has probably made them hundreds of billions of dollars) was to let someone send in a box of crap and get paid when someone shopping for "Tide Laundry Detergent" gets their box of crap instead of Tide Laundry Detergent.

Other than that, they're where they are today because they're good. I just wouldn't buy anything valuable from them; laptops, cameras, phones, etc. Those you'll have to find a dedicated electronics retailer. But sometimes I'm like building a 3D printer and I want a touchscreen display or something for it... for $20 I can have one the same day. That is super neat. It works because no "brand" makes parts for hobbyists, and some company you've never heard of in China is actually the market leader. Amazon connects you to them... but also to billions of scammers. Caveat emptor.

Edit to add: I'm talking about the in-person stores. I have no idea what Wal-Mart and Target do online.




> Wal-Mart and Target are the 'curated' everything stores.

Are you talking in-store or online? If I go to walmart.com or target.com and search for "usb cable", I don't see a dozen cables that fit 95% of use cases like in the store. Walmart shows thousands of results, the vast majority of which are marketplace sellers selling through walmart.com. Target has "only" 753 results, 600+ of which I find are not actually sold directly by Target if I dive into the filters. Basically it feels like Walmart and Target are trying to turn their online shopping experience into amazon.com.


Annoying but at least Walmart still has the option to filter out third party sellers (under Filters, select Retailer and then Walmart). IIRC Amazon used to support this, but not anymore. I guess it wouldn't even do you much good with the commingling issue.


They do have that filter but annoyingly it resets between each search. I don't buy a ton from Walmart but I typically buy allergy medicine there since it's cheap. So I go to walmart.com, search for "allergy medicine", scroll through the filters and then click Retailer->Walmart and then pick my poison. Then I realize I need to add a few bucks worth of stuff to hit the free shipping threshold so I search for "dark chocolate" and add something to my cart...only to realize it wasn't directly from Walmart so it doesn't apply. For every search you have to go in and filter by Retailer->Walmart specifically. Ugh.


You can create a bookmarklet to only show items sold by Amazon: https://old.reddit.com/r/amazonprime/comments/13nyl2k/amazon...


yeah but those are easy to filter to results available in store. or even in my store, so i can go pick it up tonight even!


The Walmart website is also a "marketplace". As it stands, the company's website is unreliable for finding goods and their prices and it is full of junk, which requires additional user-based filtering to find items of value. To me that is not "curated".


yeah buts its not even cheap like aliexpress. its overpriced mushroom brands!! there are no deals that I see on Amazon anymore, or at least maybe they know im more likely to pony up the extra $$, so thats what they show me…




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