Yeah it's pretty trash, and I've found that if I buy direct from the manufacturer website for 99% of stuff I'll actually save $5-10, including shipping
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In Germany, and by extension the EU, we have a website called "geizhals", which basically translates to "penny-pincher".
It is an insanly good tool to find the specific item you're looking for and where to buy it for the least amount of money. Its got a pretty robust search, and some of the most comprehensive filters I've ever seen. When I cant find what I'm looking for using Amazons search, which is nearly always, I use their site instead.
Only real downside (for me) is when stuff isn't listed on there. They probably collect data and stuff, but they also provide a useful service in return.
While writing this I have also noticed that they offer the same thing called "skintflint" for the UK. Maybe something similar exists for ppl. in the U.S. ?
What annoys me about Amazon search is it doesn’t listen to my search, and it doesn’t allow qualifiers such as minus sign. Most other searches listen to minus sign as excluding that word from search.
Example: metal cup -plastic -mug -jug
I search for a metal cup, but I do not want plastic, and not a mug or jug.
The product you actually want:
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Out of Stock -
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Doesn't qualify for Prime Shipping -
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Doesn't have the best Shipping/Price options -
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Unavailable -
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"We do not know when this item will be restocked!" -
can't say I've experienced this exactly but I feel ya in spirit o7
I boycot Amazon because that company is fucking evil.
I salute you, lord wiggle.
Unless you bought something, then you get the exact item in your ads too. Because hey, we know you liked that book! Why don't you want another copy of it, uh?
Of course I would want to buy it every week. Who wouldn't buy the book every week if they liked it so much they bought it once. Buy! Buy! Buy!
Amazon is just speedy AliExpress. Sellers use all kinds of key words so they pop up in the search, and they'll use different words for the same drop-shipped item that a dozen other sellers have. The sizes are all different because they're from varying shops and countries, quality is always questionable, and some are just scams (shout out to that 2tb hardrive I got a few years back that was just coded to read that when plugged in). You can't trust the reviews, as they're likely bought, bots, or both.
Looking for a product is low key exhausting, especially if it's important. You have to check videos, reviews, reddit, lemmy, Twitter, so you can get a variety of responses since the first 5 are alway "wow, my life has been changed by the DooDoo dome 1500.“
Amazon search was never good, but it was not a problem before it got flooded with cheap Chinese crap.
The cheap Chinese crap makes Amazon worse, which results in loss of customers, which frightens the Shareholders (line has to go up), to increase the profit the management milks their cash cow (AKA cheap Chinese crap sellers) so more Chinese crap is in the site. The circle of life.
Yesterday was some houseware. There wasn't anything Chinese in the listing, but it was the same sponsored wrong products again and again and again and again and again and again. I get more Chinese stuff when I look for electrical items, but sometimes the Chinese stuff works out for me.
If you make the same search for houseware on AliExpress I bet you'll find most of what you saw on Amazon
Amazon is deliberately built to be terrible for the users, so they can push products that make them the most money. Most filters are useless, and some don't work properly, you only have limited sorting options that also don't work properly (if you sort ascending by price, it will still put sponsored results that don't respect the sorting order). A while ago, I was looking for a product that I knew should cost about €5, and I couldn't find any cheaper than €10 until I got to the 10th result page.
For an example of a good search interface, just check farnell.com. It's insanely good, you can basically filter by any attribute of a product. Being able to use something like this to search for a laptop, or a mobile phone would be amazing.
Also you have automatically been signed up and charged for Prime.
- So hard to avoid signing up for Prime.
- Even harder to cancel your free trial of Prime if you ever caved and took the free trial.
- I don't know why they don't do Prime for free all year. I always buy more when I'm on free trial Prime. It would be an easy way to get more of my cash. But I guess enshittifying executives are going to demand more customer charges, and maybe they get more money from paid Prime subscribers than they get from increased purchasing anyway.
It's not just a matter of avoiding it, I have been signed up for prime on days I didn't eve use Amazon. The system will sign you up on its own.
God forbid you want to use search exclusion.
Oh, you searched for “some item -plastic”, guess that means you want all these bestselling plastic ones.
I have literally used their own filter system to find something with very specific specs and it still shows me totally unrelated bullshit because just like SEO, people will just put an entire fucking dictionary in the description or tags so it always shows up no matter what you're searching for.
And sometimes the filters are completely irrelevant. You're searching for correction fluid and the filters say 1Gb, 2Gb, 4Gb-512Gb, 520Mb.
Amazon Canada is just a bunch of no name brand Chinese shit.
the hilarious part is that there is genuinely good Chinese products in 2024 but it's almost like Amazon wants to flood their store with over priced junk instead
Just go to AliExpress, same shit, half the price. Bonus points that while their initial results may not be exactly what you want their recommendation engine usually gets you there quickly enough.
Maybe it's just my experience, but I have yet to find something on AliExpress for cheaper than somewhere else.
There might be a bit of a knack to it. Anything brand name or bulk generally there aren't a lot of savings. With the right search terms you can usually uncover third shift items, whether that's you're thing or not. Anything you see on Amazon sold by companies with names like HSUUEHE are often 20-40% cheaper. You might need to dig a little, there may be 20-30 listings of the same product from different sellers, some just list things at the same price you'd see them on Amazon. Anything that looks mass produced on Etsy can usually be found as well.
The niche thing you just bought just two months ago and that no one would ever need two of in their life.
I mean I bought one toilet seat, clearly I need 16 more, they know us so well
My weirdest Amazon experience was when I went to Lowe's and bought a drill bit and a pair of cabinet door hinges, and just looked at cabinet pulls for a minute or two - didn't buy any or even pick any up. That night, Amazon recommended for me drill bits, cabinet door hinges ... and cabinet pulls. I'm assuming that I got linked to in-store footage from Lowe's, which is creepy but certainly not suprising.
Your phone's Wi-Fi told them exactly where in the store you were. That's how they knew what you were looking at.
Is Lowe's like a physical amazon store?
They're not in any way associated with Amazon, as far as I know. But apparently they sell their customer data to them - and immediately.
That is pretty scummy.
Get the same feelings with Netflix. Like it feels like I'm some experiment for them instead of a customer looking to watch movies.
Actually you may well be part of their “beta experience” which typically sucks ass.
Turn it off in your settings.
Like it kept trying to recommend Carry On after I gave it a thumbs down. That movie was fucking garbage I couldn't get through the first like 20 minutes
kNN was a precursor to AI and is just as much slop.
I've custom tailored my Amazon experience using my adblocker to delete pretty much any element that doesn't serve me.
This includes any and all ads, "recommended" items, "customers also bought..." listings, banners for their business account, and anything that isn't specifically relevant to the item I'm looking at.
I can't image using it vanilla. They'd lose my business.
Amazon: You want to search for laptops with Graphics cards? Want to filter by RTX 3000s, 2000s, or 1600s?
Me: What about RTX 4000s?
Amazon: "What is a RTX 4000?"
Check out this screenshot from Home Depot's website.
About 1/8 of the page is the product. Almost NONE of the page is the "specifications" section, which is the most important section.
The majority of the page is "frequently bought together", "More from this brand", and "Customers also viewed".
I have NEVER bought anything from any of these useless lists. But they have slowed down the page sufficiently that I stopped using their website and went elsewhere. Try browsing with just 10 product pages open on this site -- you will start having tabs unload or crash due to memory consumption. Some of these product lists have a dozen items in them if you scroll right, so it consumes gigabytes of RAM.