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RadioShack CEO Resigns

xzvf writes to tell us Forbes is reporting that RadioShack CEO David J. Edmondson has resigned. Reeling from a 62% drop in fourth quarter net income the company has announced a sweeping restructuring plan. From the article: "Edmondson said in a separate statement Monday that new leadership was needed so the company's turnaround plan would have the best possible chance to succeed. The revamp announced Friday prompted mixed responses from analysts, who indicated the plan might be successful but, at that time, they doubted Edmondson's ability to pull it off after it became clear he had lied about his education."

79 of 474 comments (clear)

  1. Check? by Agent00Wang · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "became clear he had lied about his education"

    It seems like you hear about this more and more in the business world. Don't they even bother to check people out?

    --
    NINJA SPIRIT - The Ancient Art of Insanity
    1. Re:Check? by Fear+the+Clam · · Score: 4, Funny

      Don't they even bother to check people out?

      They did ask for his mailing address...

    2. Re:Check? by GoatMonkey2112 · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's pretty surprising considering that Radio Shack normally requires background screenings in order to buy some freakin batteries.

    3. Re:Check? by RockModeNick · · Score: 2, Funny

      My father once ran in quickly to do just that, and they start asking him for name, addy, digits, everything - he stared at the clerk for a couple seconds and then repeated "just these batteries" and blinked until the guy rung him up and took his 5$.

    4. Re:Check? by Janek+Kozicki · · Score: 3, Funny

      the previous president of Poland (two cadencies, 8 years in total - 1998-2006) lied about his education. Media went berserk about it after the first election, and yet(!) he managed to get elected for the second time.

      I live in Poland, so I know for sure.

      --
      #
      #\ @ ? Colonize Mars
      #
    5. Re:Check? by brunes69 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I usually find its faster to give them the old "10 Nowhere Drive, 90210, 555-1212" routine. If they start to clue in they just stop asking. If they don't then who cares.

    6. Re:Check? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There is no shortage of people on Slashdot with no business education who think they could run a business.... Seriously- Why does everyone here insult Biz degrees and MBAs?

    7. Re:Check? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I guess it's more understandable at lower levels, but you'd think that at the CEO level they might want to make sure they're getting what they paid for.

      The thing is that he'd been with Radio Shack for 11 years, and become the top sales associate before being offered the job as CEO. Whatever checks might have happened, probably didn't happen 11 years ago. Since then, no one had any reason to question his education. He was a full time employee with an excellent record. What else was necessary?

      After he crashed and burned the company, people started paying attention to who he was and where he came from.

    8. Re:Check? by Greg_D · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you have an aggressive streak, the ability to lie with a straight face, can communicate effectively, and the ability to remember a few facts and figures, you too can be a top salesman. No education beyond high school necessary.

      The qualifications necessary for a sales position and CEO aren't even close to being the same, and they should have checked his qualifications again before ever giving him the top spot. If you're a salesperson and you screw up big time, they can fire you and give your accounts to someone else, but even then you're not likely to hurt the company a great deal. If you're a CEO and you screw up, everyone in the company, and especially the shareholders, feel it.

    9. Re:Check? by Ubergrendle · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Two things to consider: educational background has little relevance to one's capabiltiy of doing many corporate jobs. He's proven that with an 11 year successful internal record. I've seen it personally time and time again. The best development manager I ever worked for was a philosophy major in university. I personally have fired an MIT grad and opted to retain the community college grad, based on actual peformance, work ethic, and team mindedness.

      The other is the peter principle...one rises to the level of one's own inability. Unfortunately, the role of CEO requires very diffierent skills from top sales associate, or even head of marketing. His lack of success as CEO can just as easily be explained by a) inheriting a mess, b) lack of board support, and c) not the right man for the job. The educational question is probably just a hatchet job done to justify his removal after the fact -- "We've got a problem with Bob...find a reason to fire him!"

      --
      John Maynard Keynes: "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do?"
    10. Re:Check? by Shipwack · · Score: 3, Funny

      I usually respond to questions about my address, phone, etc by looking the (usually) male clerk in the eyes, putting my hand on top of his, and repsonding, "I'm flattered, but you really aren't my type...."

      Since I'm a big husky guy, they usually stammmer and just give me my batteries.

    11. Re:Check? by nelsonal · · Score: 2, Informative

      One of the primary duties of a CEO is lead stock salesman, it can be a tougher sell than some electronics goods, but Wall St and Madison Ave should intersect if the map reflected their operations.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    12. Re:Check? by Dan+East · · Score: 5, Interesting

      the top sales associate before being offered the job as CEO.

      How does being a good salesman equate with the leadership and organizational ability required of a CEO? I understand, CEOs must to some extent "sell their company", but many great CEOs are very introverted, out-of-the-limelight type of people.

      I worked at a Radio Shack (a company owned store) for a few years, and the pressure to sell people expensive items, whether or not they needed them, was intense. Batteries were (and still are) the big killer profit-maker for them. They really beat it into our heads to sell those batteries. Why do you think Radio Shack gave out those coupons for free flashlights all the time? Because if just a few takers would buy batteries for them then they did very well.

      Anyone that excels in sales in that type of environment plays dirty. Period. So the fact that he was a leading salesman tells me enough about his character to know that he is not someone that should be in charge.

      Dan East

      --
      Better known as 318230.
    13. Re:Check? by Agent00Wang · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wonder how the "little" lie that helped him get his original position at Radio Shack 11 years ago affected him in his rise through the ranks. Can you imagine wondering all those years whether someone was going to find you out eventually? Sure, it seemed like a harmless bit of misinformation when he was applying to be a sales associate, but it quickly becomes a much greater liability as power and position increase.

      --
      NINJA SPIRIT - The Ancient Art of Insanity
    14. Re:Check? by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I personally have fired an MIT grad and opted to retain the community college grad, based on actual peformance, work ethic, and team mindedness.

      In the end, tertiary education does not count for as much as some people think it does, especially in the business world. Tertiary education simply primes your for a certain kind of job. It does no actual on the job training. Sure, you got an 4.0 in your business degree, but can you actually sell product and make money?

      Once you begin working, that is when your true worth becomes apparent.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    15. Re:Check? by EatHam · · Score: 4, Funny

      It is *far* easier to teach an engineer business than it is to teach a business person engineering. I'd rather try to teach my dog diff eq.

    16. Re:Check? by WetSpot · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I had a professor who was fond of describing the importance of putting your degree on your resume as "important only for landing that first job". After that, it's performance and experience based.

      If this CEO fudged his education, it speaks more to his character, judgement, and ethics than his ability sell batteries and solder.

    17. Re:Check? by typical · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Seriously, that is one of the most annoying things a store can do -- to demand your personal information at the counter.

      Also, the guy at the register hates doing it, because half the people that go by hate him asking them for it.

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    18. Re:Check? by russellh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure, you got an 4.0 in your business degree, but can you actually sell product and make money?
      Once you begin working, that is when your true worth becomes apparent.


      agreed. but in defense of the business degree, they only truly worthwhile business school experience is when you go back to school after having worked in the real world for a time. the executive MBA programs are entirely different from your random business degree, especially in the top schools that are taught by real life successful business people, who do real work in the real world, and where all the students have done real work in the real world also.

      --
      must... stay... awake...
    19. Re:Check? by Kankraka · · Score: 2, Informative

      I work at The Source (Read: Radio Shack in Canada) and haate doing that. I've never asked for anyones phone number and all that crap unless they are buying a high priced item, it just makes tracking their reciept down easier in the event that they've lost it and need warrenty/extended warrenty work done. If you're just buying a pack of freakin' batteries, I'm not going to go through all that crap.

    20. Re:Check? by hempalicious · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Do you also give fake address information when you buy DVDs online, then?

      I'm not saying I agree with the practice of requiring customers to provide the info unnecessarily. However, I do find it ironic that we will refuse to give personal info to someone who we are looking at face-to-face, but give it happily to a nameless, faceless online "storefront".

      Obviously, not everyone buys things online. But to those who do, quit being such hypocrites.

  2. slogan by kisrael · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "You have questions...we have cellphone plans."

    --
    SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    1. Re:slogan by Technician · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When they went to toys and phones instead of answers and parts, I stopped visiting. There are lots of places to get good prices on toys and phones. Why did they go from a niche market to an overpriced K-B Toys and cellphones? When I'm breadboarding a hardware project, I order online. I know the local Radio Shack doesn't have parts.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    2. Re:slogan by Kevin+Stevens · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I am sure this comment is going to be utterly redundant shortly, but last time I went to Radio Shack I wanted solder. Not an exotic transistor or out of the ordinary capacitor, just farking solder for a soldering iron. I looked around the store, and could not find it. So I asked one of the clerks where I could find it (not believing that its possible that Radio Shack could have moved that far away from hobbyist stuff). The clerk did not know what solder was! He had to ask his coworker who said they might have some in the back. I was shocked, and there was another geek next to me who also had a stunned look on his face. In another time or place, or possibly a more empty store, we probably would have hugged each other to console ourselves. After the two of them went in the back store room for almost 10 minutes, he finally returned with a roll of it and asked if it was what I wanted. I walked out feeling like a defeated man. I kind of wanted to take the shitty component systems on the wall shelf and throw them at the stack of overpriced R/C cars.

      I am pretty sure if I had asked him for an LM555C Timer his would have asploded.

    3. Re:slogan by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 2, Funny
      In another time or place, or possibly a more empty store, we probably would have hugged each other...

      I saw that film. Quite disgusting.

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    4. Re:slogan by XO · · Score: 2, Insightful

      actually, radioshack sells more wireless phone units, satellite dishes, and a few other smaller products than all other retailers combined. Period.

      And the recurring revenue on a few million wireless phone contracts a year is something you'd be pretty damn appreciative of.

      --
      "Champagne for my real friends - and real pain for my sham friends!" http://ericblade.postalboard.com/
    5. Re:slogan by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Informative
      Well, your store must have been cracked out, because no more than 10 years ago it was possible to stroll into the radio shack in the capitola mall and purchase one. Also, it was formerly in the radio shack catalog - when I went to go try to get one, the guy behind the counter remembered seeing them in there, but they had mysteriously vanished since the last time he looked in the catalog for one.

      I'm sorry to hear that your radio shack went in the shitter early, or was always there, but radio shack did indeed formerly carry conductive pens. I noticed them originally (as a pre-teen) because the idea was so neat, and I'd never heard of them before.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  3. Hmm.. by MrByte420 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Its been news for the last few days that he never gradudated college let alone had the two degrees he claimed. I'm suprised the article writeup only touched on this in italics in the bottom. One of the degrees he claimed wasn't even offered by the university that he claimed awarded it to him.

    --
    If religous zealots don't believe in Evolution, then why are they so worried about bird flu?
  4. Long time coming.. by j0e_average · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Radio Shack went downhill when they made Cellphone and Satellite TV service their primary sales vehicles. They ought to get back to their roots...providing components for tinkerers. I know there's not as much potential profit in this, but if they were to partner with the editors of Make Magazine, they could become the new hope for the home brew crowd.

    Example: In this month's Make Magazine...there's an article on how to receive free (not illegal) satellite channels by using inexpensive materials. Radio Shack should be the source for this material for those who don't want to scrounge!

    I know this has been a huge plug for Make Magazine...but for goodness sake, when I used to need some obscure part, I knew it could be had cheaply at the Shack...now you have to order a lot of parts.

    1. Re:Long time coming.. by ian_mackereth · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I've nursed a grudge against Tandy/Radio Shack for many years, so their current woes fill my small soul with spiteful glee.

      Back in the 70s, they moved into Australia and tried to buy their way into market dominance, mainly against a local company, Dick Smith Electronics. DSE got hold of documents that showed that RS were prepared to lose a lot of money (by local standards) to wipe out the competition, then make it up with monopolistic pricing.

      It didn't work, not least because they tried to simply transplant an American store to an Australian shop without taking local conditions into account. The publicity from DSE's protests didn't help them, either. Nor did the crap that they were selling!

      Ironically, both Tandy Australia and Dick Smith Electronics were bought by Woolworths Australia (a big supermarket-based chain) in 2001. They still operate seperate shops, but there's a lot of overlap of product.

      (Not completely on-topic, but moderators please note that I've just admitted to carrying a grudge for over thirty years. Mod me down if you like...) 8-)}

    2. Re:Long time coming.. by sasdrtx · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've found Parts Express to be a great alternative to Radio Shack. It's great for me since I pass them on the way to work, but they are primarily an online order company anyway.

      --
      Most people don't even think inside the box.
    3. Re:Long time coming.. by Aladrin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A year or 2 ago, I got interested in learning to solder. I've had soldering irons and tinkered a bit before, but I wanted to learn to do it right and actually be able to make things. (Without buring the boards and frying the components, you know?)

      My first thought was 'Radio Shack! They've always had that stuff.' So I'm all happy and travelled 45 minutes to my nearest not-a-cesspit Radio Shack (I wouldn't touch the local one with a 10-ft pole. Very slimey) and start looking for those kits for radios and wireless microphones. They had not a single one! When I finally got a free clerk, his answer was 'We used to have those, but we don't any more.'

      So I took a good look around and they still have some parts like resistors and stuff, and some stuff I have no earthly clue about, but the majority of their store is overpriced phones, overpriced computers, and overpriced toys for adults with too much money and too little sense. I was very disheartened.

      I eventually went to the net to find what I wanted, and got a couple kits (one of them actually worked when I was done!) and had my fun that way.

      In short: The one thing I remember Radio Shack fondly for, they no longer have. That seems like a grave mistake to me.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    4. Re:Long time coming.. by Intron · · Score: 2, Funny

      True. If I want a half-baked homebrew project these days, I don't solder it together out of parts, I write it in perl.

      --
      Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
  5. Another version by Dekortage · · Score: 5, Funny

    According to CNN's article on this topic, Edmundson "originally said he had received a Bachelor of Science degree, but now says he believes -- but cannot document -- that he received a ThG diploma, awarded for completing a three-year degree in theology."

    Call it academic theology: "I believe that I got the degree, but cannot document it." Intelligent design, anyone?

    --
    $nice = $webHosting + $domainNames + $sslCerts
  6. The margin's the thing... by aapold · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For years now I've associated Radio Shaq with overpriced items... I only go there if they have something I can't get somewhere else and by that I mean something I need right this minute. That's like 3 times in six years for me.

    Plus, what few things they have are all across the board. I always wondered what they held in common, now I see that it was profit margin. A slim range of digital cameras, handheld radios (do people still use these?), stereo wire and connectors and radio control cars (like its a place you bring your kids to?). For each of these if that's what I'm looking for there are other places that come to mind first. Even audio connectors I'll go to some local contractor electronics supplier who can make a custom cable if I need it...

    --
    "Waste not one watt!" - CZ
    1. Re:The margin's the thing... by DeanFox · · Score: 2, Interesting


      I recently web ordered a security camera and ignored the additional accessories page. The website had a 100' video cable for $18 and a power supply for $10. In a pinch to install the camera I go to Radio Shack.

      Radio Shack had a 6' cable for $16. I would have needed 16 of them and 15 connectors to equal the 100' at a cost of $331.00. Not that I would have gone that route but still...

      And then there was the power supply. Radio Shack wanted almost $20. We ended up with a different solution that "only" cost me $50 rather than the $28 it would have cost from the original supplier of the camera. And at that I only got 50' not the 100'.

      I'll absorb some premium for the convenience and personalized service but not almost a 100% increase for half the product. I only concluded the sale because I needed it fast.

      I left the store feeling ripped off. And that's a very difficult feeling to market or promote out of your customers. A once loyal fan of RS I'm not even sure I'll go there the next time I'm in a pinch.

  7. His problem was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    that he needed to be Realistic and not an Optimus.

  8. Realistic by FrankDrebin · · Score: 4, Funny

    new leadership was needed so the company's turnaround plan would have the best possible chance to succeed

    Sounds like a Realistic(tm) plan to me.

    --
    Anybody want a peanut?
  9. News: There's a new CEO with a tough job.... by postbigbang · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Big box consumer electronics retailers have usurped the role of the neighborhood consumer electronics store. Remember that not long ago, this was Tandy Leather Company. Although the company has changed over the years, each of their markets has big competition:

    - Cell phones and 2-way phones are in the big box retailers
    - Fry's and others have edged the electronic components and tech tool offerings
    - TVs, computers, stereos, and others are the domain of Best Buy, Circuit City, etc...
    - Tech toys have also been gnawed on by a slew of retailers

    So it's no fun to be Radio Snack, as my uncle calls them. Closing 700 stores is only the first step on a long journey back to health for these guys, as they try to find identity and appeal in the major and tiny markets they once did well in.

    Getting smeared because of their ex-CEO's dubious credentials is just another nail in the coffin if they're not careful.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    1. Re:News: There's a new CEO with a tough job.... by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 2, Informative

      Tandy Leather was sold many years ago. They are still around, but harder to find. I remember goign to Tandy alot when I was a kid. Back then, my dad did leather work to supplement his income. I still carry a wallet he made. He still does the stuff, but has to get the kits via mail most times.

      Links:

      Radio Shack History
      Tandy Leather

      Radio Shack still does sell alot of components, but just not as many as there used to be. I have not seen a ole 200 in 1 kit lately. Problem is how do you get kids intrested in component circuits? I would love to see Radio Shack start to carry computer components and mother boards. They have some things, but you can't really build a computer with parts from Radio Shack anymore(you coudl have back in the component days).

      --

      Gorkman

    2. Re:News: There's a new CEO with a tough job.... by XO · · Score: 2, Informative

      People DO go to radioshack to buy cell phones. Internet service, not so much.
      TV, audio all RCA, Magnavox, Sony, Samsung. Which brand isn't mainstream?

      Computers are all Compaq.

      --
      "Champagne for my real friends - and real pain for my sham friends!" http://ericblade.postalboard.com/
  10. They stopped all the cool stuff. by jellomizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I personally find little reason to go to RadioShack much anyways, they no longer have as much as the stuff I really wanted. Things like Audio and Video Adapters and cables are getting more and more slim, There IC selection is becoming non-existance. I can't find things like a basic Cable Tuner, Null Modem adapters and other adapters. When you walk in there are TVs Surround sound systems, Cell Phones, as their primary which I could get a better choices at a Circuit City, Best Buy, Rex, etc... stuff heck I had to hunt around until I could find a basic calculator. People go to radio shack for hand made electronics and custom configuration of their technology. I should be able to go in there and easily find a Stereo Splitter. So my old 5 speaker Surround sound system for my computer will work on my normal Stereo TV with all the speaker for 4 speaker Stereo. Or If I need a Cable Tuner to get an Old TiVo working like new again they should have some in stock. That use to be Radioshack value add. People may stop in once in a while to get Computers, Cellphones, or TVs for the bulk to their profit but the small stuff keeps many of the more technical people coming back and get the low end stuff and perhaps they will get an other High Margin product in the future.
    Also customer service has went to crap. While they are friendly and everything, when it comes to ask about stuff in the far corner like Is there any RJ45 Connectors aka Cat 5 connectors, I will get a Blank Stare. In the old days the people were far more knowable about all the products then just the top sellers.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  11. Radio Shack and the decline of amateur radio by CRCulver · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's interesting and more than a little depressing to see just how greatly Radio Shack has changed in the past ten years. In 1995 I got my amateur radio license. Everyone knew that Radio Shack's license exam preparation materials, done by one Gordon West, were rubbish that taught people how to pass a test without understanding any of the concepts between it. That's why I ordered the ARRL's dependable guide Now You're Talking from another store (check the book out if you are looking for an interesting hobby, it's also in many libraries). But Radio Shack was incredibly helpful for providing all the parts one needed to build little projects. Whenever I found an interesting project in the ham magazine QST, such as an audio amplifier or a QRP kit, I knew Radio Shack would provide the materials.

    But now, things have changed, there's hardly more than a couple of soldering irons for sale in the back of a Radio Shack today. The hobby of tinkering with electronics is no longer profitable for a retail store, possibly due to the decline of amateur radio. Hams today order what they need from the Internet or the catalogues that a few specialty stores like to spam technophiles with. Instead, Radio Shack has decided to entirely focus on consumer electronics. But it can't win there either, larger stores like Best Buy or Circuit City will always have a better selection. I can't really see any way for this company to survive.

  12. No chance by drgonzo59 · · Score: 2, Informative

    My friend worked for RadioShack and he said the whole business model of RadioShack is crap and is obsolete. When before they were _the_ specialty electronics store, now they make most of their money off of overpriced batteries and cell phone plans. The savy geeks who would have gone there before to buy electronic parts, now get them cheaper from the Web, and the average consumers just go to places like Best Buy, CircuitCity and others where they have a larger selection of equipment. The last time I went to RS was 6 years ago to get some thermal paste for my heatsinks, and the idiot saleman didn't even know what it was, I had to go through the shelves and find it myself (I suspected they had it somewhere). That's the last time I bought anything from them. I am sure other "electronically inclined" geeks here probably have a similar story...

  13. Making stuff yourself??? by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Are you nuts? People are too busy being at the mall or watching TV to do anything by themselves. Tinkering has become the pastime of penny pinchers and weirdos who can't or don't want to do what a good citizen does: CONSUME!

    Let's face it. Making stuff yourself gets out of fashion. Remember, kids, only commies make stuff themselves, a good consumer buys it!

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:Making stuff yourself??? by Dunbal · · Score: 5, Funny

      Tinkering has become the pastime of penny pinchers and weirdos

            And terrorists! Let's not forget the terrorists...

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:Making stuff yourself??? by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, the problem is that the gap between "what you can do at home" and "what's useful" has opened up tremenduously. 20 years ago you could actually, given a few parts and lots of time, build your own computer, and it wouldn't be TOO much behind an off the shelf computer. You could probably even use the same software.

      Today, even if you did get all the necessary ICs, you could not create the prints at home (or, rather, most people couldn't), you can't solder them in (unless you have very special equipment), you simply cannot build a computer at home anymore.

      What you can do is buy the parts and put them together. It's kinda like the (new) Lego. The NEW Lego, where you get like 10 parts that "need some assembly". Not the good, old one, that let you build what YOU wanted to build.

      Yes, today we can still "tinker" at least on our software. I just fear that this is going to be over very soon, too. And I kinda don't think it will take another 20 years until this is gone as well, and we're relegated to consumer status on our computers, with little chance to ever become any more than that.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  14. Re:I Hate RadioShack by Himring · · Score: 4, Informative

    You must not work much with technology in a tactile fashion. Radio Shack is irreplacable in most mid-sized to small towns wherein it is the only place you can walk in and purchase certain eletronic parts to complete projects. Where else can you view and select from a wide choice of project boxes in a store front? Sure, there are tv repair shops and the like, but they do not special in the retail sales of these parts, and even if they do have it you'll pay an arm and a leg. This says nothing of such things as batteries for watches and the like. Walmart, Office Depot, Staples ... they will carry only the most popularly used battery watches. You'll most likely have to order online or from the company for the rest. But you can walk into a radio shack and get the same thing right away without waiting or paying for shipping.

    You may read and post on /., but I doubt you're much of a geek beyond that....

    --
    "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
  15. Re:Hmm.. (LINK) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    As usual, the /. article is very low on relevant links. Here is the article about this fucktard admiting lying.

    http://msnbc.msn.com/id/11388447/

    He is paid >1.4M$ per year, and will probably get that as its package.

    Bastard.

  16. with a little help from my friends? by marco_craveiro · · Score: 3, Funny

    you know, just the other day I was browsing Linux Today and somehow i found myself reading the ever useful "get the facts" ad (right-hand corner). one of success stories was "RadioShack Saves Millions of Dollars by Choosing Windows Over Linux". and now there's a 62% drop in fourth quarter net income. yet another company "helped" by microsoft, methinks... :-D

  17. Educaton is not always that important. by jellomizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The reason why they probably never checked his education is because It was not not the most important part of his Resume. In real life Education is only a minor factor, especially when you get more experience. When you are staring out Education is a major factor because you don't have much to go on. But when you go further it becomes less important, unless you plan to switch paths, like say you have a BS and you want to get into management so you get an MBA. That way you can show the hirers that you are not just a Tech Egg Head and you have some business knowledge as well. But If you were able to work your way up in a company with a GED and proved yourself valuable (Bill Gates never graduated from college) then you could be work more then a person with degrees up to the kazoo. Sometimes I see people who may Flash their PHD in Engineering at me to show how smart they are, except they call me to fix the problem with their primary program when windows is putting up a little bubble on the screen saying you have loss network connection. So I tell them the program doesn't work without a network connection, then they just flash their degrees at me.
    In Business degrees and education usually says the person was able to stick it out for at least 2,4,6,8 years and get a degree and they have the building blocks to learn to do the job. But when you start getting experience then that counts for so much more.
    As for Lying about your education what that does is makes it easy to fire you for lying on your Resume if they don't want you. But they are not going to take the effort and check it unless they need a good reason.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    1. Re:Educaton is not always that important. by TFGeditor · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I deeply regret that the parent was modded "Funny." The post is insightfully correct, but it fails to point up the larger underlying principle: discrimination.

      I was a test-engineering consultant for 20-odd years to companies such as Lockheed, Motorola and TI defense divisions, Dell, and so on. At the time, I was one of the top ten people in my (admittedly narrow/specialized) field in the U.S.

      Yet, not one of those companies would have hired me as an employee to do the *exact* same work they hired me to do as a consultant because I did not have a degree. I never attended high school, but did get a GED.

      (Side note: Tandy was one of my clients in the 1980s and 90s. Every Tandy computer manufactured in the U.S. was production tested with software I wrote and on apparatus I designed and built.)

      When I burned out in that field, I switched careers and entered writing/journalism, eventually becomming a magazine editor (circ. ~100k)--still on a contactor/consultant basis. Yet, I'd be hard put to land even a proofreading job as an employee because I am "uneducated."

      I hold that this is an unrecognized/unacknowleged form of discrimination and bigotry. Experience and ability should be the primary--if not only--criteria in hiring, not race, sex or orientation thereof--or education.

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    2. Re:Educaton is not always that important. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Gee, you don't have a chip on your shoulder or anything. Perhaps because the PHDs you mention are too busy studying things that you, who does not have a college education, could never do. They are also getting paid much more than you because your skill level, being able to fix network connections, is something that a kid in high school can do.

      You can continue to sit on your high horse and keep changing my oil and running cat 5 cable as a lowly tech support peon. I'll work less hours on cooler projects for more money.

      Maybe you can learn job skills after being employed for a long time, but people with an education get a higher starting salary because they already have a skillset.

      GG.

    3. Re:Educaton is not always that important. by NialScorva · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I never got a degree, and I'm now a contractor who does very quick turnaround solutions for a customer who needs very specialized and unusual tools (software and hardware). It's very interesting and technical work requiring a fair breadth of knowledge, and there's no room for incompetency (4 man team, combined 70 years of experience). I think I've done quite well for myself.

      I say that not to brag (well, maybe a little), but more to drive the point home when I say that a college degree is a very important part of your resume. Practical experience in IT has a hard time truly capturing the theory aspects of what you are doing. Too often it's a "make it work" world where you have enough understanding to navigate the dialogues in windows without understanding why the network is the way it is. How often will you have practical experience in compilers, operating systems, or assembly language from working experience? Yet all of those skills are extremely valuable to be a good software person. The most important thing about formal education is that it exposes you to things that you may not need right away, but later down the road may be useful. I spent a days researching just to find that the algorithm I needed for one problem was a "weighted connected component", and most of that was just in finding the right term to search for. If I had taken a junior level graph theory class, I would have been exposed to it.

      You mock the engineers who flash their degrees at you when you fix their network. Does their job entail fixing their network connections? If there's a mess on the floor, I could clean it myself but I'm more likely to call the janitors. Don't get me wrong, there are plenty of really compentent people without degrees. There exists a few of them who are wildly successful. The other 90% of people won't be competent or successful, though, and a most of the remaining would be more competent and successful with a formal education.

    4. Re:Educaton is not always that important. by dr_dank · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I hold that this is an unrecognized/unacknowleged form of discrimination and bigotry. Experience and ability should be the primary--if not only--criteria in hiring, not race, sex or orientation thereof--or education.

      Whoa. Race, sex, nationality, and so forth are entirely separate from education since they're what the person is. Unless you're Michael Jackson or a eunuch, you can't change those things and its rightly illegal to discriminate on those lines (AA quotas aside). Education is something you CAN change. It shows an employer that you set your mind to a goal and stuck it out until you got your degree, learning relevant info and getting liberal arts education along the way. 40-50 years ago, you could walk out of high school and land a decent manufacturing job or other such gig with the right hookup. Today, the deck is stacked against you if you follow that route, unless you're heading for a trade school or to the service sector.

      --
      Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
    5. Re:Educaton is not always that important. by jellomizer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm one of the top programmers in the world.

      Like all the other programmers out there.
      We all feel like we are the best programmer in the world because programming is much like Art, very sugestive. While we can tell the difference from a good programmer and a bad one fairly easilly. (If the program works or not, or they get stuck a lot when making a program, like many into to CS students are), I can write programs that may do the same things as an other good programmer, most likely including you. My method my be different and I may choose different tradeoffs, but still I usually can get any possible program to work if given to me and enough time allocated to it. But every programmer is like that. We could debate difference until the cows come home but like art it is sugestive. Is execution speed more important then development time, is Good User interface better then more features... we all program differently and when ever we read someone elses code we go to ourselfs this guy is nuts what is he thinking he could make it better by doing this... And I bet if I read your code, mr. Wolds best programmer I would say the same thing. I have never stood in Aw of someone elses program. Ill commend their work and effort put into it, but I have never saw some code and went gee I could never do that.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  18. Re:What's education got to do with it? by z0idberg · · Score: 2

    The difference being if it was any other level employee they would have been marched out the door when this came to light, instead he resigned with a pat on the back as he walked out the door..

    "Roberts said, 'because Dave is a talented and dedicated individual who has made many contributions to the company. Dave recognized that major distractions for the company could negatively impact its efforts to implement the company's turnaround strategy. Undoubtedly, this was a tough decision.' "

    These CEO types really do live a charmed life.

  19. Re:I Hate RadioShack by Xocet_00 · · Score: 2, Informative
    You're certainly correct about that - whenever I need a bizarre connector, box or even chip at a moment's notice I can get it as long as I'm willing to drive a bit. However I find these days that I'm more likely to decide to take a break, have a beer and visit Digikey.

    If Radioshack goes under, you'll still be able to get all sorts of weird parts at relatively short notice (albeit not immediately).

  20. Motto by Comatose51 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Radio Shack: You got questions, we got blank stares...

    I tried to get some parts for an oscillator once and the guy just looked at me like I was crazy. I thought in the back of my mind, "This is Radio Shack right....??"

    --
    EvilCON - Made Famous by /.
    1. Re:Motto by Mancat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Interesting.. I was in the local RS about two years ago. I was looking to mess around with SparcStation 2 that I was bored with, and decided to replace the CPU clock oscillator in order to overclock it. I went in to RS and asked if they had some 100MHz oscillators. The guy asked what I was doing, and I mentioned it was a Sun box. We got into a discussion about it, he knew which CPU the SS2 had, and he even recommended against doing the operation because of the layer width of the motherboard. This guy knew his stuff; turned out he was a Sun hardware service guy in the late '80s-early '90s.

      Every once in a while you'll run into one of the "old crew" in a RS store, but probably less and less these days. I remember fondly in the early '90s when I was a young kid, and RS was my favorite place to go, when they really did have all the coolest gadgets and kits, and the staff was knowledgable and freindly.

      I'm sad to see it go this way.

      --
      hello dear sirs my name is jamesh i are india (bihar) can u guide me install red had linux 9?
  21. Re:I Hate RadioShack by unitron · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Radio Shack is the Wal-Mart of electronics. They carry enough parts to keep anyone else who would carry a greater selection out of the local market.

    That, combined with the trend in consumer electronics to go from expensive but repairable to cheap but unfixable (can't get parts, can't get service manuals), means that where I live we've gone from two competing "parts houses" (where service technicians used to get tubes and transistors and such) to none.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  22. slickdeas by nxs212 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    That explains why they had that 30% off EVERYTHING on-line sale last week of December.
    (trying to make their numbers look better)
    Dell does the same thing every quarter.

  23. You'd think people would have gotten the message by Wansu · · Score: 3, Interesting



    This isn't the first person to be exposed for lying about academic credentials and it probably won't be the last. Nonetheless, after so many have been keelhauled for doing this, I'm surprised that people still lie in writing about their academinc credentials and surprised that there are still companies not checking for this, particularly for executive candidates. No doubt some of the Radio Shack board have egg on their faces as well, especially in light of the drastic cuts that ananlysts suggest are needed.

    Academic credentials are about the easiest qualification to check for. Just call the school. Either the candidate has the degree they claim to have or they do not. There's no shade of gray. That's why it's so stupid to lie about this. It's easy to check and there's no wiggle room. Why then do so many do it? Why then are there companies that don't check for this?

    --
    Wansu, th' chinese sailor
  24. RadioShack = Dollar store of electronics by TheSkepticalOptimist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you want to turn around profits, then stop selling the house-brand crappy electronics that are made in China that you can buy at a Dollar Store for a buck (but RadioShack sells for $20). People recognize quality when they see it, and RadioShack doesn't represent quality.

    Even the name brands they sell tend to be the low end economy models that Sony, Panasonic, etc will sell at Walmart or grocery stores, of course for a far cheaper price then RadioShack.

    There may have been a time when you can pass off a cheap Chinese boom box for $100, and that is when RadioShack raked in the money, but these days people are a little more discriminating in the quality of electronics they buy, and RadioShack hasn't offered those better quality products. They still insist on selling that cheap Chinese boom boxes for $100.

    RadioShack should simply refocus on selling batteries and remote control cars, its about all they do well. Stop trying to sell cheap home theater and stereo equipment and televisions, drop computers period, and focus on smaller electronic gadgets that you can't find elsewhere. Either that, our start offering high end stuff you can't find anywhere else, open up a niche market that walmart, Best Buy and Target can't touch.

    Just, don't go on as business as usual. It obviously isn't working, and those no-name brands you keep carrying and selling for the same price as name brands are not making you money.

    --
    I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
  25. Nice. :) by WidescreenFreak · · Score: 2, Informative

    What's really sad is that a lot of people won't get that joke at all. Hopefully, you won't get too many "Offtopic" mods. Unfortunately, I don't have any mod points or I'd throw a +1 Funny your way.

    For those not in the know, Realistic and Optimus are Radio Shack brand names.

    --
    The Overrated mod is for reversing inappropriate, positive mods, not for voicing disagreement with a post.
  26. Re:Where do people buy parts? by Tlosk · · Score: 4, Informative

    There's not really any national chains but it's not uncommon to find at least one really nice electronics surplus shop in most larger metropolitan areas. And by nice I mean they have a large range of components. But they rarely advertise and can be in off the beaten path locations, so it can be a challenge to find them. That and they are usually run by someone advancing in years who does it as much because they love it as to make money off it, and when they retire it's unlikely to continue as a going concern, so one by one these great places are winking out across the country. Unfortunate for people like us who love being able to physically browse all sorts quirky and hard to find electronic components, but in a changing world what are you going to do I guess.

    This would make an excellent Ask Slashdot post I would imagine, to get a list going of all these out of the way shops as I'm sure there's a lot of slashdotters with favorite places they know about.

    The closest to a national presence would probably be Fry's which has a pretty decent range of stuff if you live in a state where they operate (mostly west coast from what I understand).

  27. Re:I Hate RadioShack by Starker_Kull · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That USED to be the beauty of the place, a long time ago. Fry's has taken what little electronic hobbist store business there is, and the rest is all by catalog, sadly. I don't think there are enough electronic hobbists in the U.S. today to support a nationwide chain of stores catering to that. Someone or ones in Radio Shack management came to that conclusion back in the 80's after the PC market consolidated (remember the Trash-80?), and the chain has tried to remake itself into a mass market cheap electronic gadget distributor ala Best-Buy and P.C. Richard, replacing employees who knew how to fix and build things with the "You want fries with that?" crowd. It has to date failed rather miserably at this task, which relys on massive stores with room for both inventory and selection of "consumer electronics" and doesn't give a rat's ass about hobbists any more.

    At least, that's my perception of them here in New England and in my frequent visits to Texas...

  28. It all started when... by ShineyMcShine · · Score: 2, Funny

    It all started when they took out the vacuum tube testing machines from the stores...

  29. Once Upon A Time(tm)... by ursabear · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...Radio Shack had parts and adaptors and other things that you just couldn't get anywhere. There were zillions of times I went to Radio Shack to get some bizarre audio adaptor - and not only would they have what I needed, they'd have three different types that would do the job.

    Ever wired a commercial audio job at some remote site in East Belt Buckle [insert state here]? In the middle of the job, there was always some part needed, or something that would not work right - and even East Belt Buckle would have a Radio Shack - problem solved...

    Spin the time machine to the present... the CEO isn't quite what was sold to the company... The product line is thin, cheap, and out of step with the times. The sales clerks demand your life's personal information if you want to buy a $.25 resistor or some wire, or if your wife just went there to buy an odd-size battery. They are not in the consciousness of the public (along the lines of CompUSA, Best Buy, Circuit City, et. al.). Their prices are not anything to write home about. Their hours are generally not as flexible as the Huge Mart stores against which they compete. And to top it all off, the cool little DIY parts are getting so thin that you can't go to RS and dream up a little cool electronic thing any more.

    Earth to Radio Shack: Do more than get rid of one or two brass... Figure out what America is after and then adapt to that. I don't like to nay-say the health of a company, but even I can see that Radio Shack has become the Kodak(TM) Instant Film and the 8-Track superstore that no-one needs it to be.

  30. Re:What's education got to do with it? by Fred_A · · Score: 2, Insightful

    OTOH why they'd care that the company's CEO had or hadn't a degree in theology is completely beyond me.

    What did they expect him to do, exorcise the financial reports ?

    --

    May contain traces of nut.
    Made from the freshest electrons.
  31. Re:Radio Shack and National Security by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2, Funny
    Without this source of parts, the creative genius of american youth will not be able to grow to understand technology the way our national security needs.

    I have to agree. When I was a kid Radio Shack gave me a real head start in electrical engineering principles like series and parallel resistance calculations: By never having the actual values that I needed in stock, I had to learn to mentally rig together an equivalent value with whatever scraps I could actually find on their shelves. And with their markup of $1.79 for a pair of 1/2-cent resistors, there was a real financial incentive to find the most efficient solution. Radio Shack shopping was a valuable part of my technical education.

  32. And cool stuff could be a lucrative niche by ke4roh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They just can't have a store in every shopping mall.

    If they would consolidate their stores and put one or two in each metro area, focusing on the hobbyist by providing the integrated circuits, connectors, switches, project boxes, breadboards, and so forth, they would be in good shape. How much would you pay for a handfull of 10k resistors if you needed 3 for a project? Talk about profit margin! They won't make money on cell phone plans, TV sets, cordless phones, or Tandy computers. They have a reputation for selling junk. But for parts, it's the place to go (except that they quit selling the cool parts...)

    Heck, they used to have some cool project books. They could send people project ideas by e-mail and put them up on a web site. They could milk it for all it's worth...

    Oh, but I forget! We don't care about science (and to some extent, engineering) in this country. It's all about short-term gains, next quarter's profit, and so forth... Grumble, grumble.

    So yes, they could be cool if they wanted. I don't think they really want to earn my business.

    --
    I hate call waitin`~+~~~
    NO CARRIER
  33. Head of sales is a liar by DrSkwid · · Score: 2, Funny

    who'd have thunk it?

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  34. Re:I Hate RadioShack by kniLnamiJ-neB · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You don't know the half of it, amigo...

    I'm not allowed to work at a corporate-managed RadioShack ever again (I quit without notice).

    Radio Shack pretends to care about its customers. It's evident from the way every meeting goes, all the way down to the store manager with his employees. The entire focus is on SELLING BIG-TICKET THINGS. If you're in here for batteries, I should offer you a cellular plan. Why? Because deep down, you want one, and you're just waiting for me to offer it to you. Their strategy for floor salesmen was "give them what they came in for, and then add as much as you can onto it." It doesn't matter if they need cellular service, if they have good enough credit to support it, whatever... sell it to them anyway!

    Now, they're changing their pay scale as part of this revamping process, and making it so even less of the money goes to the people who sell things. Their new commission system is designed to screw the salesman 4 ways from Friday. I'm so glad I got out of there... I hated that job. Ugh.

    Now, I don't even shop there. I'll find some little independent electronics retailer, or I'll find it online. Radio Shack isn't nearly what it used to be. They hire salespeople and try to make them knowledgeable instead of hiring knowledgeable people and making them into salesmen.

    Everyone, do the world a favor... Take your money elsewhere.

    --
    Windows isn't the answer... it's the question. NO is the answer!
  35. Radio Shack = Cellphone store by TheSync · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I stopped going to RadioShack very often when it became a cellphone store.

    You would go into the store, and the one or two people working there would be on the phone busy trying to get someone's cellphone service working. You would wait for 20 minutes to check out. They didn't care if you were buying $10 of stuff, since they were in the process of selling $100 cellphones plus the monthly service.

    The ironic thing is that despite leaving the chip selling business, RadioShack is one of the few places you can drop by and pick up a wire wrap tool and wire wrap wire. But I need to do that once or twice a year.

    R/S has no differentiator now. If you want a cellphone, the carriers have their own stores that are better staffed and more familiar with the products. If you want home electronics, it is hard to beat Best Buy, and for that matter the low-end stuff is at Target as well. The one differentiator of R/S in the past was the electronics parts, which have been gutted.

  36. We've got questions, and apparently, by Danzigism · · Score: 2, Informative
    you've got the answers... simply because any computer related question I ever asked someone from Radioshack, never was answered.. of course this was atleast 10+ and you could still purchase the rare, yet available, Tandy Pentium 60mhz..

    i also really think Radioshack has let themselves go downhill.. for example, selling $60 Monster cables instead having the generic versions for like $5.00.. they have some of the cheap ones, but not all.. and also, what happened to all the cool breadboard shit they used to have?? capacitors, chips, boards, all that cool shit?? wish they would of kept up with that kind of shit.. release newer things.. Its pretty simple really.. They took the geek factor out of RadioShack.. once the average geek can no longer ride his bike down to his nearest radioshack for a computer part, the radioshack starts doing poor business.. stop trying to sell crappy computers and monster cables!! bring the breadboards back too! haha

    --
    *plays the Apogee theme song music*
  37. Chihuahuas and CEOs by typical · · Score: 2, Insightful

    educational background has little relevance to one's capabiltiy of doing many corporate jobs.

    The problem is not that the guy didn't have whatever degree he said he had.

    The problem is that he lied to the company about it.

    A long time ago, there was someone who had blogged about applying for some kind of very sensitive job at the FBI (or maybe it was the NSA) posting about the interview process. The point is that they asked all kinds of seemingly senseless questions, mixed with questions that he considered invasive and not relevant to the job. "Have you ever put a finger inside your anus for sexual pleasure" and things like that. Someone else said that they were familiar with the process and the interviewer didn't really care about the answers -- they just wanted to see whether when the person was under intense pressure, they'd start trying to lie. So a failing response to "have you ever had sex with a dog" would be "Err....heh...well, not as such" with the lie detector going off and a passing one "Hell, yes. I fucked a Chihuahua five years ago in Mexico City and it was *great*!"). If the interviewer's take is that the candidate is lying on any of the questions, they pass on them. I've no idea as to the accuracy of the posts; however, it certainly struck me as an interesting approach.

    If someone starts lying to their employer when they think it's to their benefit to do so, the employer loses the ability to trust them. Better to have a slightly worse employee whose statements can be trusted than one who might do a good job but produces useless status information when backed into a corner. Because there *will* be times when people are scared to tell the truth "Is this project done?" "Are you going to make deadline?" etc but it really, really matters that the people above them get accurate information from them.

    His lack of success as CEO can just as easily be explained by a) inheriting a mess, b) lack of board support, and c) not the right man for the job.

    Or just that CEOs are used as scapegoats. They know about this when getting hired, and this is why the golden parachutes.

    As long as the company does well, the CEO can interview with Fortune and so forth to build his reputation. However, if it goes downhill, the company *will* blame things on this one guy, fire him, hire another CEO, incur steep "one-time restructuring costs" to "implement the new guy's ideas", and with the costs they've shifted to that quarter, be able to report profitability immediately after getting the new CEO.

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
  38. Re:Hear Hear! by Random_Goblin · · Score: 2

    ... Yes,yes, for the pedantics out there that ...

    I think you'll find that's "for the pedants out there..."

  39. Radio Shack should pounce on microcontrollers by xtal · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There's a H U G E market for cheap 8 bit microcontrollers now that you can get a little computer for the price of a latte', and you can do a lot of near things with them very easily. There's loads of related things like robotics that they missed out on too - how many people have any idea where to get a motion controller, or a servo motor?

    Makes you think.

    Then there's the whole embedded linux thing!

    Radio Shack turned their back on hobbiests; I probably owe my EE degree to Forrest Mimms and his great books that radio shack distributed in the 80's. Now they sell cheap crap from China and Cell Phones.

    --
    ..don't panic