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Friday Fun Thread for October 4, 2024

Be advised: this thread is not for serious in-depth discussion of weighty topics (we have a link for that), this thread is not for anything Culture War related. This thread is for Fun. You got jokes? Share 'em. You got silly questions? Ask 'em.

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Amazon has a reputation of having you do your own research while letting practically anyone peddle their crap on its platform. McMaster-Carr, on the other hand, is well-known and respected for having a massive curated catalog of fasteners and other hardware. If you need an M8 bolt, it will have just one offering for each length, will charge a premium price, but will guarantee it's not some chinesium crap you won't strip as soon as you tighten it.

Who are the McMasters of other goods? Toys, clothing, dimensional lumber, USB cords, dietary supplements?

Grainger and Fasternal have some overlap with McMaster-Carr, though there are some areas that their stock focuses are different that can be relevant.

Some mechanics would argue Snap-on as a tool-specific version, though I'm... not really skilled enough with any Snap-on tools I've used to recognize the differences well.

DigiKey and Mouser (and to a lesser extent Jameco and Arrow) would be the centralized spots for electronics components, where if you needed one chip even if it's been out of production for five years and absolutely positively can't accept a clone or a fake, they'll work for you, and it's still a major marketing argument. That said, while they still have pretty good catalogues and stocks, the combination of 'market' sellers and occasional parts contamination mean you have to do more filtering now than pre-COVID. For small orders, they can actually make sense to work with, since calling up Molex or STM directly and trying to order five can end up pretty similar in cost, and other shops just won't talk with you for less than 1k parts, but as you start trying to go to mass production getting a real connection to the underlying business for major parts becomes more important.

For network/IT, fs.com will cover most stuff, and make your wallet wince at the same time. Their network switches aren't awfully overpriced for next-day delivery where your office might struggle with the local Best Buy crap, but fiber equipment is not cheap and if you need it tomorrow it'll be really not cheap. The cameras are actually good for the price priced that I'm a little skeptical of their claimed NDAA compliance, though.

For user electronics cables, monoprice is the best I'm aware of. They've had a few supply chain fuckups, but especially as power-over-usb goes to higher and higher wattages, they're gonna be increasingly important.

For odd electronics adapters, big choice is StarTech. They're not the only people with USB-serial adapters (second place: TrendNet TU-S9s) I'll trust in safety-of-life situations, where a lot of amazon-grade or even Microcenter-grade ones will work kinda until they need to be reset, but StarTech's like this for everything they make, and they make weird stuff. That said, you do have to be careful, because they will retire products with few users, and then you're really up shit creek without a paddle -- I know the underlying (I think Silex?) driver issue that caused this to die off, but I know of three separate businesses that had to scramble because of it.

For user electronics cables, monoprice is the best I'm aware of.

I love their stuff, and I own a lot of it, but it's not exactly highest quality.

I've got bluetooth headphones where the ear padding is disintegrating completely. I love their retro over-the-ear headphones, but they're out of stock and I've pulled the cord on two pairs such that one cuts in and out and the other simply doesn't work on one ear.

Still, I will continue to buy from them, and appreciate the mention.