Setec Astronomy
Well-known member
As I was sitting here this morning drinking my coffee and trying to wake up and browsing the forums, I got a little nostalgic. I joined Autopia in 2004 (the join date in my profile is from Autopia Forums). Back then there weren`t as many products, and not as many good ones.
I was thinking about how many good product choices there are today, but I was also thinking about how we today have these "super stores" with vast line cards, while back in the day (which to be fair, was a little more in the infancy of online shopping) there were a bunch of guys who had side businesses out of their basements, etc.
Remember Patrick and Scott and Danase and Rick and Rob, and probably some others I am forgetting...that guy Steve (was that his name?) that sold towels?
Rick (ADS) and Rob (now TowelPros) are still around, but the others are gone. Of course Corey was a late-comer to the "garage" business and successfully grew it up into a larger, full-time business.
Most of the "garage" businesses had a niche product that became not so niche as the internet expanded and it was easier to find things, and as some of the bigger stores kept taking on lines popularized by the little guys. I still remember when Patrick started selling Surf City and shortly thereafter WalMart or PepBoys started selling it...someone posted a link and Patrick said "well, there goes that product line..." or something like that. Patrick always seemed to ferret out these products that nobody knew about and once he made them popular AG would pick up the line.
Anybody know what happened to Patrick? I know he always wanted to move from CA to CO. I know Scott (I can`t even remember the name of his store...wait, it was SMP) moved to TX because his wife got transferred there, and then he gave up the store. I thought we saw Danase posting here some years ago.
Anyway...it was a simpler time back then...although a lot simpler today to get products that work well...lot more one-stop shopping and less trial-and-error.
PS Since I was asking about Patrick...what ever happened to SpoiledMan? I know they lived close to each other...another great guy. Sorry if I`m rambling, having a sleepy morning.
I was thinking about how many good product choices there are today, but I was also thinking about how we today have these "super stores" with vast line cards, while back in the day (which to be fair, was a little more in the infancy of online shopping) there were a bunch of guys who had side businesses out of their basements, etc.
Remember Patrick and Scott and Danase and Rick and Rob, and probably some others I am forgetting...that guy Steve (was that his name?) that sold towels?
Rick (ADS) and Rob (now TowelPros) are still around, but the others are gone. Of course Corey was a late-comer to the "garage" business and successfully grew it up into a larger, full-time business.
Most of the "garage" businesses had a niche product that became not so niche as the internet expanded and it was easier to find things, and as some of the bigger stores kept taking on lines popularized by the little guys. I still remember when Patrick started selling Surf City and shortly thereafter WalMart or PepBoys started selling it...someone posted a link and Patrick said "well, there goes that product line..." or something like that. Patrick always seemed to ferret out these products that nobody knew about and once he made them popular AG would pick up the line.
Anybody know what happened to Patrick? I know he always wanted to move from CA to CO. I know Scott (I can`t even remember the name of his store...wait, it was SMP) moved to TX because his wife got transferred there, and then he gave up the store. I thought we saw Danase posting here some years ago.
Anyway...it was a simpler time back then...although a lot simpler today to get products that work well...lot more one-stop shopping and less trial-and-error.
PS Since I was asking about Patrick...what ever happened to SpoiledMan? I know they lived close to each other...another great guy. Sorry if I`m rambling, having a sleepy morning.