Frugality: Difference between revisions
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you can set a deal alert on [https://slickdeals.net slickdeals.net] to be alerted to sales on products and product categories you're interested in | you can set a deal alert on [https://slickdeals.net slickdeals.net] to be alerted to sales on products and product categories you're interested in | ||
Unless in edge-cases like needing audio description tracks, pirate TV shows and movies. Even with streaming platforms, pirated content has the convenience of being more shareable over Discord calls etc. Save your media money for things that actually have diminished content when pirated, e.g. online video games. | |||
Most consumer tech can be bought refurbished or used in A-/B+ grade on eBay. | |||
About eBay, if a device is easy to repair, look for two instances of it for parts with different issues. You can piece them back together, and resell the extra parts. | |||
It's better to get an older flagship thing, than a newer mid-range thing. This goes for monitors, TVs, phones, GPUs and more. | |||
https://reddit.com/r/buildapcsales and its canadian counterpart https://reddit.com/r/bapcsalescanada are amazing community-maintained resources for extraordinary tech deals. | |||
This list: https://free-for.dev/#/ | |||
Buying a Chromebox and spending 10 minutes to hack it is about 150 dollars cheaper than buying an equivalent Windows mini PC. | |||
Use Facebook Marketplace! Especially for appliances. Fridges, ovens, freezers and more seem to lose all their value. A 3 year old fridge bought for 800 gets sold for 120 on Facebook every Monday. | |||
Consider what to buy used and what to buy new. As well as when to buy high-end versus when it doesn't matter. A good indicator for this is moving parts. This isn't always true, but there are specific components like motors, belts, rails, etc, that can seize up, disintegrate, rust over time. In those cases buying new and/or high-end will provide you with a longer lasting appliance, since they're built with better parts. Its important to do your research with multiple sources on which brands are high quality for a given product vertical. | |||
Floor models are always a winner. Not every store will sell them to you, and some have an entire section dedicated to them. But always check. Even IKEA has a liquidation section just before the checkout area. I'd recommend you check these before checking the rest of the store you're in. Odds are you'll find a better deal there which you might've missed otherwise. | |||
Learn to fix your own car. Its cheaper to send your phone for a display repair to the cell shop down the street since they have the 590 different tools for it. But most of your car's maintenance involves the new materials, your hands, and household tools you already have. | |||
If you have a disability, read online if there are benefits cards you can sign up for. Many regions have these, and you can get free entry to concerts, discounts, and more. |
Revision as of 03:54, 15 July 2025
you can paste an Amazon link into camelcamelcamel.com to check how good the current price is compared to the historical prices
you can set a deal alert on slickdeals.net to be alerted to sales on products and product categories you're interested in
Unless in edge-cases like needing audio description tracks, pirate TV shows and movies. Even with streaming platforms, pirated content has the convenience of being more shareable over Discord calls etc. Save your media money for things that actually have diminished content when pirated, e.g. online video games.
Most consumer tech can be bought refurbished or used in A-/B+ grade on eBay.
About eBay, if a device is easy to repair, look for two instances of it for parts with different issues. You can piece them back together, and resell the extra parts.
It's better to get an older flagship thing, than a newer mid-range thing. This goes for monitors, TVs, phones, GPUs and more.
https://reddit.com/r/buildapcsales and its canadian counterpart https://reddit.com/r/bapcsalescanada are amazing community-maintained resources for extraordinary tech deals.
This list: https://free-for.dev/#/
Buying a Chromebox and spending 10 minutes to hack it is about 150 dollars cheaper than buying an equivalent Windows mini PC.
Use Facebook Marketplace! Especially for appliances. Fridges, ovens, freezers and more seem to lose all their value. A 3 year old fridge bought for 800 gets sold for 120 on Facebook every Monday.
Consider what to buy used and what to buy new. As well as when to buy high-end versus when it doesn't matter. A good indicator for this is moving parts. This isn't always true, but there are specific components like motors, belts, rails, etc, that can seize up, disintegrate, rust over time. In those cases buying new and/or high-end will provide you with a longer lasting appliance, since they're built with better parts. Its important to do your research with multiple sources on which brands are high quality for a given product vertical.
Floor models are always a winner. Not every store will sell them to you, and some have an entire section dedicated to them. But always check. Even IKEA has a liquidation section just before the checkout area. I'd recommend you check these before checking the rest of the store you're in. Odds are you'll find a better deal there which you might've missed otherwise.
Learn to fix your own car. Its cheaper to send your phone for a display repair to the cell shop down the street since they have the 590 different tools for it. But most of your car's maintenance involves the new materials, your hands, and household tools you already have.
If you have a disability, read online if there are benefits cards you can sign up for. Many regions have these, and you can get free entry to concerts, discounts, and more.