Quantcast

All-Star Tech Stores

Who's got the best prices, selection, sales help, and return policies among online and brick-and-mortar stores? We surveyed more than 5000 readers to find the best places to buy tech gear.

Christopher Null

  • 0 Yes
  • 0 No

Choosing the right product is only part of the headache when you're hunting for new tech gadgets or computer parts. Shoppers these days also face an almost overwhelming number of options in how and where to make a purchase: Buy the product offline and get it today, or buy it online and wait a few days? Go offline and pay sales tax, or go online and pay for shipping? Will a big store like Wal-Mart treat you worse than the little computer shop down the way? Is Amazon.com more trustworthy than a tiny Web outfit with unbelievable prices?

"Now you have more [buying] choices....But you're making a more informed choice." --Mike Radway, financial services consultant, Portland, Oregon

Photograph: Robbie McClaran
As experienced tech shopper Mike Radway, a financial services consultant located in Portland, Oregon, puts it, "When your only choices were Coke and Pepsi, it was easy. Now you have more choices, which can make things more difficult. You can spend an endless amount of time obsessing over which product to get and whether you're getting the perfect price. But you're making a more informed choice."

To get a picture of how buyers are making those choices and of which Web-based and real-world stores best meet their needs, we surveyed thousands of PC World readers and PCWorld.com visitors. We then conducted interviews with some of the surveyed shoppers, performed our own in-person tests at brick-and-mortar stores, and took multiple spins around the most popular online retailers.

In this article:

  • Recommend this story?
  • 0 Yes
    0 No

"All-Star Tech Stores" Comments

With HP wireless printers, you could have printed this from any room in the house. Live wirelessly. Print wirelessly.

Related Consumer Advice Articles

  • How to Stream Media around Your Home Here's the play-by-play on setting up a free media-streaming network with either Windows Media Player or Apple iTunes.
  • Use Gmail to Fight Spam Gmail already offers champion spam-filtering for Gmail accounts. Here's how to leverage it with non-Gmail accounts.
  • Overclock Your Body With Geek Cuisine Can caffeinated chips and drinks stuffed with more herbs than you'd find in an Asian pharmacy really make you more productive? We slurped and chewed our way through lots of so-called energy food to find out.
  • Give Web Users What They Really Want Most people go online with a goal in mind. Learn to capitalize on their habits.
  • LinkedIn: The Network Effect Revisited You've signed up for LinkedIn, because everyone says it's the primary business social network. But to whom should you connect? According to a few power users, there are a few common approaches, most of which are different than what you'd do on Facebook.
  • CDW Security Center Is your data protected? Visit the CDW Security Center Learn where you may be vulnerable and how to address those risks.
  • Asus Laptop Showcase Ultra-fashionable thin and light notebooks with SmartLogon Face Recognition. Find out more...
  • HP Ink Center Bring improved color and brilliance to your printed material. Visit the Resource Center for more info...

PC World's Marketplace

PC World's Free Whitepapers

Name City
Address 1 State Zip
Address 2 E-mail (optional)