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RadioShack is an American electronics retailer that started in 1921 as an amateur radio mail-order business. It filed for bankruptcy in 2015 and was acquired by several companies since then, and currently operates as an e-commerce website and a franchised store network.
The Source is a Canadian consumer electronics and cell phone retail chain that was formerly owned by Circuit City and RadioShack. It is now owned by BCE Inc., which will wind down its operations as an independent chain and rebrand some locations as Best Buy Express by 2024.
Unicomer Group Headquarters in San Salvador, El Salvador. The Unicomer Group was founded in 2000. [2]In 2014, Unicomer Group obtained international credit ratings from Fitch Ratings and from Standard and Poors for its consolidated holding company, which at that time was named Regal Forest Holding Co. Ltd.
2008: Begins to operate, with the opening of the branch channel Tezontle Avenue in Mexico City, The Home Store format, dedicated to selling decorative items. Grupo Gigante sold to its partner, the Tandy Corporation U.S., its 50% of RadioShack stores in Mexico, specialized in selling electronics products.
Incredible Universe was a chain of American consumer electronics stores from 1992 to 1997, owned by Tandy Corporation and Trans World Entertainment. It was a joint venture to compete with Circuit City, Best Buy, and CompUSA, but closed or sold all 17 of its locations due to lack of profitability.
The brand began in 1954 after Radio Shack management were approached by stereo newcomer Harman Kardon, who offered to help create a line of private label audio equipment for the company. The original brand name, Realist, was pitched by the manufacturer and approved by Radio Shack. The first Realist-branded products - an FM receiver, an AM ...
Learn about the history and features of various computer models released by Tandy Corporation under TRS-80 and Tandy brands. Compare the differences and similarities among Model I, Model III, Model 4, Model 100, Color Computer, and more.
Radio in Mexico is a mass medium with 98 percent national penetration and a wider diversity of owners and programming than on television. In a model similar to that of radio in the United States, Mexican radio in its history has been largely commercial, but with a strong state presence and a rising number of noncommercial stations in the 2000s and early 2010s.