Cables and extended warranties are both significant profit centers for brick-and-mortar electronics and computer retailers. This is why cable prices at brick-and-mortar retailers tend to be ridiculous. The way it works is . . .
The retailers sell a DVD player for a razor thin margin at $59 - you are all excited about your new bargain! The problem is that the only cables in the store sell at a huge markup at $39.
The cable is where they get the profit.
If they can get you to buy an extended warranty - which the salesmen are trained to push on their customers - that is more profit in their pockets.
This is all just routine retail cost shifting.
Think of it as a magician's sleight-of-hand.
Nothin' up my sleeve . . .
You can outsmart this cost shifting by:
(1) Not buying the extended warranty (except for laptops, where you will be wise to purchase it).
(2) Checking out the cable(s) you need ahead of time (or afterwards) and buy it(them) online for less than a tenth the price you would pay at the brick-and-mortar retailer. This does take a little planning and patience, however.
I have thus far had 100% good luck on inexpensive cables from:
http://www.cablewholesale.comI received a shipment about a month ago - ten cables various, 1-15 feet long, several premium with gold-plated tips - for about $37.50 with shipping.
Lets see - USB 2.0 cable, 6', $1.20.
Cat-6 ethernet cable 3', $3.00.
S--Video + 2RCA phono (gold-plated) for a DVD player, 12 feet, $7.88.
Total S&H for the ten cable order was $7.60.
The order did take a week or so to get here, however.
If you are under no time pressure,
www.cablewholesale.com can be a very good source.
When buying inexpensive generic cables I generally buy one or two steps up if possible.
I.e., even when I just need a USB 1.1 cable, I go ahead and buy a cheap USB 2.0 cable. When I need an ethernet cat5 or cat5e cable, I go ahead and buy a cheap generic cat6 cable.
When I need an audio or video cable, I go ahead and buy the one-step-up generic premium gold-plated cable.
I also buy the shortest cable that will do the job - less chance of problems that way.
The cable web sites usually actually have a better choice of lengths than do the brick-and-mortar retailers.
http://www.cablewholesale.com has much better prices than you get from
http://www.newegg.com when you consider what newegg overcharges for shipping.
But
http://www.cablewholesale.com has slower delivery than
http://www.newegg.com - for sure.
Happy cabling -
Epaminondas