Going out with mates and getting hammered on a weekend, then a couple days later getting several emails from ebay informing me I've won some stuff that I really didn't know I'd bid on.
So far I've purchased a hula hoop, a giant talking ET doll, several pairs of marvin the martian socks, a replica hanzo sword from Kill Bill and a tupperware set.
Luckily I have cheap (and tacky) tastes it seems, so the damage has so far been relatively contained.
At online boutique shopbop.com, traffic doesn't spike after happy hour. In fact, the online research company ComScore says purchases made by women during the evening total only about 22.6 per cent of all online retail sales. But internet sellers know all about consumers who click on a Marc Jacobs dress and slur, "Hey there, frock. I want to take you home tonight."
In other words: after discovering that there is no evidence of this being a signficant phenomenon we decided we were going to write this article anyway and pad it with quotes from some friends of ours who would admit to buying stuff online while plastered.
I used to do this all the time, but I solved it by switching my search bar to cuil. Now when I get hammered and search for electronics or movies to impulse buy, pictures of naked people pop up instead and I get distracted.
I once woke up after some late night computer operating (under the 'influence') and thought my webserver had been hacked. It turns out I half-installed several scripts the night before and gave up before completing leaving a mess of non-working scripts on my webserver. I spent 60 minutes changing all my passwords before I realized what I'd done (still don't remember why or what I was trying to do that night)
At least I didn't waste any money on crap from Ebay.
>I doubt this is a widespread problem.
I think you're the wrong gender. Apparently, for females it is. All the interviewed subjects were females, after all.
I sometimes wonder how prevalent selection bias is in articles like this and the demographics they feature. If you're a magazine writer in NYC writing an article like this, how do you find people who buy under the influence? Stop people on the street? Go to a crowded bar and chat people up? It seems likely that a decent percentage of your interviews are with friends and friends of friends. It also seems likely that many of those people would be in similar careers.
I'm guilty of this. Luckily the domains have worked out (either having a use or a friend who wants them).
I was thinking a good iPhone app would be a domain searching/purchasing - specifically because I've had friends call me to purchase names for them when they are out drinking.
Going out with mates and getting hammered on a weekend, then a couple days later getting several emails from ebay informing me I've won some stuff that I really didn't know I'd bid on.
So far I've purchased a hula hoop, a giant talking ET doll, several pairs of marvin the martian socks, a replica hanzo sword from Kill Bill and a tupperware set.
Luckily I have cheap (and tacky) tastes it seems, so the damage has so far been relatively contained.