Bonjour et Bienvenue

camelcamelcamel est un outil simple et gratuit pour surveiller des produits sur Amazon. Vous choisissez le produit et le prix désiré, et vous recevez un email quand il est atteint. Ce site est encore en développement mais fonctionne relativement bien.

Features

  • Get email and/or RSS alerts when a product's price on Amazon.com drops
  • View product pricing history to make more informed purchasing decisions
  • Built-in Amazon product search
  • Import Amazon Wishlists and automatically tracked unpurchased products
  • Manage camels (tracked products) with a super sweet interface
  • Install the Greasemonkey script for quick and easy camel/Amazon integration
  • Full Amazon locale support (Amazons Canada, France, Germany, Japan, United Kingdom, and United States)
  • Registration is completely optional

Click here for the details on all of camelcamelcamel's features!

Screenshots

Sophisticated graphs - with numbers and everything. A menagerie of delightful icons guide you to your destiny.

Development Status

I am hard at work developing this site, so please keep that in mind when using it. Things may break; try not to panic, they won't remain broken long. Head over to the camelcamelcamel.com forums with any bug reports or suggestions!

July 11, 2008 Blue lines on price charts show up properly. Camel create/edit forms now show no price rather than 0.01 when the current price is N/A. The first price tab with data is shown by default instead of the Amazon Price.
July 9, 2008 I fixed a bug involving example prices being set to -0.01. A features page was added, containing fairly detailed descriptions of the main features of the site. It's worth checking out, you might find out something very interesting. A caching bug was fixed regarding camel pages and rss feeds.
July 4, 2008 Caching seems to be working on the product/camel pages and the search results pages, so try it out and let me know if anything is broken! I also updated the search results page to include links to the price history RSS feeds, as seen here.
There's more! Read on...