I thought advanced micro devices was a product. I didn't know it was a company.
Personally, I think it may be a good idea to focus on niches you are familiar with. Also think twice if you're not prepared to keep the domain and develop it. After all, it's more likely to never sell.
I also thought .info was a good extension for products, services, & general information. I know they're not worth as much as .coms, but with those I thought they would have a pretty good value.
.info is not an extension that sells well. If you are looking to develop why not give it a shot, but you want to resell domains. So you need the set the bar higher. That means .info is not an option unless the keyword is stellar.
Also, how credible are these free online appraisals?
Automated appraisals are pure fantasy.
Besides, an appraisal is just theory. It's always a best-case extrapolation of much you could ask from a potential buyer. But is there even a buyer ? Now that's the question.
But automated appraisals almost always deliver impressive figures even for domains that don't make sense, that's the problem. So when you are a newcomer it's easy to think there's plenty of gold waiting to be mined.
The reality is that the pool of buyers is tiny while the supply of domains is enormous.
Lastly, I have 3 more domains I would like input on. I have iloveyouman.net & .org. The phrase generates almost 50,000 global searches, and I believe 14,000 local searches per month. I also have ibzia.com which can possibly be considered a typo for Ibiza which generates over a half million searches per month. It's also an 8 year old domain. It's a pronounceable 5 letter .com that I believe can be brandable.
I don't think ibzia can be considered brandable. Just imagine the confusion in print. Everybody knows about Ibiza, so you can bet the majority would think it's a mistake and type in Ibiza instead. Massive traffic leak, Overstock fashion. Doesn't pass the radio test either. The value of a typo is derived from the type-in traffic it gets, if any. No traffic, no value. Easy.
As for the others, the question remains. Why would someone want to buy these domains from you. People will pay for outstanding domains, but not if they can find a domain of similar quality still available.
I know I repeat myself often, but looking at the sales reports every week is a bare minimum in order to understand what types of names do sell. This eliminates part of the guessing game.
Good luck.