Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/12/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Jem Kime jotted down the following: > the second auction ended with me watching the screen and seeing his last > bid appear just one second before the end. Perfectly legitimate I'm sure, > but leaving no time (as he'd have rightly anticipated) for me to return a > better bid! eBay automatically bids for you, up to the maximum amount you are willing to bid for an item. It's really simple: you find item A for sale on eBay, you figure out that you're not willing to pay more than $137.50 for item A in that condition, and you enter $137.50 as your maximum bid, even though the current bid may only be $52.00. Then, as time goes by, if no-one else bids more than you, you get it for either your maximum bid (if someone bids the same amount and you were first), or for the second-highest bid plus the bid increment (i.e., less than your maximum bid amount). In either case, you get it for the lowest possible price, up to the maximum you are willing to pay. If someone does outbid you, well, you've already decided that you didn't want to pay more than $137.50 for it in the first case, so what's the problem? Why should it make a difference if you're outbid by $1 or $1,000, one second after you bid or one second before the auction closes? You've already stated that $137.50 is the *maximum* you are willing to pay for it. If you, in reality, are willing to pay just a little more, than bid just a little more when you enter your maximum bid. If you want the damn thing at any price, simply enter $2,000 as your maximum bid and you'll be sure to get it. Come on, guys, it really isn't *that* difficult. M. - -- Martin Howard | Super Cali goes ballistic, Celtics are Visiting Scholar, CSEL, OSU | atrocious. email: howard.390@osu.edu | -- British sports headline. www: http://mvhoward.i.am/ +-------------------------------------------