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There's usually little point in starting a fixed price auction for $100 when someone else is selling the item for $90. Words. Non-paying bidder: a bidder who wins an auction but does not then go on to buy the item.Do your item description pages have everything that buyers need to know?If you're planning to offer international delivery, then it's good to make a list of the charges to different counties and display it on each auction. Do you follow up?It is worth sending out an email a few days after you post an item, saying "Is everything alright with your purchase?I hope you received it and it was as you expected. If someone else is selling the same thing as you, then always try to provide more information about it than they do. Oh, and always use first class post - don't be cheap. Learning the ebay "slang". If you have any special terms and conditions (for example, if you will give a refund on any item as long as it hasn't been opened), then you should make sure these are displayed too. If you get serious about ebay but don't have a camera, then you will probably want to invest in one at some point. Firstly, you need to know what it is you're going to sell: what's your specialisation?You'll do far better on ebay if you become a great source for certain kind of products, as people who are interested in those products will come back to you again and again. Are you emailing your sellers? I use Selling Manager Pro that automates all of the stuff below. Being a really good ebay seller, more than anything else, is about providing genuinely good and honest customer service. There's a market for just about everything on ebay, even things that would not sell
Wikipedia on resume tips
- The one on the right is George. I don't know the other seagulls. ;) - Mgm| (talk) 11:40, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
Paddy wagon
Australia down under
Why do they call Australia, "down under".
If you live in the northern hemisphere and look at australia on an ordinary globe, isn't it pretty obvious? alteripse 13:02, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
Question about Paris
I'm looking for more information about a particular set of buildings in Paris, located at 14 rue Perree, in Arrondissement III. As I recall, they bear the standard of the Ministre du Budget, and still seem to be government-run. When I asked an employee who was outside of the building (in my horrible French) about what the purpose of the buliding was, they said they couldn't tell me. Can anyone help me out? You can find pictures of the building online here. Thank you very much. --Brasswatchman 06:24, August 17, 2005 (UTC)
what is the most popular resterant in Austrilia?
what is the most popular resterant in Austrilia?
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I think you mean restaurent. But I'm not from Australia so I wouldn't know what the answer is. - 131.211.210.13 07:26, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
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And I think you mean restaurant. :) Dismas 07:57, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
- The most popular restaurant, as in the restaurant company that serves the highest number of customers? Well, that would probably be McDonald's. So far as the most popular individual restaurant? Well, I could name some of the bigger ones in Hobart, but chances are it would be pointless as the most popular restaurant is more likely to be in a larger city. -- Chuq 08:18, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
- There's also Burger King, although it's known over there as Hungry Jack's due to complicated circumstances. :) Garrett Talk 08:34, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
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And I think you mean restaurant. :) Dismas 07:57, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
Tutankhamun's dagger—iron or steel?
I vividly recall watching the A&E documentary The Face of Tutankhamun and reading its accompanying book (ISBN 0571168450).
In one episode the guy interviewed said that the tiny dagger found near King Tut's heart was made of steel, and talked about how exciting this find was for them.
BUT our Iron Age article say it is iron. Which is correct? I'm confused...
I wouldn't like to think "we" would be wrong about such a basic detail, but I thought that the whole point of the song-and-dance about its descovery was because it was steel of an unprecedented age? —Garrett Talk 06:58, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
This is getting away from the question: was it iron or was it steel???????? Simple. The issue here is not when steel was or wasn't invented, but which Tut's dagger made of? Garrett Talk 11:35, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
Severn Railway Bridge
In the Severn Railway Bridge there is a link to some archive footage of the demolition of the bridge. Watching the footage, one of the final pieces of commentary says that 15 of the spans of the bridge were not sold for scrap metal, but were sold intact to be re-used as bridge spans elsewhere in the world. Does anyone know where these re-used spans are to be found ? Thanks--JRL 06:35, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
What one Word Concept would describe the phrase what comes aroud goes around? or like same life Karmic revenge?
Martyharhar---Martyharhar 08:45, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
Balance? Karma? --Brasswatchman 09:22, August 17, 2005 (UTC)
Comeuppance? David Sneek 10:50, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
Maybe reciprocity. I don't know if there's a perfect one-word solution, though. "Just desserts" would cover it ... Proto 11:34, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
Poetic justice (although that's two words) ? Gandalf61 13:16, August 17, 2005 (UTC) Inevitability
Inconvenience. --bodnotbod 22:48, August 19, 2005 (UTC)
Hell. --Matt Yeager 22:37, August 20, 2005 (UTC)
Routing PC Sound to Speakers or Headphones by Application
Is there any freeware that will allow me to send my VoIP (Skype) incoming calls to my headphones, but at the same time have my TV display ( from my PC's TV card ) sound sent to the PC speakers ? This software would enable a user to watch TV on their PC, but then take their VoIP phone calls on their headphones, without fiddling with the sound settings. I hope this is an appropriate place for this type of question (pushing the limits perhaps)--jrleighton 10:47, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
Thinking aloud
I've seen some people often thinking aloud i.e. uttering every word that the person is currently thinking even when noone around is noticed by the person. Is this a disorder? Are there any psychological reasons such as craving for attention etc., for this? -- Sundar \talk \contribs 11:55, August 17, 2005 (UTC)
Midnight Oil
What are characteristics of the songs that the Australian rock band - "Midnight Oil" wrote?
What does the lyrics in their songs "Beds are Burning" and "Power and the passion" mean?
If there are any more interesting information on this band - Midnight Oil - please include it too.
Thanks.
If you can tolerate the hideous navigation of The All Music Guide do a search on the band and, to the left, you'll see "mood words" that users have assigned to them:
- Cerebral
- Rousing
- Earnest
- Urgent
- Passionate
- Literate
- Visceral
- Aggressive
There's some additional critique there and their style too. --bodnotbod 22:58, August 19, 2005 (UTC)
"I could care less"
What are people's thoughts on the above expression (cf. "I could n't care less"). My girlfriend shoots me a vicious glare every time I use it, but I've even now spotted it in a New York Times headline (where it was being used un-self-consciously). The only article I can find that mentions it is American and British English differences, where it mentions that the original usage may have been sarcastic(?)
So, is it an acceptable idiom, or is it a sign that language is going down the tubes, since it actually means the exact opposite of what the person using it intends to say?
It's an example of a idiom that doesn't correspond to the literal meaning of the words. This is commonplace. Other examples are "head over heels", "shouldn't wonder if", "more than you can help", "near miss", "literally" (i.e., metaphorically), "back and forth", "ass backwards" etc etc. You might regard the phenomenon as an unfortunate debasement or as an amusing feature. Gdr 14:23:21, 2005-08-17 (UTC)
(1) No-one can say if it should be either form. It all depends on the context. In the UK "could care less" sounds odd and wouldn't be acceptable in any formal context. However, in the US it seems to be much more acceptable; Google finds occurrences in ordinary prose in the New York Times whereas in the Guardian it only finds direct quotes from Americans. I wouldn't use "could care less" myself, but I don't object to "head over heels". (2) There seems to be little or no evidence that "could care less" is sarcastic or ironic in origin. (On the other hand, there's not much evidence the other way either!) (3) The idea that language change is the result of "debasement" and "mistakes" makes it harder to understand what's really going on? Was the great vowel shift a "mistake"? Is modern English debased? What does that even mean? Read the article that Shimgray linked to, which describes an ordinary phenomenon of language change by which the phrase could have arisen. Gdr 15:33:16, 2005-08-17 (UTC)
Well, in England it is always 'I could n't care less', I have always wondered whether I misheard Americans who I thought I heard say 'I could care less'. Trollderella 16:13, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
People often say "cheap at half the price" - I don't know wheter this is meant to be sarcastic or not. This is perhaps an example of the same phenomenon. 19:55, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
Incorrect statement?
Hi! I copied this statement from your Air Force info section:
Schriever AFB is the only U.S Air Force base without a runway, and the only base named after a person who was still alive at the time.
Actually, Los Angeles Air Force Base also does not have a runway. I believe that LAAFB is the only base names after a city. (That is what I am told, I'm no authority.)
I didn't feel I had the authority to edit the info. Perhaps it is something you would like to review first. Thanks! Great information! Elizabeth
<e-mail address removed>
Milky Way Structure?
Who first identified the spiral (or spiral barred) shape of the Milky Way galaxy? How did they do it?--Fangz 19:40, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
- That's a real good question. The best I can find is that the idea that the galaxy is spiral had been floated around since the middle of the 19th century; I think Harlow Shapely and Edwin Hubble's researches seem to have proven it. --jpgordon∇∆∇∆ 22:40, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
Hera, Temple of:-
Hi guys,
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