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    Quote Originally Posted by OLD_SCHOOL View Post
    Both bids would not be entered at the exact same time, split second etc. One would get in first and beat you. That's why it's called a sniping program.
    I'm not sure I understand what you're saying. I'm pretty sure that IF your bid gets entered at all then the eBay software WILL run it up to the max if needed. The auction-end time is simply a cutoff for bids to be entered. Once your bid has been entered it will be incremented as necessary until it reaches your max bid. That's my understanding. (even if it did work as you might be thinking, seconds is an eternity for the eBay server).

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    Senior Member AusTexShaver's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Quick View Post
    I'm not sure I understand what you're saying. I'm pretty sure that IF your bid gets entered at all then the eBay software WILL run it up to the max if needed. The auction-end time is simply a cutoff for bids to be entered. Once your bid has been entered it will be incremented as necessary until it reaches your max bid. That's my understanding. (even if it did work as you might be thinking, seconds is an eternity for the eBay server).
    That's my understanding of the process too.

    Which is why I'm asking on the Gixen forum how the bids are queued since the first max bid wins if two people were sniping with the same max bid whoever's bid was recorded first would win...in which case it might be worth subscribing to their "mirror" service so you can adjust your bid time.

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    Agreed. The time it gets entered on eBay is the time that is used to break ties. One of the questions was if 20 people were the only ones bidding, all were using Gixen, and all entered the same max bid. Then it would be determined by the order that Gixen submitted the bids to eBay. I was speculating that Gixen would use the same method. First one entered would be the first one submitted. They do say that if you modify your bid on Gixen before it has been submitted the original bid will be canceled (on Gixen) and a new bid entered (on Gixen). I would expect this to move you to the back of the (Gixen) queue if there was one.

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    Senior Member AusTexShaver's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Quick View Post
    Agreed. The time it gets entered on eBay is the time that is used to break ties. One of the questions was if 20 people were the only ones bidding, all were using Gixen, and all entered the same max bid. Then it would be determined by the order that Gixen submitted the bids to eBay. I was speculating that Gixen would use the same method. First one entered would be the first one submitted. They do say that if you modify your bid on Gixen before it has been submitted the original bid will be canceled (on Gixen) and a new bid entered (on Gixen). I would expect this to move you to the back of the (Gixen) queue if there was one.

    I was worried about this myself as I sometimes adjust my max bid if the price goes up while I'm watching and I was afraid my new bid would be placed at the back of the pack so to speak.

    Now for the definitive answer.

    The question I posed on the Gixen forum...

    One question I've always had about snipe programs in general is since they all try to bid at the last second how are those bids queued?

    Since whoever puts in the highest bid first wins lets take the hypothetical example of 20 Gixen snipers all putting in the same max bid. Who would win?
    And their answer...

    The winner will be the one whose bid is submitted first. This is completely random if all the participants use the same offset.
    Last edited by AusTexShaver; 11-03-2008 at 07:45 PM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by AusTexShaver View Post
    And their answer...

    The winner will be the one whose bid is submitted first. This is completely random if all the participants use the same offset.
    Interesting. Was that from a Gixen person or a forum member? The way they would do that is use a random number generator and then use that to insert the bid into the queue for that offset. I guess from some perspective that would be consistent with the concept of sniping.

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    Senior Member AusTexShaver's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Quick View Post
    Interesting. Was that from a Gixen person or a forum member? The way they would do that is use a random number generator and then use that to insert the bid into the queue for that offset. I guess from some perspective that would be consistent with the concept of sniping.
    That answer was from the site administrator of Gixen.

    I doubt if the process is as sophisticated as using a random number generator. I suspect Gixen just takes all bids and sends them at once (or at the time you specify)...and lets eBay sort it out.

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    Quote Originally Posted by AusTexShaver View Post
    That answer was from the site administrator of Gixen.

    I doubt if the process is as sophisticated as using a random number generator. I suspect Gixen just takes all bids and sends them at once (or at the time you specify)...and lets eBay sort it out.
    There is no such thing as "all at once" with computers. They will leave the Gixen server one at a time (or possibly bundled in some order). They could get randomized a little bit in transit over the net if transmitted one at a time but not likely.
    Last edited by Quick; 11-03-2008 at 09:30 PM.

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    Junior Member Hammer's Avatar
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    If you guys want to play with snipping software for free try this program.
    Works very well and best of all the price is right.
    This program gives you a good understanding of how the whole process works.
    I don't have any affiliation with this site just a happy user of this program. By the way I use the Linux version.

    Bruce

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    Senior Member AusTexShaver's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Quick View Post
    There is no such thing as "all at once" with computers. They will leave the Gixen server one at a time (or possibly bundled in some order). They could get randomized a little bit in transit over the net if transmitted one at a time but not likely.

    Here is what the Gixen site administrator had to say about that.

    So you don't use a "first in first out" queue to submit the bids? Do you use some type of random generator to determine the order of bid submission?

    The reason I'm asking is I'm wondering if for some reason I decide to edit my bid that I'm not hurting my chances by that bid being placed at the "back of the pack" so to speak.


    "No, handling threads are spawned at the same time for all the snipes. This all happens in a tiny fraction of time that's far, far less then the network latency variation. So editing a bid in no way puts you at disadvantage.

    Plus the chance of two users bidding on the same item through Gixen is very small. While it happens occasionally, it's still very rare."

    I guess he doesn't know how popular his program is among SRP users. I suspect several of us are using it to snipe at the same razor.

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