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Silly question : 2 members have exact same max bid and time. Wich one wins? | Mon Jun 06, 2011 07:59 PM | | |
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spaulcote |
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Posts: 1 |
Member Since: Jun 06, 2011 |
Location: EBay.ca |
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| Mon Jun 06, 2011 08:44 PM | | |
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Sashka |
Support |
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Posts: 3794 |
Member Since: Feb 13, 2008 |
Location: www.myibidder.com |
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The non-serious answer: American coins work better for some reasons. I get tails more often when using Canadian coins. Is it because I don't speak French?
I bet someone who speaks French (or knows a few words at least) will get better results with Canadian coins.
The serious answer is: the sniper does not decide and does not give any priorities. Both snipes will fire at the same time. eBay will decide the outcome, so whatever bid is accepted first, that person wins.
This is the reason why I always recommend to add a few extra cents to cover up similar situations. Put $30.02 instead of $30.00.
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| Sat Aug 06, 2011 10:15 AM | | |
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MJN |
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| Sat Aug 06, 2011 01:49 PM | | |
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Sashka |
Support |
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Posts: 3794 |
Member Since: Feb 13, 2008 |
Location: www.myibidder.com |
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You are talking about atomic processes, but snipe is a complicated process and contains several steps.
Each snipe is a process. Any modern OS can do several processes pseudo-parallel even with single CPU core, so you should not take it into consideration even.
What you should consider is that each snipe may land on different eBay servers in different networks and the network and processing lag may add up into the process.
That's why two snipes can go together with no problems and it's up to eBay whatever will be counted as the first one.
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American coins vs Canadian coins | Tue Jun 12, 2012 01:38 PM | | |
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spaulcote |
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