APC IEC C19-C20 jumper cable, part AP9887. Ingram Micro part number APC1883. How much would you pay?
$194.80+GST?
$42/metre?
Craig Box's journeys, stories and notes...
APC IEC C19-C20 jumper cable, part AP9887. Ingram Micro part number APC1883. How much would you pay?
$194.80+GST?
$42/metre?
Got a reply from Trade Me on my pulled listing:
Dear Craig,
Thanks for contacting us.
It is assumed that members of the same household, workplace or close friends would purchase goods off each other outside of the Trade Me auction process. Hence bidding by family members, flatmates or friends is considered "shill bidding" and is in breach of our terms and conditions.
Re: section 4.2 of the Trade Me terms and conditions "You shall not manipulate prices through ghost-bidding or assuming multiple roles in a single transaction."It appears that members that you are linked to were bidding on your auction #69170303 and this is considered shill bidding.
You are welcome to list this on the site again, permitted that no further shill bidding occurs. Unfortunately you will need to do this manually as we are unable to restore the listing.
If you have any further questions or if I can be of any further help please do not hesitate to contact me.
Regards,
Amy
I managed to get a copy of the original text out of Trade Me, via a friend IMing someone who worked there. (Ironically, it was the same friend who was trying to buy the laptop!) However, I paid promotion fees which I have not been refunded. I'll get back in touch (there is no 'reply' facility, I'll have to just use their contact form again).
My problem is that their initial assumption is wrong. People do not always conduct their sales outside of Trade Me, for reasons previously stated.
</rant>
A couple of days ago, I listed some Thinkpads on Trade Me on behalf of my employer, who has accumulated too many of them. He specifically wanted them listed so they would fetch what they were worth, rather than us putting a dollar figure on it and selling it cheap to a friend.
Then, I told you all about them. My boss likes to sell things off cheap. You might get a bargain. Promotion is everything.
A friend of mine, who now lives in Australia, said "Oh, yes, I'd like one of those", and created a Trade Me account for the purpose. Someone posted on the auction saying "Beware of saidperson, they're a new user in Australia", and I responded along the lines of "thanks, but I went to Uni with this person, and they're genuinely interested in purchasing it because of the favourable AUD-NZD rate at the moment"
NO! shouted Trade Me:
Dear Craig,
Your listing for THINKPAD X41 TABLET WITH DOCKING STATION (S=R)
Listing no. 69170303 has been withdrawn.It has been brought to our
attention that shill bidding has occurred on your auction.Shill bidding occurs when members of the same household or friends bid on
each others auctions. We do not allow this on the site. This is because we
are unable to determine if this is with genuine intent to purchase the
item or is an attempt to increase the price on an auction.It is a breach of our terms and conditions. Please ensure that you do not
allow friends or family members to bid on your auctions in the future.Your co-operation in this matter would be greatly appreciated.
So, I try and take the path that leads to Trade Me making a successful sale, openly and honestly, and this is how I get rewarded.
Kyle very accurately observes "if it was happening to things you wanted to buy with sellers creating new accounts and bidding against their own items we'd be pissed off if they didnt stop it". Correct, but this happens all the time. My friends list auctions and say "Here is stuff I'm getting rid of", and if I'm interested, I bid. I only ever bid up to a point that I'm prepared to pay, should I win the auction. That's not shill bidding. Where's the beef?
Want to buy a Thinkpad?
I've yet to post something so sensational (or trollworthy, or just "noticed by Digg") to build up a loyal readership of thousands. I'm sure it'll come eventually. I need to do a couple of things: pimp myself to various Planets, and decide exactly what it is I write about. Generally, it's "things related to what I'm working on", which may or may not be of interest.
My last plea for help didn't turn anyone up. Here's another one that hopefully Google will one day turn up for someone who is bored and has the knowledge and skill to do this, or I'll get bored myself, and acquire the knowledge and skill to do it. Perhaps when it's cricket season again..
I want a simple add-on for the Active Directory Users & Computers MMC utility that does the following things:
No more will you have to ask a user for a password to log into their machine and fix something wrong with their specific profile or operating environment, or change their password and tell them to change it back when you're finished. The script will copy the crypted password to an unused LDAP attribute on the account, and then copy it back when finished - without ever having to know what the password is. By standard means, it's not possible to read the password hash out of AD, so I'm currently seeking help from the newsgroups.
Daniel Petri's help pages have examples on how to extend AD to add options to the context menu for a user, to run VB scripts.
One of the things I maintain at work is a self-installing Linux distribution.
When I started in 2002, we were purchasing KickStart installed Red Hat 7.x machines from a local company. With Progeny's AutoInstall, I managed to get a CD that would automatically install Debian Woody, but not in a very nice fashion.
Ubuntu came out, was more up to date than Woody (I think my Commodore 64 was more up to date than Woody for a moment there), and so I changed to it after the second release. Hoary introducted some support for KickStart installations, but I found that much more power could be gained with the new debian-installer that was coming for Sarge. A guide to remastering your Ubuntu CD ensued.
Two releases later, I updated all the machines to Ubuntu Dapper, and tidied up the installer a whole heap. Today, under the chargeable heading of "documenting my self-installing Linux distribution in case I get hit by a bus", I have given the Ubuntu Install CD Customization page a complete overhaul. Read it - it's grand.
Want to get all the SysInternals utilities? You can download them all yourself, or there's a really useful SysInternals installer built by Ross Smith II that downloads them all (or the ones you select) and creates shortcuts for them for you.
He also has a similar utility for the NirSoft utilities, which include excellent tools for recovering lost passwords and product keys. Watch out if you run Symantec AntiVirus, as it will suggest they are "hack tools".
Another useful meta-utility is The Ultimate Boot CD for Windows. Built on BartPE, the free and legal Windows LiveCD builder (you must have a license for Windows to use it, and you must not use it on more than one PC at once), The Ultimate Boot CD builds you a bootable image with dozens of useful recovery utilities on it. Every sysadmin should have one.
Here's something simple that I never thought of - props to my workmate Tom for coming up with this.
This is a gnuplot graph of our SpamAssassin scores. The code used to generate it is on the bottom of the SpamAssassin notes page at the WLUG wiki.
The grouping around -100 is caused by the whitelist rule, which scores messages down 100 points (ensuring they are never marked as spam). Usefully, this rule doesn't count towards the threshold needed to be reached before a message is learnt as ham by the Bayesian categoriser.
We seem to have a reasonably normal distribution of good mail, between about -5 and +5, and a reasonably normal distribution of spam, between 10 and 60. This means our filter is working really well. What I took from this, is that it was safe to up the ham learning threshold - it defaults to -0.1, but I've set ours to 1, as we have a lot of rules that score all messages up quite equally.
Also useful is sa-stats.pl, which generates a summary table of how often rules were hit on messages that were either marked as ham or spam. As of today:
TOP SPAM RULES FIRED ———————————————————————- RANK RULE NAME COUNT %OFMAIL %OFSPAM %OFHAM ———————————————————————- 1 RAZOR2_CHECK 153 38.65 76.50 1.00 2 BAYES_99 150 37.41 75.00 0.00 3 RAZOR2_CF_RANGE_51_100 149 37.41 74.50 0.50 4 RAZOR2_CF_RANGE_E8_51_100 128 31.92 64.00 0.00 5 URIBL_JP_SURBL 125 31.17 62.50 0.00 6 URIBL_BLACK 120 29.93 60.00 0.00 7 URIBL_SC_SURBL 105 26.18 52.50 0.00 8 URIBL_OB_SURBL 105 26.18 52.50 0.00 9 HOST_EQ_D_D_D_D 102 28.93 51.00 6.97 10 RCVD_IN_SORBS_DUL 92 23.19 46.00 0.50
TOP HAM RULES FIRED ———————————————————————- RANK RULE NAME COUNT %OFMAIL %OFSPAM %OFHAM ———————————————————————- 1 AWL 193 57.86 19.50 96.02 2 BAYES_00 183 45.64 0.00 91.04 3 RELAY_IS_203 78 20.20 1.50 38.81 4 FH_RELAY_NODNS 75 25.44 13.50 37.31 5 HTML_MESSAGE 72 35.66 35.50 35.82 6 UPPERCASE_25_50 60 14.96 0.00 29.85 7 FORGED_RCVD_HELO 56 36.16 44.50 27.86 8 USER_IN_WHITELIST 23 5.74 0.00 11.44 9 NO_REAL_NAME 20 13.22 16.50 9.95 10 SPF_HELO_PASS 19 5.49 1.50 9.45
I toyed with changing the scores on rules that hit lots on both ham and spam, such as FORGED_RCVD_HELO, but they contribute only very small weightings overall at the moment.
AWStats is a "free powerful and featureful tool that generates advanced web, streaming, ftp or mail server statistics, graphically". It's commonly used for generating pretty logs of your Apache web server. (See the AWStats demo if you're unfamiliar and interested.)
I got it going with my Ubuntu virtual web hosting setup this morning, and wrote a page about AWStats, Apache 2 and Ubuntu or Debian on the WLUG wiki. Enjoy.
Debian's package system, as well as its automatic dependency resolution, has reasonable management of configuration files - not as great as Gentoo, unfortunately, which has some smarts about merging changes, but at least it stops you and tells you what is changing. It does this for files that are labelled as 'conffiles'.
If you're upgrading a lot of alike machines, you can find out what answers you want to load in first, and then tell the others to accept or reject the changes appropriately.
For example, hdparm gets an init script in Dapper that it didn't have in Hoary, so we can safely force an answer of 'yes' for that package:
apt-get install -y hdparm -o Dpkg::Options::="--force-confnew"
However, the firewall rules have been customized locally, and overwriting them with defaults would be bad!
apt-get install -y linuxserver-firewall -o Dpkg::Options::="--force-confold"
ClamAV's packages are a bit smarter, using the newer ucf configuration system, which, among other things, can handle a three way merge - letting you compare new, current and original, in a way that can roll your changes in a bit better. (It's also designed more for files edited or created in postinst, and not just plain configuration files). The syntax for automatic accepting of conffile changes is different for UCF:
UCF_FORCE_CONFFOLD=yes apt-get install -y clamav-base
Look at 'man ucf' and 'man dpkg' for more force options.