http://video.honda.co.uk/campaign/asimo/video/Asimo_Commercial.wmv
Leia Mais…Wednesday, 17 December 2008
Monday, 15 December 2008
If I build it, they will come...
Well, I didn't actually build it, I bought it, and then paid for the hosting and the company set it all up for me and I went 'live'.
www.e-DUDS.com was born!
The thing is, that I have become so disillusioned with eBay and their ridiculous rules and enforced regulations that I was convinced that the only thing to do was to open up an auction website with all the original freedoms that eBay used to provide.
Didn't it used to be a place where people came to trade? The whole world was not divided into sellers and buyers - the sellers all evil and intent on overcharging for postage and evilly scheming about ways to con the innocent, guileless buyers, and the lovely, hapless buyers wandering through cyberspace with their hands full of wodges of money, with 'please dupe me into buing something silly' written on a sign around their necks.
Then, also there is 'paypal'. Paypal have their own fees scale, all of which also go to eBay. You have to pay paypal for receiving money into your account. I'm sure there are some bank managers out there wringing their hands and thinking 'now why didn't I think of that!' You pay paypal 3.4% + 20p of all your income into paypal.
eBay fees
So, at the time of deciding to start my own auction website, eBay's fees are as follows. For a normal auction with no special categories or features, if you sell something for £1, you will pay 15p to list the item, then 8.75% of something called a final value fee (FVF). A final value fee is the commision you pay to eBay (and many other auction websites) for using their website. If you don't sell the item, you still pay the listing fee, but not the FVF.
Incidentally, I looked up Final value fees on Google and there are a million or so hits. Of the first 57 pages, all the hits refer to eBay FVFs - What they are, how much they are, how to avoid paying them, etc etc. Then on page 58, there start to be hits about other auction website FVFs. So, someone correct me if I'm wrong, the FVF was brought into existence by eBay?
Back to our £1 auction, you now have to pay 15% VAT and then paypal take their cut, which in the UK is 3.4% +20p.
So, altogether, eBay takes 52p of your £1.
Now I know, if you extend it to larger amounts it isn't quite so dramatic. But roughly take off 10-12% of what you have earned to pay eBay.
There are some very good eBay fee calculators out there. I have been using this one.
But be careful when using a fee calculator. It needs to be relevant to the country you are in, and also some of them don't automatically work add in the hidden extras like VAT.
Saturday, 13 December 2008
What's in a name?
"
What's in a name?
That which we call
'rose',by any other name would
smell as sweet"
In order to run a successful auction website, you need to have a good name.
Some important 'good name' criteria might include:
- Short, snappy title
- One that people will remember, maybe even comment on
- One that describes the contents of the website
How to choose a good name? I did a few searches around the net and there are a lot of sites which directly rip off eBay. Then there are the ones which have something really obvious in the name about selling or buying or bidding online, isell, yousell, webid. It would be easy to get lost in the list of least traffic.
When searching, you do get a little bit focussed - a small amount of tunnel vision creeps in...
So, then I did a search in online dictionaries and thesauruses(thesauri, thesauriums?) and started looking for words to do with selling, auctions, bidding etc etc.
The objective was to have the shortest word possible but still be on topic. And that is how, 'Duds' came into view. Cool articles of clothing for a snappy dresser - an ideal name for an auction website.
I had had the idea that there was a need for a website to help people sell the little things. Little knick-knacks, clothes, etc. i.e. those items on which there is a potential to lose money on eBay because, once you have paid the fees, you are totally out of pocket.
And so e-DUDS.com was born.
I liked it, a nice snappy, memorable name, which rolls off the tongue, with a totally cool meaning.
Do you remember I mentioned about the potential blinkers earlier? the tunnel vision?
Well, one of the first members asked why I had named my site after an unexploded bomb? i.e. a 'Dud'. Or a 'Squib' if you like things in Harry Potter terms.
I still didn't get it. I still thought the majority of people thought of duds as clothes rather than anything else. And I had already bought the domain name and paid for the software and they had already set up the name on all the pages. But it all still seemed to have negative connotations.
Rather lamely, I decided that a good thing would be to have a definition on the website. So I paid through the nose and got the software designer to insert a definition onto each page. And this is what it said:
"Duds: definition: Informal term for articles of clothing. (16th century)"
Yes, OK. I know. Very internet, very web 2.0.
Why do they say 'paying through the nose?' It probably has some sort of horrible medieval connotations. On various websites it says things about debtors having horrible things done to their noses if they couldn't pay their creditors. But wouldn't that be 'paying with your nose'?
Pay up or the nose gets it!
Terrible depths of gloom and depression...
... could have descended, but then hey, if websites such as 'Yahoo' can be famous and popular, and if 'Google' can become a household verb, then why not?
e-DUDS fulfills 2 out of the 3 criteria straight away - short, memorable and of the dictionary websites I visited today, 4 only mentioned that it is an informal term for clothes and 2 mentioned that it could be clothes, or - well, yes, an unexploded bomb.
And personally, I think that if Donald Trump can overcome the hurdles of that name and get to where he is, then so can e-DUDS.com
www.e-DUDS.com
http://www.illustrationsof.com/
Tuesday, 9 December 2008
Time's a ticking!
London |
Even changing one little colour on the forum takes me all morning. I'm not sure whether I'm ever going to get this just the way I want it.
The thing is, you go onto the internet, do a search via Google, check into the BBC, look at the news, find out what the weather is going to do, watch something on iplayer, without realising that the world - make that the cyberworld is moving forwards at a tremendously rapid rate.
You can't just put some HTML together any more, and proudly display your efforts. There's XML, JS, CGI, Perl, (I'm sure some of these are ancient in computer terms, but I've only just discovered that they exist). How do you handle forms? How do you design your CSS? Do you design CSS or do you implement it? I'm not sure! Then there's all the social stuff! Do we have to be constantly so social with each other? How annoying would it be if the person next to you constantly told you what they were feeling and thinking?
So it's all moved on, but the trouble is, I've just arrived. Suddenly I'm back on the school hockey pitch running after Monica Wharton. Luckily, at some point all the girls would stop running one way and turn back and start to run back towards me, at which point I'd realise they'd just gone by, stop in my tracks and go back the way I'd come.
I don't think that's going to happen here somehow. WWW is bigger than a hockey pitch!
Monday, 8 December 2008
How to Run a Successful Auction Website
Why?
The first question to occur when reading the title will probably be 'Why on earth would anyone put themselves through all that trouble when there are already auction websites out there?' ... or words to that effect.
Well, without being too specific, I wanted the challenge. It's a great opportunity to have a website which could potentially be populated by hundreds of people and it would be a great place to hang out.
OK, being slightly more specific, I have tried other auction websites and found some of them too draconian or demanding, and some of them too confusing! (How much do I pay exactly?) Without being too much of an auction junkie, I have tried to sell the odd thing in the past and with little items of low value, once you have worked out the listing fee, the final value fee, the hidden fee, the other hidden fee, the paypal fee and the Fee fee, you have either made pennies, or worse, you have ended up paying for the privilege. Then a few weeks later, there is nothing more demoralising than getting that dreaded 'Paypal has reversed your transaction'.
Now, the thing I didn't quite realise was exactly how much time it would take (has taken) because when you are a novice, you have no idea just how much there is that you don't know! (But more on that later).
So, I bought a template, bought a domain, paid for hosting and here I am, about to run a Successful Auction Website!
Wish me luck!
www.e-DUDS.com