Uncategorized


21
Mar 10

March Auction Schedule

Auctions Days are as follows:

  • Tuesday
  • Thursday
  • Friday and
  • Sunday

No Auctions on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.

Auctions commence at 3pm EST and end around 11pm EST with a small 1-2 hour break around 5:30.

———————————————

Please Note:  Bidazzled will be Pausing Auctions for 2 weeks in April (Approx: April 3 – April 18).

———————————————


21
Jan 10

By Popular Opinion: New Win Limits in Effect

Effective immediately, the following win limits are in effect:

  • 2 Wins per Day
  • 7 Wins per Week
  • 20 Wins per Month

Win limits are in place so that as many people as possible can enjoy Bidazzled and have great opportunities to win fantastic prizes.

By request, we have made it possible for people to bid on multiple items and not be restricted by any existing limits.  However, once you win and hit a win limit you are prohibited from placing any further bids on any other auction items and any existing autobidders will not place bids.   So any bids placed before a win limit on an item may not be added to until your win limit drops below the threshold.

Thank you to all for your opinions and suggestions in helping Bidazzled one of the safest and fairest online auction sites on the web.

Please keep suggestions and ideas coming.

Thank you to those for advising us to test 7 per week over 9 per week and for the reason that it is easier to go to 9 than it is to go down to 7.


19
Dec 09

Update on Win Limits

Our prior win limit program was not functioning 100% (was advising some people that they had reached their maximum wins when they had not) , so we began creating something new.

The new program is in final testing and will be implemented shortly (so no win limits are currently in effect).  Here is a sneak peak:

Your current win total will be shown on the header.  If the win limit for the prior 7 days is say seven and you have six wins.  Then you will be able to bid on as many items as you wish.  However, when you win your 7th item – you will not be able to place any more bids on any other items.  This means that any autobidders you have placed will stop with the win.

If you sell your won item back to us for bids, you will receive a win credit.  That simply means that while you have won your limit, we subtract one of your wins and you are allowed to continue bidding.

We are examining not counting the following wins (and feedback is appreciated):

  • On items priced under $30.  After all, people may not bid on a lower priced item if they are concerned about it impacting their win totals.
  • Not counting a win if the closing price is under X amount.  X could be be $5 or $9, we are not sure exactly.  The point behind this is why would anyone who is close to their win limit, bid on an item if the price was low and run the risk of winning it which could stop them from bidding on an item they want later on in the day.  If this person felt that they should not bid, then the item may go for a very low price and this not conducive to our charitable goals.

Please remember that win limits on Bidazzled need to be different than win limits on your typical penny auction site.  As we are 100% Risk Free, there is far less need to protect people from a few big spenders.  Specifically, people who invest a lot in an auction will exit when their investment nears the retail price as there is no incentive for them to stay.  This then opens up an opportunity for someone else to enter the auction and win with very few bids.  This is not possible under your typical penny type auction where there is only one winner and everyone else loses.  In those auctions, people stay in till the very end.

We would love to have feedback on what you feel is fair and would work best.

Thank you all again for your support.

The Bidazzled Team


11
Dec 09

Server now accepts bids up to 0 Seconds

As of today, bids on Bidazzled need to reach our server before time reaches zero (as opposed to our prior 1.5 seconds).

This move is designed to make Bidazzled simpler and easier for people to use.  Here is what is going to happen:

  • Countdown clock will start at 16 seconds (not 18 seconds) and will count down until a bid is placed.  At zero seconds, we need to check and see if any bids have been received at the server (it takes some time, not much for the bid to go to and back from the server).
  • Right at zero seconds we will display a “Checking Server For Bids” message.  This should only appear for 1 second.  If a bid was received, the countdown clock will resume.  If not bid is received, the server sends out the final results of the auction and a
  • Auction Closed page is displayed with a summary of the winners bids.

Note, some individuals have reported seeing “Ended” and then the auction coming back to life.   This is due to a lag which is not uncommon on the internet but in most cases (99%) it is the result of the user running other programs, having multiple windows open or even just 1 additional window on an auction site.  These programs require CPU time and can rob your system of the needed updates to keep Bidazzled up to date.

Remember, if bidding on Bidazzled – Prepare yourself and your computer to do so.  Follow our optimal computer settings (found on this blog) and the home page of Bidazzled.  A quick check list would be:

  • A fresh reboot is a great thing
  • Use Firefox, it handles javascript and Ajax faster than IE
  • Open a single fresh window
  • Do not download large files or multimedia while on Bidazzled
  • Do not use other CPU intensive programs

8
Dec 09

100,000 Bids Celebration! Winner will receive 100 Bids.

Today Bidazzled will record it’s 100,000 bid party

That’s cause for celebration around here (we are currently over 99,500).

While some sites do 100,000 bids a day, it took us almost six weeks.  Then again, some sites don’t ever get to 100,000 bids.  So to celebrate, the lucky person to place the 100,000 bid will receive 100 Bonus Bids!

The person who places Bid # 999,999 will receive 99 Bonus Bids.

Going Forward

50 Bids to each person who places each 10,000th bid.

So 50 bids to the bidder of 110,000, 120,000, etc.

Thank you all for your support of Bidazzled and The Ruch Foundation for small cell lung cancer.


22
Nov 09

The “2 Second” Rule

Everyone one has seen it “Ended Auction” – maybe you won, maybe you didn’t and then the next thing you know – there is 15 seconds left on the auction.

So there is time for last moment bids to be registered on the server and for those bids to be transmitted back to your computers – the server will stop accepting bids with approximately 1.5 seconds left.

This does not mean that all bids placed before 2 seconds will reach the server in time and it does not mean that the occasional auction may come back to life.   To understand this, it is important to know how countdown timers work.  The countdown timer is a program running on your computer, your computer is also asking for bid updates almost 2x a second from our server.  However, if you go to any auction site and have 3 computers side by side – all will show a slight difference in time.  It is a very small difference but different nonetheless.  The greatest chance for a timing error is if you leave your computer on 1 item for a long period of time and nobody has bid on it till the final seconds.  In the absence of bids in the final 18 seconds that would update your timer – it is possible that the variation from actual time to the time on your screen could be several seconds.  Easiest Fix:  Refresh your Browser Screen.

Other variable may affect the performance and accuracy of your countdown timer.  Heavy load on your CPU (running lots of programs or multiple windows), your browser (Bidazzled works fastest on Firefox), local Internet, hardware and many more.  Please know that everything that can be done to ensure a rapid response from our server is done.  Tests show that 99% of bidders receive updates within 1 second of placing a bid.  If you encounter a lag or it is taking longer for a bid to be received – please refresh your screen.  If the problem is not resolved – stop bidding (we do not want you to waste bids).

Please let us know if you have any questions.


15
Nov 09

Does Bidazzled Use Bots?

This is an excellent question given the substantial proliferation of bots in online auction sites and the answer is a resounding no.  Bidazzled does not, never has and never will use bots to place bids.   While we much rather talk about all the wonderful things we have planned for Bidazzled, this topic needs addressing.

That question was raised on www.pennyauctionwatch.com today (thank you to “bella”) for bringing it to our attention that Bidazzled may potentially use bots.

A “bot” is a program that places bids with the sole purpose of driving up the price of an auction.  Bots are so common. it is hard to know if a site is using them or not.  So how do we (or any site for that matter) convince people that a site does not use bots?  While we cannot speak for anyone else, here are our reasons:

  1. Bidazzled has been in development for over ten months and the website for over six months.  If we were seeking a to create a site that simply placed bots to drive up the price, we could have had a site up almost 10 months ago, plowed the $40K development costs on top of our existing marketing budget and have dominated the market.   While penny auction bidders may not be aware of this fact, the truth is: a person could have a penny auction site up that is riddled with bots within a day, and could do it for under $100.   We strive to offer much more.
  2. We strive to offer transparency, fairness and an ethical place that people can bid with comfort.  That was the driving force behind Bidazzled.   Bidazzled exists not to make people wealthy but to fund a charity (more on that to follow).
  3. We originally purchased three auction sites only to find out they they were incomplete and full of bots.  After being taken advantage of and misled by numerous developers  to the tune of around eight thousand dollars, we had two versions of Bidazzled commissioned.  The first is going through it’s Live Beta Testing and the other is still 45 days away from completion.
  4. If there is a comprehensive pre-made site in the marketplace that does not use bots, we missed it.   And we looked very very hard.   We conducted extensive searches and in the end made the decision to build a site from the ground up.  The absolute minimum development time (in our opinion) for a basic auction site should be at least 2 months and then another month or so for testing.  Our development time is pushing 7 months on the current site mostly because of it’s advanced features.  This simply means that we are serious about what we are doing and why we are doing it.  If it were about using bots to make money – we would not have invested this heavily in the infrastructure.
  5. The reference made in the Penny Auction Watch regarding a sniper program is just that – an attempt to build a sniper program.   As an auction enthusiast, who wouldn’t want to have a sniper program that you could program to bid for you.   The intent was to build a sniper program (similar in many ways to the dozens of sniper programs that exist for ebay) that allow a bidder to place a bid at a desired time on a variety of auction sites.     These programs exist now and are available openly on the web.   On scriptlance, we were looking for a program that could be built to bid on multiple sites.   Unfortunately, the complexity of having more than one site was too great to operate efficiently and the developer refund the $1,000 escrow  payment on July 17.  We are happy to share proof of that transaction along with correspondence with the programmer to a neutral party.
  6. Timing.  The request for the “sniper program” was made before development work began on Bidazzled.  If the purpose was to create a bot program, it would make little sense to build it before you build the auction site.  As stated earlier, purchasing a site with bots is very simple and inexpensive ; it is illogical to purchase a bot program before you have a site.
  7. Traffic.  Bidazzled is very new, has done very little marketing and currently has more unique visitor traffic than most of the current penny auction sites.  This is a challenging claim to make as you have to be careful at the data involved.   We are only available in America and since we are in beta testing – we have an average of auctions 3-4 days a week and only for part of a day as we test systems.  Even with those few auctions, our unique visitors are high as – word spreads quickly and  last week our numbers were higher than many sites that have been around for quite some time.    So if traffic is high – relative to little to no advertising and only a few sporadic auction sessions – bots would be deflating these numbers.
  8. Ethics.  In late 2008, I lost one of my closest and dearest friends to Lung Cancer.   Watched as  he bravely fought a disease that knows no defeat, and held him as he passed.   Jimmy Ruch’s one continued desire, was to create a Foundation to help people with Small Cell Lung Cancer.   His wish was to  stop the disease from doing to others – what it was doing to him.   So some of his friends and I put some money aside and started to build Bidazzled with the goal of creating a program that would fund his charity – The Jimmy Ruch Fund.  Note, this is a  501C3 charity (as in an actual IRS recognized charity – not some made up name in the veil of a charity).   We are well funded and those that invested own their our respective businesses.   Bidazzled is based on ethics, a good cause, fairness and has been developed for the long haul – not a “pass in the night” organization.
  9. We are happy to let an impartial organization look through our site code at any time for any hint of a bot.
  10. Soon, our first winners start to receive their winnings, we are encouraging and rewarding them to send in a photo and a testimonial of them with their prize.

Hopefully we can put that issue to rest that Bidazzled has not, does not and will never utilize bidding bots.  We are most happy to do whatever we can to put anyone’s concerns at ease on this matter.


14
Nov 09

Paused Auctions – Security is #1

A quick note to keep all updated and explain why we have items on pause.

To ensure a secure environment for all our members we are pausing auctions while some payment processing work is done.  We hope to have this completed as quickly as possible and apologize for any inconvenience.  The expectation is for these changes to be made and tested for Sunday afternoon but it may be Monday.  If it does spill over till Monday – we will delay the national launch by a day to give all our early bird Live Beta testers one full day of auctions with minimal competition.

Bidazzled was built to be highly secure from the ground up and utilizes a very high level of encryption and protects every transaction.  These modifications are to prepare Bidazzled for continued security with higher load on the server (in anticipation of greater membership).

Your patience is greatly appreciated.


14
Nov 09

Live Beta Testing Winds Down

Friday afternoon and evening we conducted an intensive test of all systems including our Bidmate (autobidder) in a live auction to all members.   Members feedback was most positive and the rapid feedback to bids being placed was appreciated.

There were many bargains scooped up (no worries, we will certainly use some of those in marketing) so congratulations to all who receive a great deal.

The plan is to evaluate how the site responds over tests and live auctions over the weekend.   If all seems well, we will begin our national marketing program to make more people aware of Bidazzled and our Risk Free Bidding and the cause that we are working for (The Jimmy Ruch Fund).

Our thanks to all for your early support, suggestions, ideas and patience.  It is greatly appreciated.


12
Nov 09

Upgrades Complete – Code Tweaked

On Your Mark, Get Set………

Earlier today we completed an upgrade to the system to enhance response times.  We also have modified our site code to maximize response times you see on your computer.

We will list a few live auctions this afternoon / evening if our last round of tests show continued positive responses.  Please note, It is important that you reboot your machine before logging in to take advantage of these modifications.

Preliminary tests show almost all computer types (fast and slow cpu’s and those with high and low available ram) are seeing marked improvements with these upgrades.

We will publish auction times on the home page for you when we have the results of the last round of testing.  At present it will be after 6pm EST.