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Hi All! I couldn't find a discussion about this but I thought I'd post and see if anyone else was using this technique:

I downloaded Ebay Typo Locatorwhich runs a little goofy, but works well. It has a thirty day, full featured trial, and only costs $14.95 last time I checked. Basically, after entering keyword(s) the program searches ebay for all possible configurations of the keywords. Using this program with AuctionSniper was amazing to me. I wrote a more detailed story of what I used this combination for Here. I didn't find any articles on this in the forum, but I think these 2 options work very well together.
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Pete, a better way, especially for someone new to the forums, might be to tell us about the product first. Then, if someone asks you to share a link, do so. In that way, you do not seem like the countless three or four-post wonders who come in here, pretend to talk, then drop an ad for their products.

Thanks for the apology, though, and welcome to the forum.
Chatter, you're right, of course, and thanks.

Teester, yes it is. I couldn't find it on download.com so I googled "ebay typo" which gave me a number of different applications.

The one I settled on doesn't involve any downloading - it runs in your browser, and, unlike the alternatives, shows all its misspellings in one line seperated by commas (it has the option to include the correct spelling or not).
You only have to make one ebay search, instead of having to do them all individually. Then you can save the search, as you know, and get a notification if anything comes up.

Plus it's free!!!

Pete.
I am not sure you need this product - even for free!

I tried it and all it does is put a series of alternatives (random generated of course!) into the search box with a comma separator.

Now, if you have any knowledge of the product your looking for, you can do the exact same thing and not generate the vast amount of false positives that this programme does.

I tried it on one word "iloca" and got about 250 results to sort through. I know from experience that there are three common ways of mispelling this particular camera's name, so putting these in gives me only about 30 results to sift through. In other words, its like electric car windows - the solution can be more trouble than the ideas worth! (slightly biased comment here, having spent the past hour trying to get a stuck down one come up before it rains!)Technology doesn't always come up with the right answers!

Paul, Pauls, Paull, Pual, Porl
I find the word 'Bakelite' it probably top of the misspellings - a 64k long string pointer may not cope Wink, and the most common are the surprising variants of 'original' and 'definitely'.
The mind boggles when someone cannot even spell what they are actually looking at - like:
Ecko (Ekco) Citreon (Citroën) Furguson (Ferguson)
The funniest ones are things like 'dates from 1920 to 1970' and the like, and 'Haven't got a battery/plug so cannot try it'.
Must be the Aussie in me, I didnt see Pete's apology as a *sorry I did that*, I saw it more as a *Sorry - you are wrong*.

I would of thought the apology should of come from the other direction.

Neither here nor there I guess, but I think it is quite rude to new forum members to tell them how to post.

Gee - its nice to be back Smile

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