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lexin: (Default)
Sunday, July 26th, 2015 09:43 pm
Sigh.

I've put some stuff on ebay (a handbag, some clothes that never really fit me so why I've held on to them is anyone's guess) but I do not like their new interface. I'm sure they think it's simpler, but I didn't agree. I'm "lexin1" and they're here.

The one thing I did like was the fact that you can edit the photos once they're uploaded. The remaining puzzle is why people don't at least rotate them so they're the right way up before pressing 'sell'.

Ho hum.
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lexin: (Default)
Monday, April 25th, 2011 04:28 pm
I've been selling a few old PS2 and 3 games on ebay. The ones I've got listed there are the ones which didn't sell the first time around. If they don't sell the second, they're going in the bin.

Come to the time when I have to package them up, and put postage on, and I decided to have a go with the online postage calculator rather than walk all the way to the post office. I'm just that idle.

First up I try the one on PayPal. That would have charged me over £4 for postage on games which weigh around 150g including packaging. I thought, 'That seems a lot.' So I click on over to Royal Mail, which, after fiddling about (because it's a very fiddly system they have over there) charges me a much more reasonable 92p. Or was it 93? Anyway, under a £. For the same weight and size game.

In fact, I can't find anything on the Royal Mail site which is approximately £4 – it's either a teeny 90-odd pence, a couple of quid or right up to £7 should I want to insure a game for £50. Which, obviously, I don't.

And the moral of that story, best beloved, is do not trust the postage calculator on PayPal. Not that any of you would have.
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