Hi,
Results of a few eBay searches (all categories) on misspellings suggested by the NYTimes article. 1018 items found for: knive,"Art Deko",camra,comferter,saphire. 102 items found for: bycicle,telefone,dimond,dimonds,"mother of perl",cuttlery,antik I found 18 Labtop computers. Hoping for an underpriced lunar main mass or even a football-sized chunk of Mars, 22 items found for: metoerite,luner,marsian,martain. Interesting misspelling clusters: "wedding ban with five dimonds" or "grate first camra." Many misspellers appear to be foreign sellers for whom English is not a native tongue. No immediate evidence that misspellings hinder the sale or lower the price of items; I found one listing simply titled "Labtop" at $500 with 8 bidders. Did those eight search for "labtops" in the first place? A point that is missed in the Time article is that, since there should be statistically as many misspellers who search as misspellers who list, they should, in the long run, find each other! I think that's one of the Laws of Thermodynamics, isn't it? But I dint find inny bargins. Sterling K. Webb ______________________________________________ Meteorite-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list