![]() ![]() Now I’m switching to Mac 10.3.9 but I cannot login. previously I’m satisfied enough with JBidwatcher 1.0.2 for windows. Sun May 04 14:29:: Done getting the sign in cookie. Sun May 04 14:29:: ebay: Error, can’t accurately set delta to server’s official time.Īt 0(Native Method)Īt (Unknown Source)Īt (Unknown Source)Īt .newInstance(Unknown Source)Īt (Native Method)Īt .Http.receiveData(Http.java:161)Īt .Http.receivePage(Http.java:185)Īt .(ebayLoginManager.java:187)Īt .(ebayLoginManager.java:160)Īt .圜ookie(ebayLoginManager.java:171)Īt .(ebayServer.java:381)Īt .n(PlainMessageQueue.java:55)Ĭaused by: : connect timed outĪt (Native Method)Īt (Unknown Source)Īt (Unknown Source)Īt (Unknown Source)Īt (Unknown Source)Īt (Unknown Source)Īt .CookieJar.handleRedirect(CookieJar.java:164)Īt .CookieJar.getAllCookiesFromPage(CookieJar.java:146)Īt .CookieJar.getAllCookiesFromPage(CookieJar.java:126)Īt .(ebayLoginManager.java:185) Not logging in – error message ‘login failed, connect timed out’. Love this program and miss it! Any help appreciated. Are you seeing ‘Not logged in…’? If not, what is leading you to believe you’re not logged in…? If you can give me more information about what you’re seeing, specifically in the JBidwatcher application, I can try and figure out what’s going on. If this doesn’t happen, then I’m not sure what’s happening, offhand. Hover your mouse cursor over the ‘Not logged in…’ message, and a toolbar should pop up with something in it explaining what’s gone wrong. For example, ‘Your sign in information is incorrect’, or something like that. If JBidwatcher starts up with ‘Not logged in…’ and the normal warning about being unable to log in to eBay, then there should be some kind of message that says why it’s not being able to log in. ![]() Once you’re sure it’s right, shut down and start up JBidwatcher again. The reasons you are having trouble could be many the first thing I’d try is double-check your login information is correct in the eBay tab of the Configuration Manager in JBidwatcher (File | Configure). I’ll address that in a separate post, as this has already gotten too long. Actually CAPTCHA’s are a reverse Turing test, in that it’s the computer, testing us to see if the we are human.Īll of that is fun and such, but it doesn’t answer your core question. They are references to the Turing Test which is an attempt to answer how will we know a computer is conscious and can think. Both it and CAPTCHA’s ‘T’ are named after the brilliant mathematician Alan Turing. Somehow a completely different set of people started calling the same thing a ‘Turing number’, which is inaccurate, since it doesn’t have to just be numbers. (Or, more accurately, they can’t password-hack by constantly trying sets of passwords against known usernames.) It’s hard for programs to decode those complex images, so ‘bots’ (and programs like JBidwatcher) can’t log in. The idea is to throw up some distorted numbers on a (usually) complex background, and require the user to type them in, in order to log in. What TT is referring to is commonly known as a CAPTCHA which stands for Completely Automated Public Turing-test to tell Computers and Humans Apart. ![]()
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