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Lego Titanic Set Ebay

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Adele Adele Perth Justin Bieber Tickets 2 Tickets Adele Perth Flights Matilda Adele Tickets Green Day Seats 1 - 25 of 1,425 ads in Perth Region within Tickets Adele Adele Perth Justin Bieber Tickets 2 Tickets Adele Perth Flights Matilda Adele Tickets Green Day Seats I have been looking at a few of my old LEGO sets on BrickLink and they seem to sell for a lot ($500-$1000) - the information also suggests they actually are being sold periodically. However, I've never sold on there before. I know that with most sites like that (Ebay, etc) it's really hard to sell without any reviews/feedback and particularly for expensive items. Is this something which is even reasonable for me to even attempt to sell on BrickLink? In general, it is considered best to first build up a reputation (i.e. feedback) by selling smaller items, before offering up rare and expensive items. When a new seller (low or zero feedback) offers up an expensive set, the following might happen: Buyers will be afraid to purchase from you as offering expensive sets for sale by low feedback buyers is associated with scams.




You expose yourself to fraudulent buyers who are preying on new seller and try to pull a fast one (e.g. claiming something never arrived, or claiming something arrived damaged, or even returning something opened and replaced). This is not to say that those things will always happen, but low feedback raises warning flags. Of course, with proper research and careful shipping you can avoid all of this, and especially if you are competitively priced you might sell sooner rather than later. Being perceived as a scammer, or being scammed yourself, is something that is unfortunately a regular phenomenon on any marketplace, be it Amazon, EBay, BrickLink or Craigslist. So net, just be careful and do proper research on how to best cover yourself against potential scams. Selling LEGO can be a very exhilarating experience!Browse other questions tagged shopping bricklink or ask your own question. In retrospect, it was only a matter of time before someone turned a bunch of Raspberry Pis into a supercomputer.




The Raspi supercomputer is the result of a project headed up by University of Southampton professor [Simon Cox]. Included in the team are a gaggle of grad students and [Simon]’s 6-year-old son who graciously provided the material, design, and logistics for the custom LEGO case. The Iridris-Pi supercomputer, as the team calls their creation, consists of 64 Raspberry Pis, all configured for parallel processing using a lightweight version of MPI. [Simon] was kind enough to put up an excellent guide for turning two (or more) Raspberry Pis into a supercomputer. The machine has a full 1 TB of disk space provided by a 16 GB SD card in each node. Although the press release doesn’t go over the computational capabilities of the Iridris-Pi, the entire system can be powered from a single 13 A supply. If you’re wondering what it would take to get a Raspberry Pi supercomputer into the TOP500 list of supercomputers, a bit of back-of-the-envelope computation given the Raspi’s performance and the fact the 500th fastest computer can crank out about 60 TeraFLOPS/s, we’ll estimate about 1.4 Million Raspis would be needed.




At least it’s a start. Official LEGO home page. The Robotics Invention System developed at the Massachusets Institute of Technology (MIT). It can be ordered from LEGO America by calling 800-243-4870. Links to the Denmark, England, and US Legoland web sites. Sign up to our Newsletter 2017 Top Trumps TournamentThis offer has already expired. While you may have missed out here, we have so many more great deals to share with you! To make sure you don't miss any more offers like this one, join our mailing list and follow us on Twitter. for up to the minute updates on new deals and reviews. You can also find us on Facebook, follow us on Google Plus, or subscribe to our Feed. Update: Get a $100 Toys R Us Gift Card for just $85 w/ email delivery from PayPal (15% savings) In today’s best game/app deals, Amazon is offering its Prime members Bayonetta 2 (Single Disc) on Wii U for $23.99 shipped (discount applies automatically in the cart).




This is the lowest price we have ever tracked on the single disc version. It includes Bayonetta 2 in its entirety but does not come with Bayonetta 1 the way the original release did. That version goes for between $44, all the way up to $100+ right now. Amazon is offering LEGO Marvel’s Avengers for $46.99 on Wii U, $48.67 for Xbox One and $49.99 on PS4. While not a massive discount, this is the first notable price drop we have tracked across all three platforms at once and the best we have seen. We still have a couple notable console bundles live from late yesterday: The official Newegg eBay Store is offering the PlayStation 4 Call of Duty Black Ops III Bundle with a free copy of Far Cry Primal for $349.99 shipped ($410 value) and Northwest Outdoor via eBay offers the Manufacturer Refurbished Xbox One bundle with Sunset Overdrive, Forza 5 and an an extra controller for $269.99 shipped ($400+ new value) After seeing the Nintendo Pro Controller in black for Nintendo Wii U go down to $39.99 with free shipping for Prime members yesterday, we have a couple other notable Nintendo hardware deals today.




First up is the Nintendo NFC Reader/Writer Accessory for Nintendo 3DS for $14.99 Prime shipped (Reg. $20, within$1 of the all-time low). And next we have the Link themed PDP Wired Fight Pad for Wii U for $14.99 Prime shipped (Reg. $20, matched on Best Buy’s eBay store, best we can find.) In other Nintendo deals, we still have The Legend of Zelda: TriForce Heroes, The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask and A Link Between Worlds at $30 each (Reg. $40, current best). Down below you’ll find the rest of today’s iOS/Mac price drops including Splashtop Touchpad, Tofu Go!, Toca Kitchen 2, TicToe Fury, Lume and more. iOS Universal: Financial Calculator Premium – financial calculator with a clean layout inspired by the famous HP 12C: FREE (Reg. $2) iOS Universal: Toca Kitchen 2: FREE (Reg. $3) iOS Universal: TicToe Fury: FREE (Reg. $1) iOS Universal: Dr. Panda’s Restaurant: $2 (Reg. $3) iOS Universal: Password Safe – iPassSafe+: $3 (Reg. $6)

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