Tuesday, February 28, 2012
MTGO Library Bot 4.87 is out!
Equilibrium Point, Part 3 of 2.
But what do these numbers mean?
These are simply the starting points. These are theoretical answers based on ideal circumstances. Your mileage will vary. If you are running a part-time bot, have a limited inventory, or not even enough ticket reserve, all of these factors will hinder the number of trades your bot will make during the day.
But if you have a high volume bot, making dozens of trades each day, then it is worth it to look at this.
While they may look scary, when you break them down into daily average, it is easier to get your head around this. Let's use the example I used last time: A LITE Bot, 2.5% fee and a one (1) month term; which yields that the bot must complete 200 tickets worth of trades in the month.
First off, 200 tickets worth of trades is not the same as profit. It can be 100 tickets coming in and 100 tickets going out over the course of the month.
Convert those 200 tickets to a daily rate, divide by 30, and you get 6 2/3 tickets per day. These numbers are easier to grasp. I'll leave it up to you to do the others.
Now check your logs. How many trades does your bot make over the course of a normal day? Yes, there will be ebbs and flows. Some days are better than others. Some weeks are better than others. Dark Ascension is being released, so we'll have more traffic now than we did a couple of weeks ago. Days with downtime also affect numbers. But over the course of a month, how many are you making? Only you can answer that one.
Suppose you determine that you're over-paying and you need to switch? That's no problem. Send a note to that wonderful Albert and he'll take of everything.
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Weekly Card Review (WCR2)
When you look into cards like Chandra's Phoenix/Vengeful Pharaoh you then realize that you aren't really discarding cards but simply drawing 2 cards for 1 mana. Although this card is much stronger in vintage or classic, I believe that I can build a standard deck around it.
Some of the best standard cards to play around with Faithless looting are: Gravecrawler, Chandra's Phoenix, Vengeful Pharaoh, Burning Vengeance, Desperate Ravings, Unburial Rites, Ancient Grudge, Geistflame, Bump in the Night, Ghoulraiser, Gravedigger, Postmortem Lunge and Reassembling Skeleton.
Be tuned in the next few days to see what deck I managed to make around of this new gem.
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Equilibrium Point Part 2
As you can imagine, the answer will vary based on length of time chosen, whether Paypal or tickets are used as payment, and whether the Wikiprice message is displayed. For this example, we shall use that Wikiprice is being displayed, the bot is the LITE version and since this is a new bot, only one month is being considered. The rental price is $5.
At 2.5%, it takes 40 tickets worth of trades to accrue a fee of one (1) ticket.
So five (5) tickets means that two hundred (200) tickets worth of trades (in a month) is the equilibrium point.
That sounds like a lot of transactions I can hear you say. And it is.
These numbers were specifically chosen to make the math easy. Algebraically, it can be written as:
1/(amount of trades needed to accrue 1 ticket of fee ) = (rental price)/(X tickets worth of trades.)
Or, to make this into a spreadsheet-friendly form, also known as “solving for X:
X = ((amount of trades needed to accrue 1 ticket of fee )) x (rental price)
Looks ugly, doesn't it? It's easier than it looks. 1/40=5/X is how this looks for the example chosen.
X = 40 * 5 is how it looks for the spreadsheet version.
But I'll save you the trouble of opening up a spreadsheet: here are the final values and next time, we'll go over these scary numbers and draw some conclusions.
(Apologies for this. The table I drew up looks awful in the final draft. So I took a snippet as a picture and this became shrunk. Clicking each picture will put it normal sized.)
Friday, February 24, 2012
MTGO Library Bot 4.86 is out!
Weekly Card Review (WCR1 Part2)
Lands : 4Drowned catacomb 6Island 6Swamp 1Mountain 2Nephalia Drownyard 2Ghost Quarter
Other Spells: 4Ponder 3Tragic Slip 4Heartless Summoning 2Forbidden Alchemy 1Black Sun's Zenith 2Sphere of the Suns
Creatures: 2Perilous Myr 1Black Cat 1Phantasmal Image 1Priest of Urabrask 4Solemn Simulacrum 2Phyrexian Metamorph 2Bloodgift Demon 3Havengul Lich 1Steel Hellkite 2Wurmcoil Engine 1Consecrated Sphinx 1Massacre Wurm 2Rune-Scarred Demon
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Equilibrium Point, Part 1 of 2.
When a bot is new, say making only a handful of trades a day, it makes sense to use a pay as you go system. Likewise, if your bot does like 100 trades per day, it makes sense to pay for a defined time period.
But at some point, there is a point where it does not matter which method you choose, where there would be no difference in either method.
For those of you who have taken formal economic theory, this is a fairly common type of problem. I also will leave this as a “homework” assignment for the intellectually curious and next time, I will solve this problem: at what point should you switch your fee structure? What is the equilibrium point?
MTGO Library Bot 4.85 is out!
Monday, February 20, 2012
MTGO Library Bot 4.83 is out!
Weekly Card Review (WCR1)
Please feel free to add more ideas and discuss the cards on each week!
The big point of this creature its the ability to cast creatures from the graveyard for just a colorless mana.
The best cards to play around with Havengul Lich are: Snapcaster Mage, Priest of Urabrask, Heartless Summoning, Perilous Myr, Viridian Emissary, Mana Leak, Slash Panther, Core Prowler, Rage Extractor, Fiend Hunter, Discipline of Griselbrand, Mentor of the meek.
From Infinite card drawal, mana, damage and proliferate this card is yet to be fully discovered, the ideas for decks around this card don't stop coming.
Be tuned in the next few days to see what deck I managed to build around of this new gem.
ML Bot 4.82 is out!
This will result in less trades missing in the tradelog (the 18th February was a very bad day about this!).
Sunday, February 19, 2012
Collection Evaluation
I have created an evaluation tool based on the Swebot pricing. Free to use for everyone!
To check it out simply go to www.mtgoswebot.com/Evaluation and upload your .CSV file!
Although you first have to log on / create an account and write something in the forum before you can use it!
The evaluation tool is still in an early stage and might not work as it should at all times! If you should get an error when evaluating i will automatically get an error report and i will look in to it as soon as possible.
Everything you need to know how to use the evaluation and a guide how to create a .CSV file of your collection is on the site! :)
If you have a big collection the evaluation may take very long time!
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Wikiprice down for maintenance
Friday, February 17, 2012
Confessions of a Botter, Part 3
“Bottom line, how much is this gonna cost me and how quickly can I see a profit?” he asks.
“Let's see. $10 for a bot name. Relatively insignificant. A computer, which you have in droves. We'll start you off on a pay-as-you-go fee until your bot gets enough customers to warrant the other fee. The biggest expense you will have is obtaining the collection. Depending on the size of the collection, it could easily be a few hundred dollars.
As far as how quickly you will see a profit, it really depends on how large your collection is. The more unique cards you have, the more potential sales you will get. It also depends on the bot itself.”
“As in a catchy name?” he jumps in.
“Not so much a name as players are not affected by that per se. But if you get lucky and can buy bots from someone leaving the bot business, you can shave a lot of time as the bot will have its previous reputation. Of course, this assumes that the previous owner did not do anything to sabotage that aspect.”
“So when can we get started?”
“How about right now?” I counter.
And so begins my friend's journey into botting. As it was around 23:00 on a Friday evening when we reached this point, I thought I would give him some tasks to do to prepare for this:
[1] Pick a machine, wipe its drive and install Windows. Apply all patches as need. Avoid putting unnecessary programs on this machine.
[2] Purchase a name for the bot.
[3] Download .NET and Magic Online and log into MTGO.
[4] Visit MTGOLibrary and register your bot there.
I visited him later that weekend and helped him polish off some things and gave him some excess inventory to get started and thus he began his botting journey.
Next time, I am going to travel down a side road of this conversation. It got me thinking on something we do not discuss so I will discuss that next time.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
MTGO Library Bot 4.81 is out!
A server is up and running, the DNS is propagating and in short time you should be able to use the bot and visit the website as usual. ML Bot 4.81 is out, fixing a crash at startup due to the new "large" PRM set, that now counts 933 cards. MTGO Library Bot 4.81 supports also the new set, Dark Ascension (DKA)
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Confessions of a Botter (Part 3)
Monday, February 13, 2012
MTGO Library Bot 4.80 is out!
Wikiprice down for maintenance
wikiprice is currently down for maintenance. You can still visiti the page www.mtgolibrary.com/wiki.php, bu you won't find any card until tomorrow.
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Quo Vadis Standard?
In paper Magic there have recently been two big tournaments promoting Dark Ascension. There were held in Standard format. I did some research and checked the top8 decklists in order to see how Dark Ascension will affect on Standard. To my surprise there were only few cards from Dark Ascension there. They can be counted on the fingers of one hand. Metagame didn’t change much. No revelations. I found only one new deck - mono green agro, which is responsible for a raise of prices of Garruk’s and Sword of War and Peace last days. Rest decks are just modifications of well-known decks. Some of them don’t run even one card from Dark Ascension or they use only one uncommon.
The conclusion is really simple – don’t expect big demand on Dark Ascension cards after 3-4 weeks after Release Events. In the first days prices are always skyhigh, but later it is going to be quite cheap set, unless some professional players come up with a new decklist containing more Mythics or Rare cards from Dark Ascension. We must wait and observe how the future unfolds. Dark Ascension goes on sale in the Magic Online Store on Monday, February 20 at 9:00 AM PST and the Release Events begin after the downtime Wednesday, February 22.
Here you can find decklist from: Pro Tour Honolulu and SCG Open.
Running bots using minimal resources (Part 6 of 6)
Hello, on these series I will help you on how to setup a bot or multiple bots.My main focus will be not on how to configure and install everything, but on how to save as much memory and resources helping bot users with slower computers to experience a performance boost.
part 1 Virtual Machines
part 2 Operative System
part 3 Operative system Tweaks
part 4 Required software
part 5 Keeping resources to a minimum
part 6 Hardware recommendations and Conclusion
Part 6: Hardware recommendations and Conclusion
I will separate my recommendations depending if you use your computer exclusively for bots or also for personal use or gaming.
Processor
For many applications the number of cores isn't much relevant on a processor, but when it comes to running multiple Virtual Machines they can be crucial on the performance. If you use the PC exclusively for bots, my recommendation will be investing in a Intel Xeon Processor, with the biggest number of cores and the high QPI of 6.4GT/s its a top choice if you can afford, if in the other hand you still run the PC for personal use/gaming etc, a i5-2500k or i7 should be enough to run 5-6 bots on the same PC without any problems.
Memory
This one is very straight forward. with about 2-4gb required for most users usage + 2~GB required per virtual machine, I would recommend to run 4+2xNumber of bots GBs if you use the PC for gaming and about 2+2x Number of bots if you run it exclusively for botting. Higher frequency and/or lower timings usually don't bring a much noticeable boost in performance.
Storage
Solid State drives have a huge advantage on loading times, both windows and MTGO and having those fewer seconds of loading , less noise, less heat and less fragmentation I would recommend nothing but SSD's to run your machines main operative system and Virtual Machines.
I Recommend a SSD with a size of about 30GB for main OS and typical programs you usually install with Windows +6GB per bot (See previous parts to see on how making a small sized VM drive and fit windows and MTGO library into it).
Remember that you can still have a big Hard Disk Drive to store all the other non botting stuff.
Remember to consider if you require support for multiple monitors.
MotherBoard
Stability, Stability and... yes.. Stability. A rock solid stable and quality motherboard should be a priority, make sure yours will be compatible with all hardware choices and that isn't causing trouble to anyone else (a quick search online should do the trick).
Power Supply
Just like the motherboard, stable voltages can be the key to success, also remember that this beast will be on 24/7 powering a always in 50%+ usage powerful CPU and likely to have no "rest", so make sure you buy a reliable and powerful one to your system.
Cooling
I dedicated some attention to this one myself, with a constant cpu usage and memory load I've decided to use water cooling on my system. It's quieter, cooler and in my opinion safer than air cooling, mostly to the fact that if something fails, it will still cool for a few minutes and the temperature alarms will give me time to act, while if a fan fails, its more likely to cause overheat damage. Be aware that most new CPU's and Motherboards will slowdown your processor or shutdown your system if a certain threshold is reached (usually of about 90-95 Celsius) but this doesn't make your PC immune to overheating damage.
Friday, February 10, 2012
Confessions of a Botter (Part 2)
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Running bots using minimal resources (Part 5 of 6)
part 1 Virtual Machines
part 2 Operative System
part 3 Operative system Tweaks
part 4 Required software
part 5 Keeping resources to a minimum
part 6 Hardware recommendations and Conclusion
Part 5: Keeping resources to a minimum
Automatic Price updates
Updating prices automatically can save you hours of adjusting prices, my recommendation is to set it for more regular updates just before, during and after new set releases and less regularly in between.
MTGO Weekly Maintenance
This is a crucial couple of hours. you can use this time to delete all extra logs/temps/screenshots, reboot your main machine, defrag main machine drives and VM's Drives (Solid state drives do not require defrag) also the best time to check your main pc's updates, specially the ones that require to reboot.
You can download programs that let you set times to do all these functions without requiring to touch a single key but that takes time and a lot of effort to set it all up, but surely worth it if you want to leave your bots on for months without any assistance.
On these breaks I usually take 15-30 minutes to clean my computer dust filters, give the system a good general check, such as water cooling levels, dust, temperatures, etc.
Just make sure your computer doesn't look like the "Before" one below :)
Soon I will give you my best Hardware recommendations and complete this series on how to run bots using minimal resources.
Confessions of a Botter; Part 1
Sunday, February 5, 2012
Poker in Magic, part 4/4
Final part is about “tells”. A tell in poker is a change in a player's behavior or demeanor that is claimed by some to give clues to that player's assessment of their hand. A player gains an advantage if they observe and understand the meaning of another player's tell, particularly if the tell is unconscious and reliable. For instance, tell is when we know that our opponent beats his lip when he has good cards. Dan Herrington, who is poker expert, grouped tells into three categories: facial expression, body language, gestures. The most reliable and the clearest signs, which our body sends, are gestures.
Most players are conscious of necessity of controlling the facial expression, but they do forget about controlling other parts of their body or their behavior becomes unusual. A player who all the time was talking when he drew his starting hand suddenly mutes may send us sign: be careful, I have good cards. What is more, often players who has a good hand sit upright or their hands are shaking.
Besides observing behavior of yours opponent, you should keep two simple rules in your mind. Experienced player is conscious of his tells and he hides them better than a new or advanced player. Beginners show their true feelings by the gestures. They getting nervous and yearn when they do not draw a card which they would like to. Furthermore, weak means strong, strong means week in gauging play of unknown opponent. Usually, a human being tries to hide his true intention by acting in a totally opposite way to what he in fact thinks. Thus, players who hold weak hands attempt to convince other player at the table that they are strong: staring down an opponent. Whereas, players who hold strong hands tend to try to disguise their hand as being weak. They attempt to fly under the radar by being a passive player at the table: not making direct eye contact, they are friendly and talkative. If he says with unnatural confidence and loudly “keep” there is a high probability that he has a weak hand.
Click here to get 50 USD. You merely need to pass quiz and send them photo of your ID.(they verify people, otherwise everyone would create multiple accounts and cash out 50 USD from all accounts). Where is the catch? There is no catch! Poker platform wants to have more and more players and they lure people with free, real money. Enjoy!
Saturday, February 4, 2012
Server down
the server is currently down. We are working on it and it will be up and running in a couple of hours!
UPDATE: the server is up. We had 50 minutes of downtime
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Running bots using minimal resources (Part 4 of 6)
part 1 Virtual Machines
part 2 Operative System
part 3 Operative system Tweaks
part 4 Required software
part 5 Keeping resources to a minimum
part 6 Hardware recommendations and Conclusion
I Started by installing .net 3.5 and 4.0, updated the direct x. After that i did not install MTGO or MTGO Library bots, instead i Copy/Paste the already updated/configured folders. By doing this you are saving registration clutter (Such as unistalling info about mtgo etc) which isn't required. You can also remove the Graphics for the cards, saving extra room on your small HDD.