You're assuming they are trainable...Dyepaintball12 said:If I owned a casino the first thing I would do is train my PBs how to count.
Device laws based on the Nevada model do not allow either the casino or the player to use any device to count cards in real time. If the casino uses this device to decide to order shuffles during play it could very well be illegal.alwayssplitaces said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5n1nVLRyJ_k
Some company is marketing a glorified ruler for casino surveillance to keep track of the running count. That's just silly. And it won't help if a counter is not using the Hi-Lo method.
Most players don't know how to play a pair of 9's including casino personal so he might be telling the player how he would play the hand.Gamblor said:There's many more like him. Just saw a floor person advise a player not to split 9's against dealer 4. "Never break up a made hand".
Sat down at a shoe next to a dealer I knew from another place.Cardcounter said:Most players don't know how to play a pair of 9's including casino personal so he might be telling the player how he would play the hand.
I'm assuming they can add 1, 0, and -1.21forme said:You're assuming they are trainable...
Yea, I assume they're smart, at first, until they prove otherwise.Dyepaintball12 said:I'm assuming they can add 1, 0, and -1.
Not legal.Bondy3 said:yes, because multi billion dollar establishments that have swings daily of 100k+ and multi million dollar surveillance systems cant afford a computer to count
I believe a Nevada court has told the casinos they may not use Mindplay that way, because it affects the results and play of the game.bigplayer said:Device laws based on the Nevada model do not allow either the casino or the player to use any device to count cards in real time. If the casino uses this device to decide to order shuffles during play it could very well be illegal.
Better off to assume in general that our opponents are smart and dedicated. But of course in reality this is often not the case. Just need to think through how most companies hire and treat their employees, its "expensive" retaining talented and experienced employees.LVBear584 said:What morons would need that stupid stick? Many of our opponents, that's who. LOL.
They are psychologically different from us because they chose the low-skill, low-reward, low-ambition path of a career in a casino. We chose the high-risk, high-reward, the-more-skill-the-better path on the other side of the table. That's why the only ones who ever appear to be decent people to us are some of the dealers, a lot of them do not consider that their career and they are just doing it to pay bills while they aspire to something better.Gamblor said:Better off to assume in general that our opponents are smart and dedicated. But of course in reality this is often not the case. Just need to think through how most companies hire and treat their employees, its "expensive" retaining talented and experienced employees.