What you should do is, PRACTICE more so you dont make mistakes!Reachy said:Hi
How detrimental is it if you are +/-1 out on the RC? What about +/-2 etc? If you think you've made a mistake what should you do? Flat bet and BS until next shuffle or make a guesstimate erring on the side of caution?
Cheers
Reachy
If you are practicing intently between trips, then just make the guess and continue. zgReachy said:what do you do then? Flat bet until next shuffle or make a reasonable guess based on the information you are sure about?
Profit is NOT a good guage. Use practice/drill software like CV or NeUltra. zgReachy said:Incidentally is there anyway of gauging how accurate your count is? Profit I guess would be a good starting pointAny others?
I just got CV and I am really impressed. It has an amazing amount of different options to use. There are so many things you can do to make practicing just like playing in your local casino. I highly recommend it.Reachy said:Have been contemplating CV for a while now but haven't heard of NeUltra. Can you tell me a bit more about it? I've googled it and nothing comes up other than links back to this forum!!!
Thanks in advance
Reachy
i usually guesstimate erring on the side of caution and or flat bet with just basic strategy when this happens to me.Reachy said:Hi
How detrimental is it if you are +/-1 out on the RC? What about +/-2 etc? If you think you've made a mistake what should you do? Flat bet and BS until next shuffle or make a guesstimate erring on the side of caution?
Cheers
Reachy
i often wonder if there is room for intuition, hunchs, intelligent guessing and thought for advantage play blackjack. the conventional wisdom is that there is not. as advantage players we know the importance of sticking to the game plan. none the less one has to wonder if strategic thinking, intuition, hunchs and intelligent guessing plays a part in successful endeavors that we make in the rest of our world decisions that is dominated by entropy why not blackjack too?zengrifter said:Ed Thorp wrote the same conclusion in '61 - if the errors are occassional and random (ie, not chronic) the have virtually no effect on the overall results. zg
See Zengrifter Interview. zgsagefr0g said:i often wonder if there is room for intuition, hunchs, intelligent guessing and thought for advantage play blackjack. the conventional wisdom is that there is not. as advantage players we know the importance of sticking to the game plan. none the less one has to wonder if strategic thinking, intuition, hunchs and intelligent guessing plays a part in successful endeavors that we make in the rest of our world decisions that is dominated by entropy why not blackjack too?
sagefr0g said:i often wonder if there is room for intuition, hunchs, intelligent guessing and thought for advantage play blackjack. the conventional wisdom is that there is not. as advantage players we know the importance of sticking to the game plan. none the less one has to wonder if strategic thinking, intuition, hunchs and intelligent guessing plays a part in successful endeavors that we make in the rest of our world decisions that is dominated by entropy why not blackjack too?
well it certainly doesn't work for ploppies in the blackjack zone. but what about us advantage players? we do know that a well placed mistake can give us good camo with out hurting our bottom line significantly. so what if we use a well placed 'mistake' at a time that it both provides camo and answers some call for intuition, hunchs, intelligent guessing and strategic thinking? the art of such a tact i should think would be in making such moves an extremly rare ploy.
curious as to what others think on this matter.
best regards,
mr fr0g![]()
I only go so far as to say that in those often present "wide-border" count zones it is quite acceptable to lean towards intuition (for play or bet decisions), since statistically it wont hurt. zgAutomatic Monkey said:I do not want to give anyone the idea of going out there and playing hunches when money is involved.
If you lose the count, the best thing to do is: 1) assume the true count is the same as the last point where you are sure you knew the count. 2) Calculate a running count based on that true count and the current number of decks, and 3) start counting at this point, using the running count you just concocted.TENNBEAR said:I am guilty of losing the count from time to time, and I am certain most counters do, I will usally just flat bet until the next shuffle.
I fight the urge to follow hunches, I get into trouble every time. I will lead out with a intermidiate size bet on the first hand after a fresh shuffle if the dealer busted on the last hand of the last shuffle, this is done for camo. All the rest is done sticking to the program.
yes i had read your interview previously. funny that it didn't fully register in my conciousnesszengrifter said:See Zengrifter Interview. zg
http://www.blackjackinfo.com/interviews.php
this is the sort of thing i was alluding to. i'm curious as to your use of the phrase "wide border".zengrifter said:It seems you have broken away from the card counter “orthodoxy” over this and the
related use of intuition?
The hit-stand-double index for basic strategy departure is a wide-border “coin-toss” zone of
perhaps two digits, plus or minus. Therefore, I encourage the use of one’s intuition when the
decision is close. If decision by coin-toss will not reduce our effectiveness for these ever-frequent
wide-border decisions, does it not stand to reason that we can learn to increasingly utilize the
‘meta-awareness’ faculties of our brain and “go with the force,” so to speak, to potentially obtain a
subjective improvement over raw statistical expectation?
Consider for example, that while our conscious mind may not be aware of that extra 4 or 5 still
remaining in the deck, and not evident by our true count of +1 when we face 16 vs. 10, modern
science tells us that our brain did notice the hit-not-stand situation, despite a true count indication
to the contrary.
this may sound way off base. one cue that has served me well in life situations has been a sense ofzengrifter said:Can you give us some pointers about using intuition at the tables?
You may consciously play your hunch in the wide-border zone by taking a ‘prompt’ from your
‘adaptive-unconscious’ - that area of the brain-mind that processes and sorts an ocean of sensorydata
entirely without conscious awareness. One way that we can learn to take an ‘intuitive-prompt’
is via physical ‘cues’ – skin or other bodily sensations in particular have been proven to relay
intuitive resolution.
Zengrifter Interview – page 6
George Soros, the billionaire currency trader, uses pain sensations in his back to signal when to
buy or sell, beyond what all of the technical and computer analysis at his disposal might otherwise
indicate.
Additionally I believe that a counter’s intuition power, for use at the frequent wide-border decision
zones, can be increased dramatically through regular meditation. In fact, meditation offers
substantial physical-mental-spiritual benefits. One method that I have used for years, and
wholeheartedly endorse, is ‘Transcendental Meditation’ or ‘TM.’ The TM method requires just 20
minutes application morning and evening. Results are typically enjoyed within 1-4 weeks, and
increase with continued regular use
i agree with you.Automatic Monkey said:I do not believe that the human mind has the power to discern the value of the next card in the shoe, using intuition.
However, if certain theories about human consciousness are true, then it is possible we may have a link to our reaction to that card in the future when it is dealt. This is something that is probably more suited to the Zen Zone than the Blackjack Zone, and I do not want to give anyone the idea of going out there and playing hunches when money is involved. Many scientists believe that the human mind functions using physical principles not observed in the rest of the world and that this is related to the fact that certain events seem to require a human observer to occur. Our minds may not be limited by the temporal property of causality (the need for cause to precede effect) which would indicate the possibility of our knowing our reaction to a card before we see it.
This question may be answered someday by a grand and wonderful experiment, but please do not try this at the blackjack table! Play the indices, bet the count!