I take it that you cannot answer since the best you could come up with is good grief. I am sorry that the thread carries kinda saucy undertone from my side, it is not my intention, but I think that this needs to be clarified though. So please try to answer the question. Instead of treating me like a hopeless idiot with your good grief, it's very ignorant you know!
Playing at your kitchen table and in a casino are similar. Sometimes you will win and sometimes you will lose. This, in no way, "proves" anything other than your method of play worked for that particular, insignificant, set of events.
That's my last word in this thread. Perhaps someone with more patience, and who is in the mood to be called ignorant, will help.
"I don't think outside the box; I think of what I can do with the box." - Henri Matisse
Pretend you have a six-sided die in a box. The box is shaped so that when you look inside, you can only see the top face of the die. Each face of the die is coloured, but you don't know how many faces of each colour there are.
Suppose you are going to make a bet with your friend about the outcome of a single roll of the die. Before making the bet, you are allowed unlimited prep time, during which you can play with the die in the box, but not remove it from the box.
What do you do?
Answer: when you bet with your friend, the die will only be rolled one time. Therefore, in order to best assess what is likely to happen in that scenario, your test should also be rolling the die only one time. You roll it once, and whatever colour you see, that is the colour you should bet your savings on.
Playing at my kitchen table and in casino is very similar indeed. And I definitely wouldn't call the set of events insignificant, yes compared to the simulation of billion hands it is insignificant of course. When I will be going to casinos with real money the sets of events will be much closer to the insignificant sets of events at my kitchen table than in the billion hands.
As for calling you ignorant I apologize but remember you implied that I was an idiot first!! Simple law of action and reaction.
I played about 378 hands per session in a 6D shoe, in a week that would be around 2646 hands, why would that be not enough to have a positive result, let's say I'll do the same the week after and have a different result then I can average it out. What's wrong with that?
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