It is simply very well known that, at that time, Caesars offered the best games anywhere. Maxim soon followed suit. When the SD games finally disappeared, Maxim continued to offer DD with S17, DAS, and LS. Managed by Billy Zender, Maxim had a very liberal policy. I played there for years and never had a problem. And, of course, the Caesars main pit offered the best possible rules for their shoe games: S17, DAS, LS, and RSA, forever.
Don
I HAD to give that a thumbs up
Part of the modus operandi includes the coveted BSST (Ball Scent Sniffing Technique). This swift and subtle motion stimulates the nasal membranes which then expands arterial diameter thus resulting in increased oxygen flow thereby increasing decision making speed capability of the neural pathways. Science in action.
In many parts of the shoe. Whereas indices are created in a , let’s say, billion card sim analyzing deviations per true count bucket. Just imagine index changes per true count bucket when taking QTC into account.Your concept of QTC in your regaled FBM ASC Advanced might help with the issue of varying index with the shoe depth
Understood on both counts. However does the sim not calculate ALL remaining remain8ng card combinations within the index parameter thereby creating the index - by inference those card combos with a higher QTC achieving a higher expected value than those with lower QTC.
Seems to be a concept not easily grasped.
It is neither necessary nor possible to sim all remaining card combinations with current technology when using card counting. I've thought about using qubits in future; but it doesn't apply well, at least for the next decade or so. Exascale is less interesting, as it doesn't apply even if it weren't absurdly expensive as it's aimed more toward massive, parallel floating point calculation, in particular add-multiply.
CVData uses a combination of CA and sim; but sim is at the heart as the CA part just reduces the sim hands required. I have a design to speed index gens; but am busy at the moment.
"I don't think outside the box; I think of what I can do with the box." - Henri Matisse
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