johndoe said:Interesting article.
If it's to be believed:
The survey requires 150 hands or so, and more for counters, so the common wisdom of ~1hr sessions holds pretty well.
650 surveys in 11 years? And only 10% required action? That's 6 per year! And they consider AP's a threat?!
PBA: I never heard of this software. Seems awfully pricey for what it is though.
ihate17 said:I accept the 150 or so hands and have used it as a guideline in many situations.
The 6 a year requiring action needs clarification. I think if we polled everyone on just this blackjack board we might find 6 MGM backoffs this year alone. The 6 per year might be based solely on the use of this one program while others are backed off because of other reasons/programs, but I think the number is very small.
ihate17
Most of my Las Vegas backoffs have come in notoriously sweaty and hostile properties. No comparison between these and the way things are done at MGM, and the way you would protect yourself is vastly different too.Pro21 said:I believe most back offs happen because an AP is recognized by someone in the pit or surveillance. Another common way is for someone to use a name that they don't realize is poison.
I like to ask you how old is your article.Pro21 said:
That hasn't been my experience with RFIDS. Wouldn't they have to have the capability of reading the cards as the plays are made? They may have it, but I've never noticed it anywhere. I have played several tables with rfid chips and 'puters hooked to them. No unusual heat from them yet. :eyepatch:Mr. T said:I like to ask you how old is your article.
Nowadays with the RFID chips these manual, tedious, long man hours work is really obsolete. The pit boss looking at his monitor will get a red light or flashing light in a split second if the computer detect a card counter. He can also see what HA the player is playing at and how this HA may vary as the player plays on.
You and others can calculate the HA for the player but the computer cannot. How so, may I ask.QFIT said:The ads for the software may claim this. But it is patently absurd. Even if RFID chips were perfect, and perfect data could be collected, a computer has zero chance of calculating anywhere near the advantage of an AP. I've spent a great deal of time looking at this, not because I want to measure for the house, but because I would like to tell a player what his "real" advantage is. It is not close to possible.
We calculate advantage and risk based on a billion hands and an absolutely defined set of strategies. The software used by some casinos looks at a tiny number of hands and attempts to divine the playing, betting, wonging, tipping and cover strategies based on an absurdly small subset of hands. It has no concept of what is a cover play, versus an error, versus an actual strategy. It doesn't even know the tag values used, whether there are side counts, if the player is tracking, if the player is taking cues from a partner, or if the player mimicking someone else. The entire concept is ridiculous.Mr. T said:You and others can calculate the HA for the player but the computer cannot. How so, may I ask.
You need an additional program for your computer if you have someone in the eye count down the shoe with the player to evauate him while the RFID simply lets him know what he has bet on each hand.daddybo said:That hasn't been my experience with RFIDS. Wouldn't they have to have the capability of reading the cards as the plays are made? They may have it, but I've never noticed it anywhere. I have played several tables with rfid chips and 'puters hooked to them. No unusual heat from them yet. :eyepatch:
That has been my experience also. They kinda lay in wait. :laugh:FLASH1296 said:I like the post by "Lonesome Gambler"
I have been backed off and even trespassed upon my second visit to high end properties.
The circumstances coincide with having my play reviewed following my initial session.
That make sense.ihate17 said:You need an additional program for your computer if you have someone in the eye count down the shoe with the player to evauate him while the RFID simply lets him know what he has bet on each hand.
The other solution that just does not work right (yet at least) was something lke Mindplay21, where the computer knew each and every card in the shoe in their exact sequence. There are enough old threads here explaining why Mindplay was a complete utter failure, but it did have the capability of knowing the count, the amount bet and could relay this information to the pit.
ihate17