Bojack1 said:
It doesn't matter how many different places you play and what rules you play if you are playing a negative game. Negative is negative no matter how you try to spin it. Also your play may vary from session to session, but it should only vary in degrees of positive expectation, not negative.
Duhh! What game in any casino is positive? Yes, we all attempt to garner an advantage so that we are playing in a positive scenario. True. But my point is for everyone to see the fuzzy aspects of the math. You don't enjoy the game because you think of it as a black/white world. I see colors. I would not play the game if I did not derive enjoyment beyond making money. But I would not play if I did not make money.
There are many techniques that can be employed beyond the obvious that most players use to try to catch an edge. Wonging might work but it's no fun and boring. Leaving a shoe every time it goes negative is a pain in the ass. All I have done is developed plays/strategies that suit my style of play and brings home the bacon. How many player can look at their logs and mathematically average a 73.6% win ratio over years???? I can. So although my stlye of play may not be text book perfect, I win.
My point is I am not a Tiger Woods...his swing and play is nearly text book perfect. I'm the rebel who swings his clubs like a baseball bat but some how compensates for that and still plays scratch golf. I never took a lesson, I read and watched and practiced...like blackjack. Get the anology?
And one final question to your post"If you play long enough in a positive scenario you will win"... are you sure? I've lost lots and lots of money during the positive swings...back to my question, when have I reached the long run?
Don't take this the wrong way, but for someone who has played this game for 30+ years you sure seem to have a limited view on advantage play. Complaining that wonging is no fun, boring, and just a pain in the ass sounds more like a recreational ploppy mentality. I agree that wonging isn't the most fun I've ever had, but in terms of playing a winning game, I'll take it over sitting at a table for hours on end playing through negative crap. Thats not my idea of fun either.
As far as finding other ways to find and exploit advantages, there are many besides just counting. My team has employed many, very successfully for years. I will admit we haven't really invented anything new, but we do play the advanced techniques to the highest level available. There are even methods of play with 0 variance and gauranteed money everytime. With any luck that will be something that won't be published for a long time.
So if you are an overall winner, good for you. It just seems out of sorts because you don't understand ROR and claim to be dealing with "fuzzy" aspects of math. The only thing about math that is fuzzy is how its applied, math itself is absolute. Your self described techniques you have developed are more in line with hunches and gut rather than math. As an AP I can't buy into such things.
And to answer your final question, yes I am sure if you play in a positive scenario over time you will eventually win. Of course there will be losses during positive situations, thats just a factor of the short term results that you don't buy into. The problem is not with the positive playing scenario but with not identifying what one is. As far as when you will hit the long term, you'll never know as you don't seem to have a trackable plan on your playing. If your claims of winning in over 30 years of play are true though, why worry about it now?