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Showing posts with label Full Tilt Poker Remission. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Full Tilt Poker Remission. Show all posts

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Saturday's Sundries


Some olio for this Saturday:
  • PokerStove. A few posts ago, I implied that Pokerstove was dead (here). A few people have since corrected me. Turns out that one can evidently still find the program online, just not through the original website. I won't provide the links here, however, as I have no idea how safe those particular sites are; you're on your own if you want to download a third-party copy. Also, some folks have told me that if you already have a copy installed but it won't run because it's trying to update, you can trick 'Stove into continuing working by fiddling with the date and time settings on your computer. See the comments of my original post to read more about that particular option... 
  • MemphisMOJO. I'm still vicariously high from fellow blogger Dave "MemphisMOJO" Smith's deep run in the Seniors $1K event at the World Series of Poker (WSOP) in Vegas. Seriously, besides blogging about it, I must have told a dozen non-poker-playing friends this week about his feat. Wooot!
  • Full Tilt Poker. Holy miracle of miracles: my Full Tilt Remission is finally on its way. I received a formal email this past week that the money owed me would be transferred into my back account within 7-10 business days. About freaking time, US Government. FWIW, I plan to use the money to play in the upcoming Arizona State Poker Championship in August.
  • Monthly Tournament. I'm still smarting over forgetting to Look Left at a recent local tournament I played in. Argh. Mojo commented on my blog post that he calls this sort of behavior the "Execution Gap"; i.e., something you know you should be doing, but you don't for whatever reason. Argh.
  • Omaha. Should you play Ah7h4s7d under the gun in PLO? Unlike Texas Hold'em, there really isn't such a thing as a starting hand chart in Omaha-- way too many hands to fit on a chart. The other day, I did some digging and discovered an improvement to the old Capelleti point system for determining the playability of PLO hands. It's called the Hutchison approach, and while it's too complicated to go into herein my blog (click here if you really want to read more about it), I've played around with the system and it indeed seems to be the real deal. Anyway, per the Hutchison system, this particular suited Ace hand has just 19 "points," which means it has only an ~8% chance of winning hot-and-cold by the river. Said simply: it's a long-term negative-EV hand to play out of position (OOP). Without knowing anything else about your opponents tendencies, this means this is a pretty easy fold preflop.

-------------------Non Poker Stuff Below-----------------

  • Evernote. I'm still really really liking Evernote, which I switched to from MS OneNote a few weeks back. Yeah, I know: is there anything more boring than some zealot proselytizing at length about a new exercise obsession and its alleged results, or a new new life-changing religion, or how to get rid of head lice, or whatever? Well, hold on and prepare to be bored for a moment (or just skip this entry altogether; I won't mind). I've tried a few times in the past to make the switch to Evernote, but I never really figured out what all the hoopla was about. Now after a few weeks I "get it", and it's pretty awesome. No, it's not perfect, but it is significantly helping me get and stay organized at work. Besides just good note taking abilities and web page clipping and the like, the real benefit to me right now is how it integrates into my email inbox. As an engineering manager, my life at work is consumed with reading and replying to emails, teasing out action items, assigning them, and then following up on them with all the various employees that work for me. I end up with literally hundreds of emails per week that I'm chasing, a half-dozen lists of action items, reminder notes stuck to my computer monitor, etc.. Anyway, it turns out there's a cool way to use Evernote that helps streamline this whole process and essentially ensures I "touch" an email only once, but don't lose any action items I need to follow. I spent a few hours last Saturday watching a series of training videos and learning how to do all this, and--I can't actually believe this myself--I now actually have an empty email inbox for the first time in over a year. I'm really hopeful this is a magic bullet for me staying on top of all the action items and tasks I juggle daily and weekly...
  • Home Argh Stuff. I've been fighting  broken plumbing, ants, pack rats, and an intermittent electrical smell in the house this past week. Oh, the joys of home ownership....
All-in for now...
-Bug

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Full Tilt Remission Process & Stacking Off

Been traveling a helluva lot lately, so the posts have been few and far between. Sigh. At least I'm back in town for a couple of weeks before heading out on another monster set of trips. Double Sigh...
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Well, I did it. Finally got a notification from Full Tilt re: my account. I went through the second part of the online remission application process this morning, and I *think* I'm going to get paid what's owed me. 'Bout time, if you ask me...


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Played a 45-minute session today of $25NL. I could basically do no wrong... until I did. Here's the scoop: I had two tables open, and was really and truly playing perfect poker. Making great reads, solid laydowns, and getting it in over and over with the best of it. Turned the $50 I had on the tables into $145 in the 3/4-hour long session. Then I picked up two red eights in the small blind. It folds to the villain on the button, who opens for 75-cents. I have about $75 on this particular table, but villain actually has me covered, which means we're playing super deep stack poker with 300 big blind effective stacks. I figure I have the best hand a lot of the time here pre, but my two snowmen are also pretty vulnerable to lots of flops. Also, I'm going to be OOP, and wouldn't mind taking it down here and now. Ergo, I raise it up to $2.25. The big blind folds, and the button tanks for a while, then calls. The board comes out 8-T-K, with two spades. I'm loving life, as this guy could easily have a hand like KX, including KT. He could also have straight and/or flush draws going on. Therefore I make it $3 into the $4.50 pot. Villain bumps it to $7.5. Okay, wanna play that game? I'm in. I then raise to $20. and he snap shoves me all-in. Arghgh. Time to tank. I know you're not supposed to sweat the whole set-over-set thing, but that's exactly what I start doing. Could he have TT here? I work through the math in my head, and realize that calling is correct, as there's WAY more hands that I crush than the one that I don't (remember, he flatted my 3bet preflop, so I'm ruling out KK from his range). And if he has a draw that gets there, well, that's poker too. I therefore call... and of course he turns over the tens for middle set.

Oh well, that's poker, right? So I shut things down, still happy I made $25 overall for the session (due to the other table's profit, minus this complete stack-off). Set-over-set sucks, but that's poker...

...but then I get thinking. 300 big blinds deep is pretty, well, deep. I know that stacking off with TPTK and even two pair this deep is usually a mistake, but what about bottom sets? Should I have laid down my 888? I don't think so, but... well, I'm curious what any of you folks think...
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Well, that's all my jet-lagged little brain can muster this afternoon. It's good to be back, but I'm tired, and worn-out, and wondering if I played the set of eights right...

...ah, but life could be worse. Full Tilt and the US Government are actually telling me I'm gonna get paid some long overdue moola. And it's not like either of those two outfits have ever screwed me over, right?

Triple sigh.

All-in for now...
-Bug