Special Bug Pages

Showing posts with label memphis mojo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memphis mojo. 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

Monday, June 9, 2014

Memphis MOJO out in third... Wow!


What an amazing night for Dave (MOJO) Smith. It started with him busting out the eleventh-place player (Jim Custer) early in the evening to advance himself and nine other players to the unofficial 10-handed final table. Then a short while later the 10th place guy got knocked out, and they were down to the official 9-handed table and the live streaming started. It was great fun watching the 30 minute delay throughout the night.

There's about a dozen key spots that happened during that final table, but I'll leave it to Dave on his own blog to discuss further. The bottom line was he was surrounded from the start by really, really tough players, including three well known  poker professionals (Dennis Phillips, David Tran, and Dan Heimiller). Dave was stoic and solid, playing really balanced game, super tight and nitty at times (e.g. he folded pocket eights twice preflop within about 20 minutes of each other) but then attacked super strong in between those nitty stretches without fear. Solid, patient, selective, and very aggressive. Text book winning poker formula.

Congrats Dave! I'm really thrilled for you. Enjoy that $280,000 3rd place paycheck and come back next year even stronger to win it all!

All-in for now...
-Bug


Sunday, June 8, 2014

Run, Memphis, Run!

WOOOOOT!


Memphis Mojo continues his deep run in the $1K Seniors event. He's made Day 3! They're down to 32 players and he's still got a very playable stack. Read all about it here.

Having played in this very same event last year with Dave, I honestly can't fully describe how happy I am for him. Yes, I'm more than a little envious I didn't get to play this year... but I am so incredibly thrilled he's down to the final few tables.

This year's Seniors Event broke last years entrance record, with 4,425 players entered this time around. The moderately short stack nature and fast blind structure of the $1K events means the action is fast and furious-- you have to be both lucky at times and willing to gamble, but also (ironically) very patient. You also obviously have to be very talented to survive even the first day. The prize pool is nearly $4 million, with more than $627,000 guaranteed for the winner.

I will absolutely be watching the live stream tonight if the Mojo continues to work and Dave makes the final table.

Go, Memphis, Go!

WOOOOOOOOOOOT!

All-in for now...
-Bug

Saturday, June 7, 2014

Motley Memphis Miscellania

It's been a very busy week for me at work, so not much time for play or posting. Ergo, here are some miscellaneous bits that have popped in and quickly out of my mind since the last posting (all collected during the week via Evernote (see below)):

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Trying out a new blog layout to simplify things a bit. Feedback is welcome...

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Since the demise of PokerStove, which was arguably the most significant and game-changing poker software ever written, us die hard equity geeks have been forced to find other alternatives. Equilab is a good (free) one I use when I want to run multi-way combos, but the one I like the most is  Flopzilla, which has the cool ability to show you graphically how hard you hit a flop with both specific hands and ranges alike. Here's an interesting one, for instance: Holding a pair of eights, you're actually more likely to flop a set than an overpair:


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Fellow poker blogger Memphis Mojo is currently making a deep run in the Seniors event at this year's WSOP. Run, Memphis, Run!

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One of the most important things to do when implementing the R-is-for-Reading step of my REDi system is: Look Left. How many people are there left to act? What are their tendencies? How likely are they fight back? What ranges do they reraise and/or cold call with? Do they like to squeeze? What size stacks do they have? What if any tells can you pick up? And so on....  Remember that the upstream action is definitive and fixed and 100% readable, but the downstream action is the big unknown-- and those folks are going to have position on you throughout the hand if you decide to play. Make sure you take the time to assess their intentions before acting yourself.

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Wow. Got contacted by a pretty serious and talented poker player who wants to watch me play. This person is a known "name" in the poker world. Coincidentally, I also was contacted by the Guru, who also wants to spend some friendly sweat session time with me online. I'm weighing whether I want to really open this particular rabbit hole door or not. Lots of reason both to and not to do this.

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The CIA has joined the Twitter world this week, and it turns out they have a sense of humor after all. Their first post was: We can neither confirm nor deny this is our first post.  Cute.

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For the past few years, I've been using Microsoft OneNote to keep all of my notes in life. This includes work, home, personal, project, and of course poker stuff. Unfortunately, I was switched from a PC to a Mac earlier this year, and while there is a Mac version of OneNote available, it's buggy and has some significant limitations. So... I made the switch this week to the other big name in this note-taking business: Evernote. While not perfect, and certainly with its own limitations, Evernote works seamlessly on my new machine and I'm finding the switch not too hard to make. I'd love to hear how you loyal readers take and organize session notes and poker strategy, but if you're struggling I would suggest you look into the (free) Evernote. It works cross platform (Mac, Windows, mobile devices, web-based, etc.), is fairly intuitive to use, and makes keeping, searching, and using collected data and notes pretty easy.

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All-in for now...
-Bug