CardRunners
What's Your Edge
I know I haven't updated in a while, sorry for the interruption. I have been very busy at work, as those that know me, or those that haven't been living under a rock for the past 6 months can imagine. Interesting times to say the least. I plan on updating this blog more frequently, and doing a longer "what I've been up to" post soon, but I just wanted to talk about a recent home game I played in last Saturday night. The game was hosted by S., a friend of mine who went to Harvard. I did not know him in college, but I met him through a mutual friend a while back. He's a nice guy with kind of my reverse background: he worked at a hedge fund after college and later became a pro poker player. Unlike me, he is very very good at math. He co-authored a few articles in Bluff Magazine with Brandon Adams and also helped Bill Chen out with some research for The Mathematics of Poker book. Even though everyone at the game was a Harvard graduate, we all deferred to him on math matters, whether it be size of the pot, hands to go until someone had to leave, or keeping the book. It was pretty funny. S.hosted the game in his apartment in nyc. The game was five handed, 2/4 no limit. Initially people bought in for 200 bucks, but the game got deeper after a few people stacked off/reloaded. The game transported me back in time to when I was in high school, and we played poker with old-school Hoyle red, white and blue chips on my bedroom floor or on a friends rickety table. There was a mix of competition, camaraderie, joking, ragging on one another, interrupted by moments of concentration where everyone grew quiet when two people were involved in a big pot. There was no fancy green-felt table, no catered meal, no masseuse, in fact there wasn’t even any beer in the fridge, only root beer and water, and when someone suggested we flip to see who would have to go out and get beer no one agreed because it was too cold outside. The game was 5-6 handed, and the lineup consisted of the some of founding members of the Poker Club at Harvard College, which is where Brandon Adams honed his craft. One of the guys had just graduated Columbia law school and was clerking for a year before starting at a very prestigious firm, another was a Portfolio Manager at a hedge fund, another was a risk manager at a bank. I also brought my friend from work to the game who is trying to learn (unfortunately for him he stepped into a very tough 1-2 game!). I had never heard of the Harvard Poker club when I was in school even though they apparently had been hosting games when I was a junior and senior in 01 and 02. The games were held at the opposite end of campus from where I lived, and poker was not that popular back then, but I'm still kind of surprised I hadn't heard of the games being played since I had always looked for games during college but hadn't been able to find any. Oh well, probably better that I didn’t find any games back then. We played from around 9am-230am and the game was very competitive. Each of the guys had played poker seriously at one point or another to varying degrees. In fact, I had recognized one of the players from this old underground club in NY, which is where I first learned to play no-limit (I had only ever played limit before). Obviously we were playing relatively low stakes so the money didn't mean all that much to us, but the game was a lot more intense than I expected it to be. People were agonizing over calls, and the play was overall very solid. I caught some flack for being a horrible dealer (the game moved a lot quicker because everyone had a deck to shuffle so we didn't have to wait very long in between hands), and of course in high school I got ribbed for this, as well (being one of the only non-asians among my friends this was an obvious stereotype). I got sucked out on in two major pots (once getting it all in with 33 on AA34 board v. A2—two on river no problem, and once with KK v. AQ on 43510 board all in on turn A on river on problem), yet still managed to book a nice win. But more than that it reminded me why I initially grew to love the game in the first place, and what I hope poker will be for me in the future. I started playing poker for money when I was in high school, and now, 10 years later, I can still enjoy it, whether it be playing online and really dissecting my opponents’ games and statistics, etc. playing in high stakes private live games or in a casino, or playing with buddies on a weekend night, chatting while the hours disappear so quickly because you’re simply having fun. It’s a beautiful game and one I hope to enjoy recreationally for years to come. Also, the 60 minutes piece will air this Sunday, November 30th, at 7pm on CBS: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/11/25/60minutes/main4633254.shtml There should also be a Washington Post piece this Sunday, as well.
--David
Dec 1, 08 19:24:14
Hi David,
I watched the 60 minutes special and it was quite interesting. I just joined CR with hopes to learn from a pro such as yourself.
I look forward to reading your blogs.
Thanks,
Tim
Let me start with the UB superuser investigation.
if you want more information about this, you can read this thread: http://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/showthread.php?t=99247
As some of you may or may not know, Mike (trambopoline) and I had suspicions last September that there might be a superuser on UB, playing under the screen name NioNio. The way this all came about was that Mike and I were chatting on IM, and he asked if I remembered a specific hand I had played a few months ago (this was in September). The hand was something to the effect of: Nionio raises, with 200bb, I reraise, he flats OOP. I have AhKx. Flop comes 7xx with a flush draw. I have no pair. He chk shoves for an overbet. I called him off and he won the pot when the flush came in on the river. I ave a pretty good recall for hands ,but this one obviously stood out in my memory because I am not usually calling off 200bb with no pair no draw. However, Nionio played such a seemingly “crazy” style, that I felt I had decentish equity against his range.
Mike and I commented that Nionio played a crazy style, but that he must have won huge. I said it was worth it to check out my database. Not only that, I wanted to analyze his stats (I really enjoy using statistics and data to analyze my opponents and my own game). Eventually, we complied 3k hands on Nionio, and in that short time frame he was up roughly 300k, winning at 75ptbb/100, which is insane. Literally 10 standard deviations above the mean. While 3k hands is not a large sample size by any means, it’s not prohibitively inconclusive, either. We then further realized that he played a very statistically anomalous style.
His aggression factor per street, VPIP/PFR:
- PF: 1.27, Flop: 1.50, Turn: 3.08, River: 6.36
- VPIP/PFR (mainly 4-6 handed): 50/36
Obviously, NioNio was playing a very strange style, and absolutely crushing the best players on the site. Mike and I then looked at the actual “data” (the hand histories themselves). We paid particular attention to a heads-up session Mike had played against NioNio, where NioNio never put much, if any $ in the pot when Mike had a big hand, chk-called most draws when Mike had a made hand, and chk-raised when Mike was bluffing. However, he was not an idiot, like the AP superusers were. He did not have an aggression factor of infinity (meaning they would raise/fold every time on the river since they knew the cards). He called sometimes with the worst hands, and he semi-bluffed draws, and also made some bluffs.
We thought that NioNio might be a “smart” superuser (even more scary, if someone had the self-constraint to play very conservatively and cap their win rate at 5ptbb/100 they would probably never be caught). We made a post on 2p2, trying to portray NioNio as a potentially smart superuser (AP/UB are owned by the same company, and the AP superuser scandal had come out so we thought there might be a chance the same thing might have happened on UB). We prepared the post, using PT Statistics, and hh data, and got absolutely vilified. People thought Mike and I were idiots, and crying over split milk. While I can understand their skepticism, we thought we had presented an argument that was at least compelling enough to merit consideration. The thread we started literally almost got deleted, but thankfully, it was kept around long enough (mainly because of my and trambo’s reputation) for others to chime in with their own hand histories, Josem made a graph, mypokerintel released their database to us, etc. Eventually it became clear that we were onto something.
However, UB, with their poor customer support, was not very helpful. I won’t bore you with the details, but the bottom line is that over months of investigations, phone calls, etc. UB finally released a statement admitting that fraudulent activity had in fact occurred on UB, and multiple accounts, not just NioNio were using superuser capability to steal millions of dollars from high stakes player. A lot of my friends got huge refunds. I know multiple people who got low-six figure payments. I got a decent sum myself.
Overall, this entire experience was quite an amazing one. Trusting our initial intuition, having the guts to follow through with our analysis despite getting shredded by other members of the poker community, using data and statistical analysis to show that superusers were on the site, having the community come together (Josem, Omniheart, Cornell
Other than that, things have been going really well. I am really enjoying my job, and I’m learning tons of new things every day.
My birthday was this past weekend, and I rented out the
Poker has been going well lately, too. I had a few really bad live sessions, but I’ve done well online, so that’s helped. Here are some of the bigger pots I’ve played recently. I know right now I don’t have what it takes to become one of the top players, I think less because of natural ability and more because I don’t have the time necessary to devote to become as good as the Mjorg’s, Samh’s, Stinger’s of the world. However, I still have it in me to be the best player I can be, so I am still studying the game when I have time. I have a video upcoming in mind which I think will be really good, so look out for that.
Here theguru11 (mjorgenson) gets me to commit 10k before the flop with no pair (I just held AK). Not surprisingly, he won the pot. http://www.pokerhand.org/?2796317
That’s why he’s a champion and I have to work a 9-5.
Here, another famous champion, Samh, fools me by this tricky flop raise. Once I check the turn to him, he has the opportunity to take a free card, but that’s not how great players play, they are aggressive. Unfortunately, I could not hit and the best hand preflop won the pot. http://www.pokerhand.org/?2796349
Anyways, again sorry for the lack of updates, but expect more blogs in the future.
David
Here is a pic of me and my really good friend Dan from college. He gave a little toast at the dinner, and he described how I always had a million different ideas to make money. I’m glad I finally found one that worked out. Hopefully a few more ideas I have will work out, as well.
Jun 23, 08 19:07:17
Hey gaucho, I have to say I think your blog may be my favorite one on cardrunners given your honesty and enthusiasm that it seems you put into everything you do... What you guys did with the UB scandal was unbelievable and hopefully we get to here more from you in the future. I'd also be interested if you could talk about some of the stuff you do at work and how it translates to traits that helped you in poker (in laments terms of course). Thanks for doing what you do.
Jun 25, 08 21:24:38
I've rarely post in blogs but I wanted to let you know that I've been a big fan of your vids/blog and wish you would post/make vids more often. I also wanted to thank you for bringing the UB scandal to light, even in the face of criticism from your peers. While I don't (and perhaps never will, 200nl FTW) play highstakes, I feel that the work you and trambo did was one of the best things for us, the players who play on these sites regularly. Happy belated birthday and I look forward to more blogs/vids. Thanks
Growing up, I loved basketball. If I had one great passion during my teen years, basketball was it. I played, watched, read about, and talked about basketball 24/7. I saw many amazing players growing up in
It was awesome to watch, and it was also nice to go to the game with Daniel. Like me, he grew up in a single parent home, and having a male influence around to give him advice about various situations is important. I feel, at the very least, if I can give him a realistic example of someone who came from a relatively similar background who has “gotten out” of his situation, it’s a good thing. For a lot of the other mentors, they can’t relate to the kids they mentor (and most likely, vice versa). I can speak to Daniel with a comprehensive empathy, and treat his revelations with sensitivity and genuine compassion and understanding. I feel like I can give him “advices.” Advices are basically nuggets of advice, but for some reason, the word is pluralized. I’m not sure who came up with it, but I love pluralizing random words, so I think it sounds good.
One thing I told him was to always analyze the potential upside and downside in a given decision or situation, and to analyze alternative solutions. I walked him through a concrete example. We saw a bunch of scalpers outside the Garden. I asked him if he could analyze the upside and downside of scalping. We made up numbers. He buys a ticket for 100 bucks, and sells it for 200. His upside for scalping that ticket is 100 bucks. His downside is either 1) he doesn’t sell the ticket, or 2) he gets arrested. We talked about what happens when he gets arrested, how that affects his future business, what’s the emotional and monetary cost of his getting arrested. We concluded that the downside far outweighed the upside. Obviously, this was a simplified example, but providing Daniel with a kind of framework for decision making might cause him to think twice before he makes a foolish decision in the future, which is all I can hope for. Anyways, the game was fantastic, and Daniel seemed to have a great time.
In poker news, I have been playing a bit lately, with some mixed results. Right now I am basically playing 5/10-10/20 online and I have to say I’m struggling with my game. I got somewhat depressed when someone asked me to send them some information about myself and I sent them the “in the spotlight” feature cardrunners put out back one year ago this month, in March 2007. That month, I made around 180k, and felt so strongly about my game. I was constantly analyzing situations, talking with really smart people about the game, looking every day to find ways to improve. And the results followed. Nowadays, not being able to devote as much time and energy to the game, I know I’ll never be a great player. That knowledge is frustrating, but at the same time I have a whole new slew of challenges and interests, and I’m getting quite fond of putting the same energy and effort that I put into poker into finance. Hopefully the results will follow there, as well. All is not lost, I’m up around 80k this month, so I can’t really complain, but poker for me was always about challenging myself to be better, and I know gone forever are the days when I can mess around and put up big numbers.
One sick live hand recently (private game): Me and the villain are 60k+ deep, game is 25/50. Villain thinks I like to reraise him light, and he’s not incorrect. Already during this session he has 4-bet me and I folded, and he has done this in the past as well. He opens to 200 utg, gets a few callers behind. I am in the BB and I wake up with the 65dd. I decide to reraise for a few reasons: 1) we are so deep I don’t mind doing this and it will be easier for me to get paid off big if I flop a monster because of deception, 2) he will be less likely to reraise me given I had done it before, 3) I will pick up the pot a large % of the time. I make it 1500. As soon as I put the bet out, I realized I “mis-clicked” and put out 2500 in chips. Villain thinks for a while, looks at the people behind me, and makes it 10k straight. Everyone else folds and it gets back to me and I am forced to fold. We agree to show each other what we had. I showed the 65dd, he showed the AA. We ran the flop, it was Axx all diamonds. Turn blank. River blank. I felt sick. 120k+ poof vamoose it doesn’t exist!!
dp
Mar 20, 08 19:07:06
Being from Chicago I have the same thoughts about Jordan. Never got to see him play, will always regret it.
Love your blog man. But c'mon, you're up 80k this month and you say you'll never be a great player? That's a little hard on yourself eh?
Mar 21, 08 02:09:47
I always get a kick out of you complaining about your results only to hear you say you're up nearly 6 figures.
Mar 21, 08 04:23:17
yeah im having such a shocking month too im only up \$8,927,348,723,507,012,514 these last few days... the days of me winning poker are over! i mean wtf??
you're obviously driven and will be a success in anything you do AND that's all down to you and your efforts and your personality, but don't take these things for granted, they're still gifts.
Mark
p.s. love your blog and your vids, love them!
Mar 23, 08 23:56:34
u shoulda told that kid about the ups and downs of your governer buying a prostitute. or the ups and downs of hookers in america. then u shoulda bought him one.
Apr 10, 08 19:12:21
best blog on CR, u need tp update more plz whether its about poker or not.
May 22, 08 15:49:38
I think that since you are obviously past your prime on the felt, you should retire and start a charitable trust with your measly 80k per month. You could shoot down to time square and co-host Mad Money with Jim Cramer and reminisce about the days when you used to manage real money.
I haven’t been playing much poker at all lately, but I’m eager to get back into it and will post some hands soon. In the meantime, a friend in finance asked me to write up a few thoughts about the similarities between the two fields, and what I wrote him is below. He does pretty well for himself and is a smart guy, and he told me to save what I wrote, that I would use it in the future. Someone asked me when I thought my poker skills would start “kicking in”--believe me, I can’t wait.
Poker v. Finance (some of this taken from a previous blog)
Here are some thoughts:
1. A big misconception about poker is that is a math game. While it's important to have a good grasp of numbers, as well as be able to estimate quickly, you can achieve high levels of success without ever delving deep into the underlying mathematics. Particularly in no-limit, the math is relatively straightforward, and there are fewer compounding problems then there might be in limit hold 'em, for example. Similarly, there are many fields in finance which people think are incredibly mathematically complex (stat arb) for instance, which aren't actually that complicated when broken down. It's not rocket surgery, but it's logic.
Poker is, in its essence, a logic game. It relies on history (memory), anticipation, calculation, thinking through a range of possible outcomes based on imperfect information (this might be the most important), and conviction. It also requires superior personal management. Chip Reese once said that what he felt defined a great poker player was to be able to play well when losing. It's so easy to think clearly when winning, but have a few losing sessions in a row, or lose for a month or three months straight, and then it becomes that much more difficult to play well and manage your emotions. To be successful at poker, and theoretically finance, you need to be able to have a strong memory, and intuition developed from thousands of hours of experience and analysis that allows you to make strategic decisions within a logical framework.
However, many breakthroughs in poker coming over the last two years have been from the math/game-theoreticians, and, and while poker is along way off from being solved by computers, some of the freshest insights will come from math/computer programming, but for now there is still so much room to be successful without relying exclusively on math/models (similar to finance).
2. Poker and winrates. The theoretically achievable winrates/swings in poker are very similar to finance. For example, a winning poker player wins maybe around 52% of his sessions. A superior poker player maybe wins 60% at the very max. A trader who trades every day might win at approximately the same win rates if a day=session. Playing poker teaches you about variance, about not being results-oriented (this is a logical leap most people outside finance/poker don't understand), viewing things from a long-term perspective, and about managing capital (for example, risking more than 5-10% of your bankroll in any one session is a recipe for disaster--however, it's appropriate to take big risks, say if your edge is huge--if I played in a game with terrible players, I might risk more than 5-10% of my capital). So it teaches you naturally about capital management and appropriate risk taking in order to achieve the greatest chance for long-term success.
Below is an old blog entry where I put my thoughts on how it relates to finance in bold.
Here is a blog entry I wrote 7 months ago about what it takes to be good in poker/improve: I will post thoughts about how this relates to finance in bold.
This content of this entry stems from a conversation I had today with a friend from law school. Basically, I had played some poker before the start of law school, but did not get really serious until I was in law school. A bunch of the first year law students had a mutual interest in poker (we started a poker mailing list) and I remember a friend of mine and I taught a few of the people in our section how to play one night (that was fun), holding a mini-tournament. There were a bunch of people who I would say were relatively equal in skill to me but I seemed to improve more than them. Obviously, putting in time is necessary to get better at anything, but I also felt I had certain things going for me that allowed me to improve so rapidly.
My friend thought I had a "process" that he found impressive. Here is what he said from observing me.
1. I don't hide my errors. In finance, your p/l is staring you right in the face, same as in poker. you are forced to recognize when you lose, and the better traders/poker players will analyze by directly confronting their losses and their wins with an objective analysis process.
2. I focus on constant improvement. You cannot rest on your laurels, every day is a new sessions, a new experience, a new chance to learn. The people in finance who don't focus on constant improvement/development will not survive.
3. I have solid records.
I think all 3 of those are true. But I added some adjustments/amendments to what he thought, and I think the things I list will be good things to focus on if you are working on improving as a player. I cannot speak for anyone else, but the following "principles" work for me. Also notice how absolutely interlinked these three guiding principles are.
1. Never think you know the best way to play a hand. This is akin to thinking you always know the best strategy or possible trade in given scenario. There are many smart people out there who are thinking about the same trade, it's really important to focus on listening to others/figuring out what they do that makes them successful/being humble enough to accept criticism to be able to improve.
Even if I won the hand, if there was another way to play the hand I would really dissect the hand in my mind and find ways I could have played it better given the specific circumstances surrounding the hand (opponent, position, stack sizes, image, etc.). I would also ask other players what they thought of how I played the hand and whether they could find a better way. Even when I was just playing live, I would keep a journal of hands in a journal and this process helped me forumlate my thoughts and improve. Most people that I've found always say something like: "this was how the hand went down," or "this is how I played the hand," or even "listen to this hand," and then proceed to tell you how they played the hand. They almost never are looking for criticism, and it seems they do very little self-reflection when they win the hand and even when they lose it and get sucked out on. The real truth of the matter is that there is no perfect way to play poker and no perfect way to play any specific hand. You should always be looking for better ways.
2. I am extremely honest with myself and very self-critical. Most people are not self-critical at all. They just assume, "that's what was going to happen."
Most people I know aren't very honest with themselves. If they lose, they blame it on bad beats or running bad. If they win, they assume they played well. I know I am not perfect, and I know there is always room for improvement. You have to be 100% honest with yourself (in your record-keeping, in your self-reflection, in everything pretty much) in order to have the best chance to improve. I also am extremely hard on myself. Most people don't like to think of themselves as being wrong or making mistakes. I assume that I WILL make mistakes, and when I make those mistakes (and especially if I REPEAT those mistakes) I am very hard on myself. Poker is a form of self-mastery, and if you are honest with yourself you'll immediately notice negative patterns that affect your game. I repeat mistakes all the time, but that doesn't mean I didn't try to self-reflect or improve upon those mistakes. However, there are many mistakes that I have corrected, and that is in large part due to my honesty and self-criticism.
3. I am a student. Finance offers an opportunity to learn every single day. Every day new information comes out, needs to be analyzed/processed, every day new ideas are developed, etc.
I really am a student of the game. I post hands, discuss hands, think about hands, read others' hands, and talk with others about the game. I was lucky when I was learning to form a friendship with some great poker players and they have helped my development so much that I am incredibly grateful. If you find someone better than you who happens to be willing to discuss hands with you, reach out and form a friendship with that person, it will benefit you greatly. Friends can also act as a support system when you are unsure about certain aspects of your game, or even help you out with advice on a wide variety of scenarios.
4 (addendum). Get lucky. Applies to finance as well, it helps to be lucky early on in your career.
It goes without saying that almost every great player ran hot at the start of their career or they would not have reached the heights they did. I certainly ran hot when I played 50/38 in 6max.
What do you guys think of these? I'd be curious to hear others' thoughts on these principles.
In keeping with the above rules, here are two things I'd like to work on in the future if I want to be a regular winner at 25/50 (which is my poker goal for now).
1. Do not go off for large amounts of money, simply quit when you are losing. It's so easy to go off for large sums when you are tilting and multi-tabling at 25/50. It can be disastrous to play when you are not in the right frame of mind, and after taking a few beats and losing around 4+ buy ins, it's best to just pack it in for the day and come back the next day or a day or two later and play with a fresh head. Poker is one long session, but managing the little incremental segments of that long session are critical to long term success. This point is especially true for days following big winning days. This is a common pattern I have noticed in myself and the way to correct it is to simply quit whenever you start to feel invincible and start pushing marginal situations too much. Do not risk too big a portion of your capital in one session; do not put yourself in a position where your downside is going to be a big portion of your capital.
2. Practice impeccable game selection. It's really important to fish hunt and play in games where you have at least one big fish playing. At 25/50, to make a game profitable for me now I think I need at least one fish or two marginal regulars. A game with play2kill, stinger, cts, etc. is simply not going to be profitable for me. Trade where you have an edge.
Finally, my personal assistant Julie scanned a ton of pictures that I had lying about, which was a big project, and I found this old gem among them (thanks Julie!). It’s probably my favorite picture ever taken of me. I’m not really sure why I like it so much—I think it’s just it reminds me of how I felt at the time, like the whole world was mine for the taking, that I could accomplish anything. The expression on my face—it’s like I’m contemplating that. It’s from my first day of college, in Holworthy Hall in the Harvard Yard. I am sitting in one of the standard-issue chairs before anything has been unpacked. I have a brand new basketball in my hands, I have my watch on, I have a Pirates hat on with the rim bent just so, and I have on brand new shiny metallic silver Air Max 97s. I’m 18 years old and I didn’t want to be anywhere else or be anyone else than who I was that very moment.
dp
Feb 23, 08 13:14:05
One of best blog posts I've ever seen. Well done. I'll reread over again in like a week or so. I'm gonna go into finance as well, but I love poker, and I notice the parallels between the two. I'm Jewish, so I'm an obv shoe-in for finance. I'd like to see some CR vids from you soon, as well as some hh with thoughts or something. GL
Feb 24, 08 12:04:01
Great post that articulated a lot of ideas I have been thinking about lately. A few posts back you mentioned you had been reading a lot of finance books. Anything in particular you recommend? I have read about a dozen or so finance books, but never read anything that really gave me the insights into finance, in the way that cardrunners or a forum like twoplustwo have for poker. I have speculated that the complexities of finance, along with the dynamism of hyper-competition, make it difficult for anything but broad ideas to be discussed in books. Anyway, any thoughts or recommendations would be greatly appreciated. Thanks
Feb 24, 08 22:49:39
i strongly disagree with point #1. any way you break it down, its game theory. and thats largely math based.
Feb 27, 08 15:24:26
You are an amazing role-model and inspiration. Your direct analytical style of thinking has helped me in much more than just poker, but also my thinking on life concepts and in general. I can thank you enough \$tinger.
Feb 27, 08 15:29:47
I mean gaucho- not \$tinger, I appoligize!! (i was watching a \$tinger vid at teh time of my post and accidentally jsut put his name)
Despite my love of film, I still had TVs that were almost 10 years old. Here was how my living room set-up used to look:
But for no real reason other than I decided it was time for change I picked up a very nice entertainment center, with all the amenities. I purchased the following:
-46” Sony Bravia XBR(R) LCD flat panel HDTV
-Sony RHT-G800 Home theater stand with integrated surround speakers and twin subwoofers
-Panasonic DMP-BD30K 1080p Blu-Ray Disc Player
-A Wii with all the necessary components/cables (I won’t play this myself, but it’ll be a nice thing for when friends come over)
-Tiger Woods PGA Tour 08
- Guitar Hero III (I’ve heard this is fun)
-Wii Nunchuk controller (apparently this is for boxing)
-Wii Charge Station and 4 Wii controllers
-Logitech Harmony 880 Advanced Universal Remote (crucial)
The end result is just incredible. The TV looks amazing, I watched the Super Bowl on HDTV, and best of all is the blu-ray disc player. Watching a movie on blu-ray, the quality is so crisp and clean that it looks better than being at the theater. You really have to see it to believe it. Below is a picture of the new setup, taken while watching the opening shot of GoodFellas, while Ray Liotta is speaking one of the more memorable opening lines of American film of the past twenty years:
“As far back as I can remember, I always wanted to be a gangster. To me...being a gangster was better than being president of the
I’m extremely pleased with the purchase, and I can’t wait to enjoy it.
Since I am posting pics of technology, here are a few more.
This is “the moneymaker,” as I call it. I paid for all of my graduate and law school education on this laptop, plus a lot more. It is a nice, 17” inch dell, and I can 4-6 table on it easily. It’s still my preferred way to play.
Here is my Dell Computer that I got a few months ago, which is an absolute beast of a computer:
And best of all, here is my 30” Dell Monitor and my 23” apple monitor side by side. You can 9-table on the Dell easily (not that I have ever done it, but I may want to at some point).
Haven’t been playing much poker lately since I have been incredibly busy at work, but work is going very well and I couldn’t be happier. I am so thankful to be able to have the job I do, and to be able to be excited about learning every day. If anyone has any questions about finance/hedge funds in general, feel free to ask.
Feb 11, 08 11:39:25
Nice Setup! I have that same Panasonic blu-ray player, it is the shit. There are so many great blurays out there. I highly recommend the spider-man movies, die hard movies, pirates of the carribean, etc. They all look and sound phenomenal.
Feb 12, 08 10:38:57
What exactly is your job at the hedge fund? Describe a normal day at your job incl start hrs/end hrs...I'm just delaying getting a job in finance just because im a lazy bum that doesnt want to spend 12hrs a day working in finance when I can work 2-3hrs playing poker making loads of money!!! Plzzz convince me to find a real job:P!! Thx
Feb 13, 08 08:50:57
Neat setup. I would like know how the current financial "upheaval" affects the hedge funds? are the insiders worried? Life must have been extremely great for hedge fund managers in the past couple years.....but how is the situation now and how do the insiders see the future?
This pic is taken around 715am in my apartment as I’m leaving to go to work in the morning. Brian and Taylor stayed over at my place and slept on the pull-out sofa, I assume because they couldn’t afford a hotel room (j/k). It was cool to have Brian and Taylor over, it’s always a real pleasure to talk about various business things with Taylor, he really likes to think about various ways to make money, and I like to think along the same lines. Brian also had a lot of fun gossip about the poker world, and it was interesting to hear his perspective on the poker and the poker world in general. He is a very serious minded individual and it’s no surprise that someone with his personality would be very good at poker. He is dedicated, analytical, and forward thinking. Ezra, Brian, Taylor and I went to dinner at a Brazilian steakhouse near my apartment, and talked about poker, finance, business, and other random topics. Unfortunately, we did not see Leelee Sobieski like we did last time we went to that particular restaurant. I felt bad for Brian, since he obviously doesn’t enjoy traveling/being out of his comfort zone (which is understandable given he lives in beautiful Santa Barbara) but hopefully he enjoyed himself somewhat and it was cool to hear his perspective on things.
While Taylor was in town we also got a chance to go (along with Ezra and Emil a.k.a. whitelime) to one of my favorite massage places (if not my favorite). As anyone who knows me knows, I love massages. However, I am also very particular about the kind of massage I like to get. I love massages that are very strong and incorporate stretching (thai and shiatsu come to mind). Madison Towers Spa has a very discrete, old-school shiatsu massage spa where you can sauna/steam room beforehand and then get treated to an amazing massage where they walk on your back, stretch you out, and overall leave you feeling completely relaxed. After the massage is over, you can lie down on a heated floor for the final aspect of the massage. It’s certainly an experience and I would highly recommend it to anyone if they like a strong, vigorous massage.
The next day we went to Tamarind (Indian food), which was Emil’s recommendation, and it was really great. I had my office mate Greg come along and since he has played a lot of poker and actually built a successful poker bot, he had a lot in common with the people at dinner. Of course, I lost credit card roulette (I run SOOO bad at cc roulette), but it was funny, because I started to complain about losing, and Taylor said: “Yeah, but you run good at life.” I have to agree with Taylor, and felt grateful for being able for being able to pay for dinner for my friends without a worry. It made me think back to the first time I paid for an expensive dinner myself (see old blog entry “trying to get that bread…”), and I realize how lucky I am. As Jay-Z said: “I’ve seen the worst of the worst, I deserve every blessing I receive I’m from the dirt…”
Anyways, was great having Taylor in town, but I was sad to see him go. We were supposed to head down to the Borgata in AC for the 5k tournament this past Friday, but the person we were going down with could not make it, so Taylor decided not to come. I still went with some other colleagues, and had a great time. Unfortunately, after playing great the entire day (it was a 2-day tournament) I bubbled. That’s right, 27 places paid, and I got 28th.
Here were the two fateful hands (comments/thoughts appreciated).
Hand 1: Blinds are 2k-4k (500 ante), I have around 140k in chips with the average around 85k and I’m cruising. I went from having one of the toughest tables I’ve ever been at (with Lee Markholt, Brock Parker, Gavin Smith, John Racener, Bill Elder and a few others) to being at a table where the only really dangerous players were T-May (very nice guy, by the way, shout out if you read my blog) Steve Sung, and, briefly, Bill Elder. There was an older gentleman at the table and he was talking about his gambling website, “Blackjack for Winners,” where apparently he teaches you how to beat the casino. A guy at the table remarked, “go to my website, it’s called baccarat for losers…I bet I get more members than your site.” The table had a laugh at that. Anyways, he has been playing very strangely, making odd-sized bets and over-raises, calling tons preflop, and donking out at flops seemingly indiscriminately. I am just waiting to find a spot against him. I make it 10.5k (yes, this was on the smaller side but I had seen a lot of the good online tourney players make this size raise so I tried it out) from MP with A4dd. This is a relatively weak opening hand but at this point I had a strong image. It folds to the BJ for Winners guy who thinks for a long time (he starts the hand with around 107kish). I see the wheels turning in his head, realizing that it’s only 6.5k more to him. He decides to call. Flop comes KK3 one diamond. I have no pair, but a backdoor flush draw. He leads strongly at the pot for 17k. Previously, I had seen him donk a number of flops with a wide variety of holdings, but I did not read his donk out as strength. I felt relatively certain he did not have a king here. I thought about raising, and I actually went into the tank for a long time (over a minute), and I didn’t want to raise to 45k or something then get shoved off my hand (which might even be best). So I floated. Turn came Qs. Board read, KK3Q. He donked out “fatty” (in the words of T-May) on the turn for 35k. I looked at his stack, he had 44k left, and I shoved him in. I wanted to convince him I had a king, obviously, and I would have played a King the same way. He went into the tank for about 5-10 minutes, and he was visibly close to folding. I was debating whether or not to talk to him during the hand, but I decided to just be quiet. He finally called, and he had the ole Q3o for three pair. No ace on the river and I was almost out of the tournament. I really don’t know how I feel about this hand, on the one hand I can convince myself I made a +EV play, and had I won that pot I would have been chipleader of the tournament with under 40 players to go, but unfortunately, he made a great call and I was devastated chip-wise.
In other notes from that table, I got the chance to meet Bill Elder, and T-May was asking me about my job and I told him a












