Also, you can tell from the website that the Pokie King is selling a secret formula that tells you when a machine is an overlay. This is easy to do with machines that must follow fixed rules (poker, blackjack, keno, craps, roulette, ...) but a bit more complicated on the new penny slots where you have to make educated guesses at the base frequencies, unless you can bribe a slot tech to tell you what they are.
How to make educated guesses:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statistical_inference
--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, "Bob Bartop" <bobbartop@...> wrote:
>
> Just to be clear, in case there are others like me who are a little slow sometimes, I finally figured out that you have to add an "au" at the end of his url, pokermachineschool.com.au. If you don't add the "au", you won't get very far.
>
> I'm a little confused about "pokie" machines. As anyone knows who listened to the show, it was quite difficult to understand. The connection quality wasn't too good, and his accent was quite heavy. I did find that it helped to listen to the show's download, which I did over and over until I understood it better.
>
> I'm still curious if they have video poker, like we have in the U.S. The machines he was talking about sound quite different. He says he's played all over Australia, New Zealand, and even in Asia. Asia's a pretty big continent, so not sure what countries he's talking about.
>
> It sounds interesting and anything with potential is worth learning. Although I don't plan on going to Australia in the not-too-distant future, I still would like to know more about what he was talking about.
>
[vpFREE] Re: Frank's guest from Australia
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