Geeks Playing Poker? 431
Ben Collins writes "I recently won a satellite tournament at Full Tilt Poker for entry into the World Poker Tour Final at Foxwoods Casino. I picked up poker as a hobby about 4 months ago, and consider myself a decent player, maybe due to programming experience (analytical thinking). Any other programmers/computer people find that they can play poker better than the average person because of their computer experience?"
Online vs. Offline (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Online vs. Offline (Score:4, Insightful)
Then again, what am I saying!! Everyone hop onto partypoker with all your money and find kryond at the NL single table touneys. I suck really bad...honest, I do!
Re:Online vs. Offline (Score:4, Insightful)
As a skilled player myself I can say that my mathmatical skills, used in programing if not gained from it, have helped alot. Though it is true that no amount of statistics knowledge will be the final word in a poker hand, it is usefull when determining betting for value, and dealing with those bad beats when they come along. So every time you win with that 72o hand be well aware that you are give the loser a large value bet, even a 73o is making a few penies on each dollar bet.
Re:Online vs. Offline (Score:3)
I occasionally watch the world poker tour on TV. I even watched some today. At that level, the outcome of the game seems to be based mostly on luck. Sure it takes a lot of skill to make it to the final group, but going all in on an A5 suited takes mostly guts, not skill.
-a
Re:Online vs. Offline (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Online vs. Offline (Score:3, Interesting)
And no, I don't think cryptograph can fix that problem, because out of band communications (phone, IM, etc.) will always be available so long as the players cannot be monitored.
Not to mention the issue of whether or not you can trust the casino. I'm not saying you can't necessarily, but more that I just wouldn't unless we were all there together, in person.
Re:Online vs. Offline (Score:3, Interesting)
Intelligence (or geek skills) isn't the sole requirement. Knowledge will get you so far, but your ability to play the game (primarily the social aspect as you said). At the professional level, so much comes down to reading the other man, and controlling your reactions to how the cards and bets are played out. You can k
Re:Online vs. Offline (Score:4, Funny)
A geek can play above average in a poker game against computer because he can easily read the machine facial expression
Re:Online vs. Offline (Score:5, Insightful)
That, and the fact that many of the popular online poker establishments have problems with bots and people working in collusion to grind out the pots.
Anyway, one of the most important things I've learned while playing poker is that playing penny games online will get you to see enough pots where you can learn the odds pretty quickly. But I personally wouldn't take playing online any further than that. If you want to be a serious poker player, you have to get used to playing the people, and not just the odds.
Luck (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Luck can be utterly crushed by good math. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Luck can be utterly crushed by good math. (Score:3, Interesting)
One of the members of that MIT blackjack team (Semyon Dukach) is now running BlackJackScience.com. [blackjackscience.com]
Indeed (Score:4, Interesting)
The thing with poker is the game isn't all too complicated if we are talking about online play, where sound betting strategy will win you money. Give a logical thinking person a simple poker strategy to play, they will do fine and definetly win some money online.
Online poker is all about logic and patience, and at least the former is found in most computer people, which is why I am guessing they will do much better at the strategic part, which will more or less translate into playing winning poker.
Re:Indeed (Score:5, Interesting)
Patience Indeed (Score:2)
God help you the day you play a 56k'er then. They'll beat you little impatient braodband weenies down
Crazy Fad or New Social Activity (Score:5, Insightful)
I will play from time to time, but I find it best in moderation. Anyways, lets start the flame war.
Is poker a fad or is it here to stay, and why?
Re:Crazy Fad or New Social Activity (Score:2)
I think it's been permanently augmented by the internet, in the same way that the auction, dating and communication industry have been.
10 years ago, was your instinct also telling you that email would die in a year or two?
Re:Crazy Fad or New Social Activity (Score:2)
Re:Crazy Fad or New Social Activity (Score:2)
Yes and no. Most poker broadcasts are heavily edited, so you only see the "exciting" hands. But there was recently a tournament broadcast live (actually with a 5 minute delay to avoid the possibility of cheating), and it worked really well, at least I thought so. The "boring" hands where nobody has much of anything are actually quite inte
Re:Crazy Fad or New Social Activity (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Crazy Fad or New Social Activity (Score:2)
you don't have to go to a casino.
you don't need real friends to have come around if you would play with some friends.
you don't have to play with 'strangers' face-to-face.
also, it's the game where you play against other people directly and not against mathematicall odds by which you _will_ lose.
that being said.. all the fun is in bluffing.. if you're just for short fun in it.
Re:Crazy Fad or New Social Activity (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Crazy Fad or New Social Activity (Score:4, Funny)
But my friends are geeks too (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, back during the boom, the main instigator of our poker games also liked very good single-malts, so any money I lost was more than made up for by a cheerful evening wit
Re:Crazy Fad or New Social Activity (Score:2)
We used to play shithead more, it's much more puerile.
Re:Crazy Fad or New Social Activity (Score:2)
Re:Crazy Fad or New Social Activity (Score:2, Insightful)
Teh Gates! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Teh Gates! (Score:3, Funny)
LK
Re:Teh Gates! (Score:2)
Re:Teh Gates! (Score:2)
I had a friend like that join a game once. By the end of the night he'd lost about $40 (we mostly bought in for $5 or $10 at a time), and most of the other people were in positive territory.
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Definitely. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Definitely. (Score:5, Funny)
Poker Bloke (Score:5, Funny)
Nope (Score:3, Insightful)
IMO (Score:2, Insightful)
~S
Re:IMO (Score:5, Insightful)
Tells are without a doubt the single most overrated aspect of poker. Beginners place so much significance on them and they are in actuality within epsilon of zero significance. If you are playing with absolutely terrible players, can you get a hint of whether or not they're strong or weak based on certain things they do, body language and mannerisms? Yes. Can you do this in the World Series of Poker where you imagine yourself playing at the Final Table and catching a tell off Doyle Brunson that isn't an intentional tell he used to separate you from your money? Probably not. Knowing that the pot is offering you 8-to-1 odds when you are 6-to-1 to make your ace-high flush and there's no pair on board (so there can't be a full house or four of a kind) is much more valuable then guessing and second-guessing what your opponent's scratching his nose three times means, versus his usual two.
My guess is you haven't played much poker for real money, at least not against opponents who aren't god-awful. See? I called your bluff, and I can't even see you!
Re:IMO (Score:3, Insightful)
It's about knowing their betting history, and deducing their strategy from it. It's about information transmitted within the context of the game.
Very hard to do, but not related to reading body language.
Re:IMO (Score:3, Informative)
if you TRY to read and _fail_ then you _will_ lose. if you don't even try reading body language you can play as if you were online(hell, for the heck of it, develope a system of coming up with a random order of different 'signs', blinking eyes or
Definately (Score:5, Interesting)
I go out to the Grovesner Casino in Great Yarmouth (England) a few times occasionally and have won the tournaments there simply by playing out the odds, and always starring at my chips, not playing with them at all, and just doing everything like a robot, thus giving away hopefully no tells! Perhaps I would have less success at a major tournament but certainly on a social level those odds calculating and keeping a steady game and not going on a "tilt" can definately make you win.
Its a game for mugs though
Not analytical thinking (Score:3, Insightful)
Programming has little to do with analysis and a lot to do with gut feelings when you code, and more importantly, when you debug. What I mean is, you "feel" it when the code is right (or whatever solution you're working on is right) and you know long before the end of the project whether it'll be great, so-so or crappy.
Well, same thing for poker: you play by "feeling" the opponents, and your hands, and just "knowing" when the stars are aligned and when you should go. So yes, your programming experience may have something to do with your playing poker well, but not for the reasons you think.
Re:Not analytical thinking (Score:5, Funny)
I can't believe I just wrote that...
Re:Not analytical thinking (Score:2)
Re:Not analytical thinking (Score:4, Funny)
Tell me, what's it like working at Microsoft?
We aren't smarter (Score:5, Insightful)
And this isn't a troll.
But I think that programmers tend to think that they are smarter than the average person. People tend to want to be good at what they do. And for a programmer, being intelligent is one of the most important factors for that.
And with the power of wishful thinking they think they are.
And without even realizing it, they ask questions which imply that programmers are smarter than the average person. That bugs me.
Oh, and I'm a programmer myself.
Re:We aren't smarter (Score:2)
Not to mention the fact that all gamblers think that they are "better than average," and are "winning players."
From the way that poker players talk poker games must have an element of spontaneous value creation because I have never even heard of a poker player that classified him or herself as a "loser." Unless money is being created out of the void someone must walk home with empty pockets.
Re:We aren't smarter (Score:2)
Er... yeah. Or they think they may train to get better. Otherwise, they wouldn't play. No one wants to lose consistently.
Re:We aren't smarter (Score:2)
I would be astonished if this were not the case, at least for any common definition of "smart".
People tend to want to be good at what they do.
Most people *are* good at what they do, at least better than the average person would be at that job. Most construction workers will be stronger than the average person. Most salesmen will have better people skills than the average per
Wil Wheaton is an example (Score:4, Informative)
Given that the man taught himself Linux for the purposes of running his own website [wilwheaton.net], most of us would qualify him as intelligent.
I skim over his blogs about every other month, and recently he's taken up poker as a hobby. He's studied, practiced, etc, and blogs the stores of his experiences playing (LA, Vegas, and so on).
What have I learned by reading them? No, being smarter than the average person does not automatically make you a better poker player. Other things do.
Re:Hypocrite anyone? (Score:5, Insightful)
But I'lll freely admit that I've been guilty of this myself. Assumed that I'm smarter because I'm a programmer, that is. That is why I've spent so much time thinking about it.
And now I see it as a trend with programmers and it is rather obvious when reading slashdot.
A question is asked, which begs for answers which reassuringly imply that programmers are smarter than the average person. It is our communitys little "feel good" ritual.
Re:Hypocrite anyone? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm a physician and I frequently sense that physicians consider themselves smarter than the common individual, programmers included. I am also aware that lawyers too, by virtue of their understanding of meticulous contracts and weighing of evidence, consider themselves *far* smarter than others. Then also come the management professionals, many of whom are happy to consider themselves transcendentally smarter than others they would like to see as personnel, resources and assets they can manipulate.
I think it's a middle-class disease. If you're upper class with inherited property and investments, then the urge to prove yourself isn't all that pressing. But If you're a middle-class and falling into the ranks of lower-class isn't unthinkable, then kicking the lower-class man is a good way to relieve your tension.
Re:Hypocrite anyone? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think it's because of the large amount of exposure professionals get to laymen in that profession; be it programming, lawyering, managaring, or what-have-you. They've all spent many years becoming what they are (university etc) and get much exposure to (a) laypeople in that profession (their customers), and (b) the clique of other pr
Re:Hypocrite anyone? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm an engineer and I know a lot of lawyers. They can't learn the formulas/processes. I can't read 500 pages in three days and remember everything. Which one is really smarter?
It really bugs me that people have to be smarter than someone else instead of just accepting that everyone is different.
Re:Hypocrite anyone? (Score:4, Funny)
Then come the salesmen (like myself) who measure intelligence on how well we indiscriminately outsmart and take the money of all those types...and more. It actually helps us when we find people who are puffed up with the ideas of their own intelligence. It makes it alot easier to do what we do.
We are like the undertakers of the economy. Go and do what you want, but you have to come see us sometime. MUHAHAHAHHA!!!
Survival! (Score:5, Interesting)
Texas Hold 'em (Score:2)
I know of none.
Any suggestions?
(I'm a Winex / Cedega subscriber, if that helps any...)
Thanx.
M.
Re:Texas Hold 'em (Score:2, Insightful)
http://www.ddpoker.com/ [ddpoker.com]
I've never played it, so I can't vouch for its quality. I've seen it sold at a lot of retail outlets though.
Absolutely (Score:2)
Checkout who your company is.... (Score:2)
Where's Wil? (Score:2)
I've seen him talk about playing quite a bit over at his site. Seems like poker has become sort of a *geek* fad as of late.
Personally I perfer the odds at the Blackjack table. At poker yor aren't playing against the house though.
I suck at poker. I have a tell...no I'm not going to say what it is in a public form.
Short Term vs. Long Term (Score:3, Insightful)
Even the BEST in the world, Brunson, Chan, etc., go through long losing streaks due to the high variance of poker.
You can make the correct decision each and every time based on the proper odds, yet lose money for weeks at a time.
It's not how you handle winning that determines how good a player you are, it's how you handle losing.
Re:Short Term vs. Long Term (Score:2)
Absolutely, and this is an essential feature. If the bad players couldn't get lucky and win occasionally, they'd stop playing and the good players would have no source of profits.
Re:Short Term vs. Long Term (Score:3, Insightful)
Online play has created the poker explosion (Score:5, Insightful)
This has changed everything. You can practice for little or no money (I know sites that play 1c/2c games). There are sattelite games, so for only a couple dollars, you can have a chance to win a trip and entry in to a million dollar tournament. It has essentially made the game accessable to the masses.
This is great for us geeks, because the masses arn't very good at math and logic. Online play is all a math game. Once you get pot odds and the probabilities down, you are better than the average player. If you can manage a little patience, it becomes very easy to be a positive player.
And I'll be honest with you, It is rare that I find a video game that is as engaging as poker. It's multiplayer, and winning actually matters, so everyone is trying there best.
PK
Opposite (Score:2, Insightful)
The only time I've felt I had an advantage was when the people I was playing against didn't know how to play poker.
Poker (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Poker (Score:2)
Re:Poker (Score:2)
And gambling isn't an addiction?
The grandparent poster made a true statement, when your good at it, it does indeed become a grind.
I almost guarantee that if you ask any good poker player whether he likes playing poker he will say yes.
I think thats the idea
Not just Poker (Score:2)
avi freedman made it to tv (Score:5, Interesting)
Many pros have a history in computers (Score:3, Informative)
Chris "Jesus" Ferguson - PhD in Computer Science from UCLA
Andy Bloch - Two degrees from MIT, once designed computer chips
Phil Gordon - degree in Computer Science from Georgia Tech
yes, it helps... sorta... (Score:5, Interesting)
I know of at least 2 exceptional professional poker players with extensive computer background: Chris "Jesus" Ferguson has a PhD in computer science, and you'll often hear him talking about how his studies in game theory have helped him at the poker table (and I'm thinking he's right, since he won the WSOP main event in 2000). Also, Barry Greenstein (he's also got 2 WSOP bracelets, iirc - neither were main event wins) is a former programmer who worked for Symantec for about 12 years through the mid-90's. As a side note, he donates every penny of his tournament winnings to charity (and I've seen him win over $1 million at a WPT event).
I've been playing poker for about 6 months now (pretty seriously, been competing in tournaments and reading some of the classic poker books), and I consider myself to be fairly accomplished (poker paid for my neuros audio computer [neurosaudio.com], so I must be somewhat OK), and I'd have to say that being a programmer has helped a great deal with getting better.
As I said, being a good poker player has just as much to do with being able to understand your opponent as it does with being able to count outs and figure oods on the spot. If you can get a dead read on the guy you're in the pot with, you're in better shape than if you've got 24 outs post flop because if you know what he's holding, there's no stopping you.
Great book about geeks playing blackjack (Score:4, Interesting)
No, I suck. (Score:2, Funny)
Reminds me of John Carmack (Score:5, Interesting)
2/8/98
------
Just got back from the Q2 wrap party in vegas that Activision threw for us.
Having a reasonable grounding in statistics and probability and no belief in luck, fate, karma, or god(s), the only casino game that interests me
is blackjack.
Playing blackjack properly is a test of personal discipline. It takes a small amount of skill to know the right plays and count the cards, but the
hard part is making yourself consistantly behave like a robot, rather than succumbing to your "gut instincts".
I play a basic high/low count, but I scale my bets widely -- up to 20 to 1 in some cases. Its not like I'm trying to make a living at it, so the
chance of getting kicked out doesn't bother me too much.
I won $20,000 at the tables, which I am donating to the Free Software Foundation. I have been meaning to do something for the FSF for a long
time. Quake was deployed on a dos port of FSF software, and both DOOM and Quake were developed on NEXTSTEP, which uses many FSF based tools. I don't subscribe to all the FSF dogma, but I have clearly benefited from their efforts.
I'm super smart programmer guy... (Score:2, Funny)
Playing poker is like driving (Score:5, Insightful)
As a matter of fact...! (Score:5, Insightful)
So, to answer the original question, it's not just programmers -- everyone is coming out ahead! Alan Greenspan clearly should take note, as there's something very wrong with the country's money supply.
Better be Good Players (Score:2)
Particularly if they are playing strip poker.
Nobody want to see Jabba the Gut!
hooray for full tilt poker! (Score:2, Funny)
Perfect for geeks, you are sure to rake in the cash and the wonderful full tilt poker! [fulltiltpoker.com]
Any other programmers/computer people find that they can play poker better than the average person because of their computer experience?
I sure know i can, thanks to my wonderful employers at full tilt poker! [fulltiltpoker.com]"
rounders quote (Score:4, Informative)
Carmack playing blackjack (Score:2)
Re:Carmack playing blackjack (Score:2)
Of course counting doesn't require memorizing cards - just mainting a running total. The typical counting scheme just groups cards as hi/lo, and you add +/-1 to the running total respectively.
Re:Carmack playing blackjack (Score:2)
Better than average? (Score:3, Funny)
You'll probably find this article [apa.org] extremely helpful. It won an Ignobel award.
Table Image (Score:2)
I think what helps more, especially when you play with the same group of people a lot, is the image you project at the table. I play regularly with a bunch of my co-workers, most of whom are programmers.
In short, no (Score:2)
The best players I know personally work in print shops and on loading docks, so you might want to hold that "smarter-than-thou" attitude close the vest if you ever actually sit at a table on Friday night.
Be careful (Score:3, Insightful)
It really depends... (Score:5, Interesting)
That said, online poker is much more mechanical than live poker and the advantages for the analytical mind are stronger online by a significant amount. In live play it is much more about profiling people, sensing weakness, and so on then actually what cards you are holding. Online play for any good player is a strictly "by the numbers" you only have to profile particularly bad (or rarely, particularly good) players.
One rather large caveat, being smart/analytical is great but it will not save you against an extremely experienced player. Of course, the ideal is to be both intelligent and experienced, then you are nearly unstoppable (in the long term of course, short term anything can happen).
Myself [www.rage.ws] and the majority of my friends play poker professionally, some extremely successfully [thunderkeller.com] but all make a good living. Note that all of us have college degrees but have not bothered to us them yet.
All it takes to be successful is three things:
1) Money
This is a no brainer you have to have enough money so that you can lose for a significant amount of time without busting your bankroll. It is helpful to have other friends who play and can lend you money if things go bad. To make a good living I'd recommend playing 2-3 tables of 15-30 around 30 hours a week online, for this you'll need about $10,000 to be safe. A good 15-30 player that plays full time, 3-4 tables should be able to make around $60,000 a year or more depending. Typically though an excellent player will move to higher limits when they start making this amount of money.
2) Theory
Books, books, books. Of course the "Bible" for Hold 'Em is Sklansky and Malmuth's Hold 'Em Poker for Advanced Players [amazon.com]. There are a lot of others but this is the best to start with in my opinion. In addition, if you know someone who is already a professional theory knowledge can be gained by simply watching them play and asking them questions.
3) Experience
Don't need to say much here. A professional playing for 5 years will school you 60+% of the time if you've only been playing for a year. The more the better. Note that the "play money" games do not count as experience nor does limits below 5-10/10-20 really prepare you for a 15-30 or 30-60.
As an aside, tournament play can definitely get you experience but don't count on it improving your play dramatically in standard games, with the exception of profiling and reading people. Not only are tournaments typically no limit but they have a much different dynamic in general. There are many good tournament players who suck at ring games and vice versa.
Anyways, the best thing about being a poker player is the total freedom, you can work whenever you want, or not work for a week if you don't feel like it. If you feel like taking a vacation you can just go, of course sometimes you do have to go to places like Aruba and play tournaments, what a drag!
I highly recommend it but be warned you WILL lose money at first, and you WILL be incredibly stressed out much of the time. Playing is inherently stressful, especially when you hit a dry spell where you lose for a week or two straight. Make sure if this happens, to stay calm, playing looser will not get your money back quicker!
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:It really depends... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:It really depends... (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't doubt you, really, but to me this sounds a little like an invitation to a pyramid scheme... Most people think they are smarter than average, so there should be a large pool of people to supply all the money you are winning, but nevertheless.
I don't know if I'm smarter than average, and even if there was a reliable way to tell, I might not want to know. I think however, that t
David Sklansky says... (Score:3, Insightful)
If you don't know who David Sklansky is, you don't make money playing poker. I have been playing poker for years, and most of the players I know say the make money, or 'break even'. Yah? Do they keep records? If the answer is no, then you do not make money.
About 10% of poker players are profitable. This does not mean, you won big one night, and forgot to write down those couple of loses. It means, play 40 hours a week for a year, and see where you are. Play 50,000 hands and see where you are. If you have 10 people playing.. the best player will eventually get all the money, it's just a matter of time. It may take years, but it will happen.
I don't mean to troll at all with this. It's just when I keep reading, "I am an above average poker player and have been playing for 4 months and here is what I have to say..." it makes me think how every thinks they are "above average drivers."
So am I an above average player with all my obnoxious 'insight'? Well, I am paying taxes from poker this year, so yeah.
Now, let's shuffle up and deal!
ESPN has ruined the game (Score:4, Interesting)
The first sign was my 13 and 15 year-old cousins giving me playing tips at a low limit game at their aunt's wedding. These kids look up to poker "stars" with the same intensity they looked up to Derek Jeter a couple of years ago. Weird. (Their mother didn't seem to mind too much when I schooled them for about $20 total, by the way.)
The second sign was when I went to my first "real" game in several years. Many of the doofuses in attendance had donned "crazy" sunglasses--just like the "stars" on ESPN wear. Other guys had developed their own nervous habits of shuffling their cards, shuffling their chips, etc. So many of the iconic expressions of poker have now been popularized and I think it sucks. It reminds me of when the Red Hot Chili Peppers made it big in the early 1990s, and al of the sudden, all the jocks in high school were wearing Mother's Milk shirts.
I am by no means a pro poker player. I'm not even a good poker player. But damn if I don't hate to see the ghetto of poker being gentrified by a bunch of baseball-cap-wearing, Ray-Ban mofos from the 'burbs.
view from the inside (Score:5, Insightful)
Programmers have a better foundation for poker analysis than most but this is a very incomplete predictor of success. Much more valuable is the ability to play your A-game all the time, and I haven't seen that programmers are any better at this than anyone else.
Poker is as much a test of self-discipline (and many other things) as it is of logic and knowledge. Being a brilliant analyst is of no use is you fail in other areas.
I write a lot about the tournament poker life in my blog [livejournal.com].
I think your out of your mind. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:thinking that because you're smart (Score:3, Funny)
The ones at my mom's job send her email hoaxes, chain letters, and outlook worms all the time.
Re:Gambling is a tax on the stupid (Score:5, Insightful)
Casino gambling involves games of chance where the "house" (the casino) has a statistical edge over the long term.
In poker, you're playing other players - so you've all got an equal shot at the money. The only factor giving you an edge is your ability to play the game.
To say that "Gambling is a tax on the stupid" in a thread like this is to imply that anyone who plays poker is stupid.
Quite the contrary. But we who are decent or even good/great at poker definitely prefer to play against the stupid - because they're the ones who line our pockets.
One might even argue that poker is really more a game of skill than it is "gambling" - though there is still luck involved in the short term, the skillful will win out in the long term regardless of luck.
Re:Bill Gates is the answer. (Score:3, Funny)
So when it suits us, bill gates is a real geek.. right.