Tips for Playing Texas Holdem Hands : Dealer Button in Texas Holdem


What is the function of that button on the poker table? Learn Dealer Button in Texas Holdem Poker in this free casino card game lesson from a professional card dealer. Expert: Melissa Powell Bio: Melissa Powell works with the Dealer Dolls located in Los Angeles CA, and she has been dealing Blackjack and delighting her clientelle for for over two years. Filmmaker: Louis Nathan

 
 

Jet Set Radio Future – Funky Dealer


Jet Set Radio Future – Funky Dealer ——– High and a winner, pay the front line, take the don’ts. He’s Coming out again for a new point, Get your bets now ladies and gentlemen. Four four the point’s marked four, Ace Deuce craps wants the four, Ace Deuce craps wants four, Ace Deuce craps wants four, Ace Deuce craps wants four, Ace Deuce Ace Ace Deuce. Crap crap want four crap want four, Who wants, who wants the hard four? Five want four! [Check Me Out Ya'll] High and a winner got a hot hand, Place your bets ladies and gentlemen. High and a winner got a hot hand, Place your bets ladies and gentlemen. Four and he made it the hard way, Pay the front line take the hard. We got a shooter and a good’en. Coming out again for a new point, Get your bets now ladies and gentlemen. He’s a rolling, point is nine. PLACE NINE! PLACE NINE! Eight Shooting for nine, Five Shooting for nine. [So Funky] He’s a rolling, point is nine, PLACE NINE! Eight Shooting for nine, Five Shooting for nine. [So Funky] Who wants to come? Six to point. [Check Me Out Ya'll] High and a winner got a hot hand, Place your bets ladies and gentlemen. High and a winner got a hot hand, Place your bets, place your bets. Who wants to come? [Come On] Six to point. Who wants to come? [Come On] Six to point. Place your bets ladies and gentlemen. [So Funky] [So Funky][Check Me Out Ya'll] Eight shooting for nine, Five shooting for nine. [So Funky] He’s a rolling, point is nine, PLACE NINE! Eight shooting for nine, Five

 
 

Car Negotiating – Can You Really Buy Your Next Car at Dealer Cost?

Negotiating is a dance of give-and-take. It can also be viewed a bit of a cross between chess (cold hard strategy) and poker (body-language cues, bluffs). If both parties are skilled in the art, they will come to the table with opening positions they do not realistically hope to maintain. It is from those opposing positions that the parties do their dance to some agreeable middle ground.

Some web “experts” tell you to pick your price and present it to the salesperson as a take-it-or-leave-it proposition. And there is nothing wrong with that strategy. BUT…

What if your offer is far, far below the price they could reasonably match? The answer is simple. You will be sent away. No salesperson is going to waste his/her time quibbling on a lowball price presented by a clearly-stubborn prospect. The reason for this? Simple. Within a short time, another prospect, must less stubborn, and willing to sincerly negotiate will walk through the door. If the salesperson is tied up dealing with you, that profitable prospect will fall into another salesperson’s hands.

What if your offer is ABOVE the price the salesperson was reasonably willing drop to? No-brainer. You just gave up hundreds of your dollars – and you didn’t have to! That is why a good negotiator will always present the intial offer in a purely non-committal way. That way, the offer can be rescinded and revised to a lower figure. How do you exercise this technique? It’s really quite simple, and a strategy that is employed by Fortune-500 companies (and country diplomats) all the time. You will find this procedure, in detail, in my eBook, “Outfox the Car Dealer” (just Google it).

Now let’s discuss that hype of buying a car at cost. Can it be done? Short answer: “YES.” BUT. (And you knew there had to be a “but”) #1. It won’t be the car you dream of. Give up any thought of getting a shiney new 2011 BMW for cost. However, if you’re willing to take a gas-guzzling 4×4… well, you might be in luck. After all, many dealers picked up these behemoths at top-dollar value at auction just before gas prices went sky high. Values of those vehicles plummeted overnight. Dealers would have been very happy to unload those dogs at cost. The car you get at cost will NOT be a desirable vehicle. You can count on it. And, point #2… you may have to wait quite some time and do a lot of leg work to find a car at cost. That should be obvious.

There are a lot of tricks the car salesperson has learn after enduring 80 hours of training. They emerge as skilled persuaders, negotiators, and manipulators. The training teaches them how to begin to take control of you the instant you step on the lot. From there, they exercise all sorts of pschological ploys to keep you on the lot, get you excited in a car, and run you through a sales pitch to the bottom line.

Learn how you can negotiate with car dealers – and win – by reading my 140 page eBook, “Outfox the Car Dealer.”

About Author
Jon is an avid motorcyclist, traveler, and software engineer. He enjoys the challenge of negotiating car purchases on behalf of friends and relatives.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Computer blackjack VS real person as a dealer and hand out real card, same way of how to win? Or different?

When I walk in the casinos, I noticed there is two different kind of black jack gamble. One is real person as a dealer and hand out a real cards. Other is Computer base and use fake person as a images on big screen with your cards. Are they same way of winning? Same chance? I am hardly trust computer because computer might cheats against me. Other thing is on real table, we can memory on what in the last card and keep eyes on them until they use same card again at like 20 games later.

 
 

Blackjack players: Hitting a 13 against a dealer 6?

Do you groan with the rest of the table and whine, “Damn! You took his bust card!”?

If you are one of the countless blackjack ‘experts’ who scowls and cries about other players hitting when dealers show ‘bust cards’ I’d be gratified to know how you came to believe another player taking a card, or not taking one, has anything predictable to do with your bet and the outcome of your hand.

Do you allow other players to dictate the strategy you use in your game?

Do you believe there’s anything valid in the “play for the table” concept?

If so, what reasoning brought you to believe it and what have you observed in your play to support the belief?
Nommonlawz: That’s called ‘voodoo’. It’s not odds and it’s not blackjack. It’s religious doctrine sanctified in play strategy.

 
 

How to play poker at home without a dealer? To have poker night, what would be the ideal rules?

Some friends of mine are thinking of starting a poker night, I was curious on how the rules would be idealy. If there was no dealer, would the shuffle be done by each player once? Would the raising and calling take place before and/or after changing cards? If we were to play with a 100 $ each per night, what would be the best limits to have a good fun game. I need some experieced helps, no answers just for points please.

Thanks in advance.

 
 

Can I get back the money I bet for the dealer after a push on a Blackjack table?

I placed a $5 side bet for the dealer. After a split, I placed another $5 for him because he said I must place the same amount of the bet if I want to split. Then I got push for both hands. So I want to take the second $5 back. But the dealer told me I can’t. It is already his. Is this true?

(He stacked up the two $5 chips. But I lost the next hand. So he did not get his $20 if I had won.)