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<title>TidBITS: Poker on the Mac</title>
<link>http://emperor.tidbits.com/webx/tidbits-talk</link>
<description><![CDATA[Ah, finally my two obsessions converge.  I've been playing poker for  <br>
three years, and it's been a sideline source of income for most of  <br>
that time.  Not much income, but more than I've made as a  <br>
professional writer.<br>
<br>
&lt;<a href="http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08141">http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08141</a>&gt;<br>
<br>
I haven't tried DD Poker, but I don't recommend even the good AI  <br>
software to anyone who's thinking of playing the game for money.  The  <br>
problem with poker is that it's very easy to learn bad habits, which  <br>
are then hard to unlearn.  Most players will become better by playing  <br>
against software, but that's different from saying that you'll become  <br>
&quot;good&quot;.  More likely, you'll learn some very useful tricks that beat  <br>
the AI players, which in turn will open you up for being ruthlessly  <br>
exploited by people like me when you land in a real game.<br>
<br>
Here are my standing suggestions to anyone who's interesting in  <br>
getting into this game for real -- or for anyone who has done so  <br>
already and lived to regret it:<br>
<br>
1) Decide if you want to learn to play well, or if you prefer to  <br>
gamble.  Plenty of people play poker to gamble.  It's fun, and like  <br>
most gambling, you can get lucky and win money.  Playing poker well  <br>
is much less fun -- for example, you're going to fold over 70% of the  <br>
time and watch other people play.  But it also means you don't have  <br>
to get lucky to win -- a good player wins over time with average  <br>
cards (which is all anyone gets over enough time).<br>
<br>
2) Buy *one* book and absorb it.  I recommend the Lee Jones low limit  <br>
books.  You'll learn more in 2 hours of reading than you will in 20  <br>
hours of play.<br>
<br>
3) Buy into a real online game against real online players.  On the  <br>
Mac-friendly site I play, games start at 0.25-0.50, and a &quot;normal&quot;  <br>
buy-in is $10-20.  Having completed step 2), you should be able to  <br>
make that last for a good long time, and be well on your way to  <br>
learning how to be a winning player.<br>
<br>
Finally, please note: limit hold 'em, no-limit, and the tournament  <br>
versions of both are FOUR DIFFERENT GAMES, and the skills for each  <br>
one are different.  Pick one and learn it cold -- I recommend limit  <br>
cash games (i.e., not tournaments) as the lowest risk option.<br>
<br>
The site I play at is pokerroom.com, which is also the only major  <br>
site that is Mac-compatible.  It's all Java, and a surprisingly good  <br>
interface.  If anyone is interested, drop me an email and let me  <br>
refer you; we both get a bonus from the site for doing so.  And so I  <br>
don't make this sound like a self-serving advertisement, I'll offer  <br>
30 minutes of &quot;shadowing&quot; to anyone I refer -- i.e., I'll watch you  <br>
play and give you a critique afterwards.  I can't *help* you play --  <br>
that's cheating -- but I think I'll be able to identify your best and  <br>
worst moves and let you know where to improve.<br>
<br>
And a PS to Jeff Carlson -- iPoker is a great game for goofing around  <br>
playing the kinds of games that make up home games.  I.e., what I  <br>
refer to as &quot;beer with cards&quot; games.  It's *horrible* for learning  <br>
real poker.<br>
<br>
Best,<br>
Jeff]]></description>
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