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My warped views on poker, politics, and life
Others With Warped Minds 
9th-Dec-2009 12:07 am - Spidurtweets
  • 12:09 Playing small MTTs online for fun.....at least that's what I'm telling myself it is #
  • 12:18 @dscoughlin I already hated UVA, and he and I discussed briefly on FB #
  • 12:51 @dscoughlin Also its just part of small school life - since my junior year, we've gone through 3+ coaches in FB and MBB. #
  • 13:24 @dscoughlin 1998-2002 #
  • 13:36 @dscoughlin cool....if s/he was on any of the varsity sports teams I knew em....otherwise probably not. #
  • 16:57 @caitycaity this takes don't ask don't tell to the level it actually belongs at #
  • 16:57 @scsuhockey10 stop being a damn hoser #
  • 21:27 @scsuhockey10 finally something you're really good at ;) #
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During the afternoon hours on Full Tilt Poker, high stakes gamblers Viktor “Isildur1″ Blom and Brian Townsend played a long four-table match of $500/$1000 Pot-Limit Omaha. The competition went on for four and a half hours as Townsend took down three monster pots worth over half-a-million dollars. Despite that fact, Townsend was in the red [...]

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In some morning heads-up action, Viktor “Isildur1″ Blom took on “jungleman12″ in an exciting poker match. They played a six-table battle of $100/$200 No-Limit Hold’em on Full Tilt Poker tables Cardroom, Cliff, Hole, Mase, Mount Hood, and Relay. And quite a battle it was as both players went at it for over five hours. Playing [...]

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Over on Full Tilt Poker table Mesa Grande, there was a $2000/$4000 7-Game mix running where David Benyamine was able to rake in over $71K through 57 hands of action. The other winner at the table, John Juanda, could only managed a $5K+ win in seven hands. Sharing the losses in the brief game were [...]

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Booking significant wins during past two sessions, the player known as “geoff7878″ was back it again raking in winnings during the $50/$100/$15 Pot-Limit Omaha games running on Full Tilt Poker tables Nevada Sky, Native, and Friday. He went on to collect another $86K+ in winnings after playing 637 hands. Following him was “Browndog19″ with a [...]

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In some late night poker action, Cole South and “geoff7878″ faced off in heads-up Pot-Limit Omaha action. They started off with a 40-minute session of $50/$100 PLO on tables Sosa and Calumet as “geoff7878″ picked up $1,700. Around 95 minutes later, they played another 40-minute session where South racked up over $74K in winnings. A [...]

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There $2000/$4000 7-Game mixes were running hot during the evening hours on Full Tilt Poker. Games were played on six different tables as Patrik Antonius rose to the top with over $595K in winnings through 595 hands played. Other six-figure winners were David Benyamine ($385K+), Joe “Nizot Skizared” Cassidy ($149K+), and Gus Hansen ($104K). Booking [...]

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During the evening’s $2000/$4000 7-Game mixed poker action, Gus Hansen and David Benyamine got in some one-on-one hands on Full Tilt Poker tables Orchid Moon and Clementine. Hansen went on to take down the four biggest pots of the action. After 114 heads-up hands against Benyamine, Hansen had collected over $73K in winnings. HAND A Full Tilt [...]

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David Oppenheim and Gus Hansen played some $2000/$4000 7-Game mix over on Full Tilt Poker table Conserve. They were heads-up for about 15 minutes as Oppenheim was able to pull in seven of the nine biggest hands they played. After 33 hands of action, Oppehenim had raked in a $62K+ win over Hansen. HAND A Full Tilt [...]

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High stakes gamblers Tom “durrrr” Dwan and Gus Hansen got in some heads-up hands of $2000/$4000 7-Game mix during the evening hours on Full Tilt Poker. With hands played on tables Topenga, Vista Butte, and Reaction, Dwan was able to take down the two largest pots. After a total of 47 heads-up hands, Dwan had [...]

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Over on Full Tilt Poker table Topenga, high stakes players Tom “durrrr” Dwan and Abe “EazyPeazy” Mosseri played a heads-up 7-Game poker mix. The limit stakes were set at $2000/$4000 and the NL/PL blinds were $500/$1000 as both players battled it out for almost an hour. Mosseri was up over $50K at one point before [...]

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Mr. Brown, however, did not draw attention to the fact that he posed nude for Cosmopolitan magazine in 1982, when he was a first-year law student at Boston College.


Poll #1496531
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 7

Source?

View Answers

A Fox News Report on Britain's Prime Minister
0 (0.0%)

A New York Times article about a victorious candidate
2 (28.6%)

A Rachel Maddow piece about a hypocritical gay marriage opponent
2 (28.6%)

An Onion piece, describing Charlie Brown's path to adulthood
3 (42.9%)



The source )
I know some of my friends are out of work, and most of you know someone who is job hunting. My company is hiring a bunch of people, mostly in San Francisco but also in NY, London, and a few other places. If you're interested in one of these positions, or know someone who is, let me know. http://videoegg.com/about/jobs/
8th-Dec-2009 04:05 pm - I want a new drug
I'm not really all that into sports, but this looks very interesting:

http://singularityhub.com/2009/12/08/super-strength-substance-myostatin-one-step-closer-to-human-trials/

I think it would be a blast to watch some sport, one side with regular humans, the other with "super strength myostatin" people.
9th-Dec-2009 09:00 am - A Brick Wall
It appears that workout wise, I have hit a brick wall. I am simply not increasing the weights on my workouts like I used to. Granted, yawning while bench pressing isn't the best way to maximize your strength. But the fact is that my discipline is lacking and even if it was on, it isn't doing much. I just can't quite get above certain weight numbers at the gym.

Despite my changing eating patterns, I have managed to maintain a stable weight around the low 93 kg range (around 204-206 lbs). No matter how much I eat or what I eat, I simply don't gain weight. My metabolism is just ridiculously fast while it was the opposite in college and thus I gained a whole bunch of weight.

Although I'm not hanging around the sub-200 pound range like I was when I was in the hospital, I am still at a really good weight and would like to stay here.

Whatever. I am still WAY better off compared to before I came here and even much, much better off than I was at my weight peak in college.
Not to dis, but man there ain't been shit going on lately on that site. Every software feature they add is just because Full Tilt did it first. And their rewards program? Still sucks, though slightly less with the introduction of fractional points.

That said, their new tourney is actually pretty cool: they have a regular $11 tourney, except they add $1000 off to the side. They get as many of their pros to enter it as they can. Everyone who outlasts ALL the pros gets to share the $1000. So if the last pro goes out in 101st, then everybody gets $10. I assume this means if you beat the last pro heads up, you get the full $1k. No idea what happens if a pro wins, but not overly concerned with that.

So yeah, I'm entering tonight's because it seems like there's an overlay to be had. Starts in 1.4 hours, or 7pm CST.
8th-Dec-2009 10:51 am - The innocent have nothing to fear
Slashdot quotes Google CEO Eric Schmidt as saying: "If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place."

Gawker says: "The generous explanation for Schmidt's statement is that he's revolutionized his thinking since 2005, when he blacklisted CNET for publishing info about him gleaned from Google searches, including salary, neighborhood, hobbies and political donations. In that case, the married CEO must not mind all the coverage of his various reputed girlfriends; it's odd he doesn't clarify what's going on with the widely-rumored extramarital dalliances, though."

They have a link to the video; as one slashdot commenter notes, there is a voiceover and an editing cut that makes it unclear what the context of his statement is; maybe he qualified it with very tight restrictions or something. It still sounds pretty bad though, and seems like a poor choice of words.

This all reminds me of the Justice Scalia thing from earlier this year.
8th-Dec-2009 12:11 pm - Just shoot me...
The Chosen One's Path:

President Barack Obama outlined major new government stimulus and jobs proposals on Tuesday, saying the nation must continue to "spend our way out of this recession."
8th-Dec-2009 11:11 am(no subject)
Vornado Zippi came up in the Wootoff.

Yay! I got 3!
8th-Dec-2009 08:58 am - Quote of the Day
...imagine the international terminal at JFK, but with even worse food and people walking by in giant tree costumes.

-- Nate Silver, describing the scene at the Copenhagen conference on climate change, where "the beer is cheaper than the Coca-Cola".
8th-Dec-2009 01:53 pm - Conservative interventionism
ET Claim? (7,6)

Yes, it's Climate Change time in Copenhagen, mysteriously now Copenhaagen according to at least one Radio 5 Live political commentator. I look forward to hearing about the G20 conference in Paree.

The debate on Global Warming is interesting, not least because all sides concerned seem to be doing their best to throw logical thought out of the window. One woman on Radio Four said that anyone who ignored the threat of global warming was contributing to the problem -- which seems a bit unfair on the carbon neutral eco-bloke living in a forest who has turned his back on The Guardian and all who sail in her.

A second curiosity seems to be this "either/or" dichotomy. One side says it's all the fault of industry and cutting down the Amazon rainforest, while the other says that it's just a natural global cycle (or, in some cases, they claim that it's an even shorter-term blip). None seems to accept that some of the warming might be a blip, some might be part of a long-term global cycle, and some of it might be our fault. And since no-one seems to be taking this line, no-one is trying to ascertain what percentage cause can be ascribed to variance, what to a long-term natural cycle, and what can be blamed on humanity.

However, it's the third curiosity that most amuses me. I remember the De Gaulle speech of 1968 that brought the French workers out on the streets of Paris to bring to an abrupt end the student protests of 1968. As the Gaullists marched down the Champs Elysees, proudly singing the Marsellaise, one left-wing observer commented: "If only they would listen to the words they are singing, they would realize that they are on the wrong side".

I get that feeling with Global Warming. Those who are doing everything they can to get us to reduce carbon emissions are associated with the liberal left, and yet it is these who are, in the broadest sense, the most conservative; while those in industry who are saying "hell, it's not a bother at all", should realize that the changes that will be rendered will probably put most of them out of business and create new companies based in the new cities in Greenland and on the Antarctic.

I guess that my point here is that worrying about maintaining the current ecological balance is not something that peoples six centuries ago had time to worry about. It's a product of privilege. And if one takes the extreme view and assumes that the "worst" scenario will come true, the simplest answer I can think of is, so what?

I looked up web sites that were warning of the dangers of global warming (not the "climate change deniers") to see what threats they posited. And, guess what, nearly all of these are threats to humanity's comfortable life, not to the survival of humanity itself. In addition, the threats are, in the main, threats to the developed world, rather than to the developing world. Let's face it, telling Bangladeshis that there's an increased danger of flooding as sea levels rise is hardly going to get much of an emotional response when we've been allowing the country to suffer horrific weather events for the past 50 years without really lifting a finger.

No, the worries about climate change are worries about the developed world losing its very comfortable life. Valuable land will become less valuable, while currently worthless land (Greenland, Antarctica) will acquire desirability. Little wonder that the population and government of Greenland is less than enthusiastic about "keeping things as they are".


I don't see us stopping the current long-term cycle of warming (which, for my tuppence worth, I think is slightly more significant than our own contributions) and that means the world of 2100 will indeed be very different from the world of today. But that does not mean the end of humanity. What it means is opportunities and gains for many have-nots and losses for many haves. It's the threat to a comfortable way of life, not the threat to the planet, that is the major cause of worry in the developed world.

But that's the nature of the earth; it changes. And if eventually we destroy the planet in the same way that our forebears destroyed the Sahara, then, well, that will be that; it was good while it lasted. We have no "responsibility to our children", and we do not hold this planet "in trust for the generations that come after us". If you'd tried speaking guff like this to anyone in any century in the past, they would have looked at you as if you were mad.

Personally, I think that some of the excessive consumption-mad lunacies of our current generation (gas-guzzlers, conspicuous consumption, deliberate obsolescence, GDP-growth mania, etc) is distasteful and inefficient. But that's a moral stance of mine, not an absolute right. My guess would be that, in 2100, humanity will still be around, despite the end of the Amazon rain forest and the existence of parts of the world where we have to live under special sun-protecting canopies. But humanity will be no more nor less miserable than it is today, because most of the people alive will have known no different.

Our desire to stop "climate change" is really our desire to maintain our own way of life. It's an intensely conservative way of thought and also a rather narrow way of thought, because there have been people like that throughout the centuries. In the past, they were often religious or political leaders. Change is not "good" or "bad". But it happens. Some people try to slow it down, but they can't stop it. The trick to winning is working out how to utilize things in the way that life is going to be, rather than putting all your effort (and eggs) into the basket of stopping the change happening. Because, if you do that, you are bound to lose.

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High stakes professional poker players Brian Townsend and Viktor “Isildur1″ Blom were involved in quite a long ultra high stakes Pot-Limit Omaha battle. They began with a four-table match of $300/$600 Pot-Limit Omaha. In over two hours of action, Townsend had managed to collect over $591K in winnings. Then at the request of Blom, both [...]

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Amidst a four-table battle against Brian Townsend, Viktor “Isildur1″ Blom got some action from Ilari “Ziigmund” Sahamies. Already down almost $1.4 million to Blom on the day, Sahamies decided to play some $500/$1000 Pot-Limit Omaha on Full Tilt Poker tables Breaks and Bends. The action only lasted 15 minutes as Blom took down all six [...]

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Patrik Antonius and Viktor “Isildur1″ Blom played a two-table match of $500/$1000 Pot-Limit Omaha during the late afternoon hours on Full Tilt Poker. They began on tables Breaks and Royal Guard before switching over to tables Stony Ridge and Chin Cactus. The game lasted well over two hours as Antonius took down four of the [...]

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