Bad Prediction No. 1 (made approximately five years ago): If online gambling – including poker, casino, and sports – becomes big, the U.S. government will make a very strong effort to shut it down. This will include arresting and/or seizing the assets of the principals who are residents of this country and putting pressure on credit card companies, ISPs, and phone companies to stop being facilitators.
Bad Prediction No. 2 (made approximately four years ago): It will be impossible for a new site to do very well, since all the players are playing on Paradise Poker. Any new site, no matter how good its software is, won't be able to succeed. Players will log on, not find games with players, and return to Paradise. (I cited the failure of eBay's competitors for the same reason as evidence of this fact.)
New Prediction No. 1: Any new site with excellent software and good publicity will be able to seize a market share. Right now, no sites that I have seen have uniformly good software. Most of the better ones have some good features and some major flaws. Tolstoy once said, "All happy families are alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way." Similarly, each poker site is flawed in its own way. I am available to consult with any site that wants to get in 5 percent to 10 percent more hands per hour and make its games more user-friendly at the same time.
New Prediction No. 2: The most successful software will be created by someone who realizes that online poker is not an imitation of live poker, but a different, more modern way to play. There are sites that advertise they have the feel of "brick-and-mortar cardrooms." Some friends of mine are working on a new site. They are also following the brick-and-mortar model, basically imitating the other sites, but trying to do everything a little better. Hey, guys, it is time to wake up. No one wants a car with the feel of a horse and buggy. No one wants e-mail that works as slowly as the U.S. Postal Service. The first ones to make this paradigm shift will seize market share and revolutionize poker as we know it.![]()
Barry Greenstein Vol. 17, No. 5
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The Future's So Bright, I Gotta Wear Shades
by Jeff Shulman
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2004 Tournament Directors Association Rules – Part I
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It's Poker, Not Gambling!<br>By Roy Cooke With John Bond
by Roy Cooke
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Like Moths to a Light Bulb
by Tom McEvoy
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Jack Binion
by Mike Sexton
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You Cannot Bluff in Limit Poker
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Showdown at the Sands – Part II
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Basics Sometimes More Important Than Advanced Moves
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States Win Again
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The Bald Eagle Predicts the Future of Online Poker
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Showdown Win Percentages Against Legitimate Callers
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Coming to Terms With the Terms
by Jan Fisher
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Don'ts for the Table
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The Buddha Saga – Part II
by ua ua
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The Amazing Raymond Davis
by Vince Burgio
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The Political Attitudes of Poker Players
by Nolan Dalla
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St. Maarten and the International Poker Federation (IPF)
by Warren Karp
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You're the Decision-Maker
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Barry Greenstein: A Modern-Day Robin Hood<br>By Allyn Jaffrey
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More Love for the Maniacs
by Roy West
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Going High With a Two Low-Card Flop
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Accentuate the Positive
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Tilt, Part II: Creating It
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Playing the Blinds: A Few Examples – Part IV
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Dealing With Line Moves in College Hoops
by Chuck Sippl
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Jack Keller
by Bob Ciaffone
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A Poker Makeover
by Lou Krieger