| Posted by: Irexes at March 6, 2007, 9:18 pm | | Topic: Ramblings Forum: Card Chat |
The most unlikely distribution of random events is an even one.
Best example I heard of clustering and chaos theory is if you take the balls on a pool table and set them all moving when they finish they will not be evenly distributed across the table. Some will be touching or in little clusters and there will be decent sized areas of the table that have none in at all.
The most unlikely thing is that nothing unlikely happens.
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| Posted by: dj11 at March 6, 2007, 9:12 pm | | Topic: Ramblings Forum: Card Chat |
When I got into poker more seriously about 18 months ago, I found that a lot of new terminology had popped up.
The one that gets me is the SET. I liked TRIPS. I read somewhere there is a difference between a set and trips, something to do with where the pair sits.
The reason it gets me is this; As we sit at a table, patiently waiting for a hand, often we end up getting several playable hands in a row. Sometimes many playable hands in a row. All of you who know surf will know how wave sets work. And the flow of the cards, to me, most resembles wave sets.
Some may argue this is nonsense. Yet why else would we wait out for what seems forever for the good cards to show. Because it has happened, and does happen repeatedly. Note my silly plug here for my flopology theory found elsewhere.
Recently, on the discovery channel, I watched a show about rougue waves. It had to do with wave sets and chaos theory. Very interesting. Seems that even with predictable wave sets of any fr... | | Read Entire Entry |
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