Archive for August, 2006

Central Park Bridge 2



Central Park Bridge 2, originally uploaded by Heraldk.

A second view of the central park bridge that I uploaded recently. I’m not entirely sure which I like better – which do you like better?

In recent news, I surpassed 200 views of my photostream as recorded by Flickr! Hooray!

Poker Bankroll Building

Well it has been awhile since I last wrote about my poker experience. In this post I’m gonna start going through my history of my online poker transactions to build a picture of how profitable it has been in the past 2 years (well, its been since November of 2004). All of my poker experience has been through Poker Source Online which offers huge incentives to get started in online poker.

In November of 2004 I started up with PSO and did their Party Poker promotion for a chipset. At the time, I only really wanted the chipset, which seemed like a fairly low risk venture. The promo at the time was to get a 500 chip set for playing 250 raked hands at Party Poker at .5/1 limits. I deposited $100 on my credit card and lost $30 there over the raked hand requirements (considering I knew nothing at the time this was not a big deal). I received my chips a few weeks later and I started thinking about learning how to play poker so I could take advantage of the rest of the PSO promotions.

In December 2004, I deposited $100 at The Gaming Club that at the time were offering an amazingly sweet promotion. $300 of bonus money was available for my deposit, I simply had to play enough raked hands to release it. As I recall it was something like 200 raked hands for $20 released at a time, but I’m not too sure if that is accurate and the promotion has long since gotten worse. I had aquired a copy of Lee Jone’s low limit poker book and was using its starting hand requirements to my benefit and was almost immediately breaking even. Over the time at the gaming club (a little over a month), I played break even poker and cashed out a cheque in early January of 2005 worth $405. In addition, I received $70 worth of PSO points to spend at their store. My online poker life had begun.

Next on my list of places to be hit was Pacific Poker where I once again deposited $100. This site was full of fish-like players and I found it much easier to win there than at the gaming club. Between the experience of playing at the gaming club and party poker, and the weak players, I made a healthy profit for playing .5/1. Not long after, I had already completed the short PSO requirements and cashed out a cheque worth $184 plus my PSO prize of another 500 chipset.

A week later, I started the Absolute Poker promotion where I once again deposited $100 and worked through the PSO raked hand requirements while clearing the deposit bonus money. This promo was a little harder to complete at .5/1. In the end I made my first jump to playing 1/2 and hit a lucky streak of cards that ensured a profit when I cashed out. At the end of January 2005, I received my $60 PSO points prize with another cheque worth $189.

Sometime in January there, Party poker gave me some free money to play with which I turned into $53 more money. Hooray!

Another big event happened that January. On the PSO forums, the site organizers had arranged to come to Edmonton for one of the first Canadian Poker Tour events! With such short notice, they made a general post asking if people in Edmonton were able to make it to the $500 buyin poker tournament. I signed up almost immediately and got several others who had let me know about PSO sign up as well. We had a group of 5 people play, and it was me – the 2 month poker experience player who placed well into the money. In fact, I placed 6th for a prize of $3490!! Talk about a bonus for my bankroll! Alot of the reasons for my success was due to the tutelage of Darse Billings: currently a PHD student about to graduate after working on AI in poker for a number of years. He used to play professionally and made a pretty good living doing so, so his experience helped me out considerably.
A great part of being a member of PSO is getting a chance to hit some free prizes just for being a member. Over these 3 months of being a member I received $32.50 of PSO points just for participating in the forums, and my great experience with the site would soon get me some referral points (in the next month).
That gets me through my first couple months of bonuses. I’ll update again in the next week or so with the next segment in my online poker experiences. Here’s what I had received from November 2004 – January 2005:

Party Poker: -$30, 500 piece chipset
Gaming Club: +$305, $70 PSO points
Party Poker: +$53 from free money
Pacific Poker: +$84, 500 piece chipset
Absolute Poker: +$89, $60 PSO points
$500+50 CPT Poker event: $+3490 (canadian dollars)
PSO freebies: $62.50 PSO Points
Total Winnings: $501 USD + $3490 CAD + $162.50 PSO Points + 1000 chips

Heraldk

Note: select segments were reworded and added to since the first posting to fill in some details I forgot in my rush to post. I’ve started work on the next few months of PSO experience and that will be up in the coming days!

Building Computers

Well apparently I’ve gotten in a habit of building computers for people. Odd. I built a computer a couple weeks ago for Diane, and yesterday I put together a new one for my Dad. It is amazing to me the amount that the cost of computers has dropped over the last few years. The fact that I can easily put a value system together for $500 impresses me to no end.

Anyways, once again I need to make more of a push on my thesis. Lots of work to do, and I want to get it out of the way so I can do other stuff. I’m getting to the point where I need to start filling in details, and that is gonna be harder to do than the basic exposition that I’ve been doing for the most part so far.

Lots of bonuses in casino/poker land. I’m working on the new PSO promo room DreamPoker, plus one of boogster’s promotions for play65 (backgammon). That and I did a couple of casinos last week but broke even on both of them. *sigh*.

Time for me to go in to school. Take care everyone!

Heraldk

Central Park Bridge



Central Park Bridge, originally uploaded by Heraldk.

On our last day in New York, we got some time to wander around Central Park before we headed for the airport. It was a rather nice walk – we wandered around the reservoir for a couple of hours. I took a fair number of pictures, but the bridge pictures are the ones that turned out the best I think! You’ll probably see some more of them turn up in future posts!

Evening Glory



Evening Glory, originally uploaded by Heraldk.

Not too long ago, I was getting a picture frame for a picture I bought while I was in New York. On the way home, I saw this: The sun shining through a hole in a mass of dark clouds. I ran home, grabbed my camera and took a couple of photos of the phenomena. The pictures didn’t quite turn out as good as I hoped – it was really something else at the time. It kind of looks like the kind of photo that would really have benefited from HDR. Oh well, I still like it, so that’s why I’m posting it!

Busy

I have no idea why I feel so busy. I have had a fair amount of free time at home, so that’s not the issue. Maybe it’s because I didn’t get enough time to sleep in this past weekend which has made me feel a little moody at the moment. *shrug*.

Speaking of this past weekend, I got up early and Diane and I went down to help my friend Jon build a deck in his backyard. We didn’t quite get it all done, but we made some really good progress. They provided us with some really good lunch (homemade paninis!) and supper which was really nice.

On Sunday, I returned a picture frame I had got from Ikea which meant a big trip down to the southside. My mom and I took my sister down for a harp gig at the Coast Terrace Inn, and while she was there we did the return and stopped at Indigo books where I used a gift certificate I originally received for Christmas last year. I picked up Angels and Demons, the sequel to The DaVinci Code and a book called The Professor, The Banker and The Suicide King which is about an amateur poker player who has a bankroll that he can use to play against professional poker players for crazy high stakes. Should be some good reads.

So both days this weekend I didn’t get a lot of sleep which is adding to the not much sleep I got all last week … and the trend seems to be continuing. I think I’m gonna need to get myself to sleep sooner one of these nights!

My thesis has come a long way over the last week. This week, the progress has been much slower but I’ve still managed to get quite far. There are some less pleasant sections to write yet though (because they are more technical and harder to write), so hopefully they don’t take too long.

With regards to the changeover of this blog, it appears that everything made the switch okay. If you see anything odd, let me know though! I want to spend some time playing with the layout – I’m not sure if it’ll be a complete redesign or not, but we shall see. Suggestions are always welcome of course!

Heraldk

Welcome to my new Home!

Hello!

This site still needs some work, but I couldn’t delay this any longer. Welcome to my new blog! I know it doesn’t look a whole lot different, but it sure feels like it to me! This is wordpress based (I’ll soon get a button that says so, please bear with me) rather than blogger which is slowly aging. Plus, because it’s on my own server I have a little more control of what I can do with the site.

Besides this update, I’ve been doing a bunch of work on my thesis as well as checking out the local summer attractions including the Fringe! If you’re in Edmonton and haven’t checked out the Fringe, you totally should!

Anyways, enjoy the new site. If you see any problems, please let me know!

Heraldk

Phoenix Cloud



Phoenix Cloud, originally uploaded by Heraldk.

At Heritage Days, an Edmonton festival celebrating the diverse culture of our fair city, there was this really cool looking cloud. To me, it looked like a phoenix, rising from its ashes born anew. You could potentially argue it’s a dragon with smoke coming out its nostrils. At any rate, I really liked this photo, so that’s this week’s selection!

Thesis Trucking along

Well I’ve finally managed to put together several days of productive thesis work. My thesis is now flirting with the 40 page mark, and there’s still a long way to go, but it is coming. It helps that since I did a lot of discussion with Darse concerning the ICGA paper and his thesis, I now have a pretty standard graph format I can use so I don’t really have to figure that out. In fact, most of the graphs I just have to reuse as is!

I’m gonna be tackling a hard chapter here tomorrow. Its the one that involves the theoretical proof that the tool I’ve been working on is unbiased. That section is going to be the hardest to write for several reasons – the most difficult thing is laying the proof out so that it is clearly true, but also so it is understandable and easy to follow. This really isn’t my strength.

At any rate, I’ve realized that there’s a limit to the productivity I can have on my thesis on a given day. If I’m able to keep up my current rate of writing though, I’ll have a pretty decent start on it by the time my supervisor gets back from holidays. Hopefully he likes what I’ve managed to come up with! In the meantime, while keeping that pace up, I think I’ll actually have some chance to play some poker in the evenings. The insanity of the past few weeks seems to have passed and things are starting to get back to more-or-less of a flow (which is good for my thesis writing!).

Heraldk

UN Security Council



UN Security Council, originally uploaded by Heraldk.

The site of the United Nation’s security council, this room is pretty cool to look at.

Here’s a quick rundown of what seats belong to who. The 15 seats around the horseshoe are for the delegates from the nations on the security council. The blue chairs behind them are for their advisors. The table in the middle is lower than the rest and is for people transcribing the events of the council. The red chairs on the sides are for all other members of the UN to sit in and listen to the council’s decisions.

The UN tour was probably one of my favourite parts of the New York trip. It was informative, interesting, and simply cool to check out.