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Articles
iPhones
and Casino Blackjack Card Counting - 17th February 2009
(Credit: Gambling911)
Ten years ago who would have guessed we would be taking photographs
with cell phones? Now it seems the iPhone is being used for
something quite clever - casino Blackjack card counting.
The Australian
press has caught onto this mighty fast.
Many of
you have seen the film "21" about a group of Ivy
League college students who learned the great art of Blackjack
card counting. Back then the iPhone was yet to be invented
but probably would have come in handy.
Gambling911.com's
man on the scene - Greg Tingle - says it is something the
Australian casinos are becoming more vigilante about.
"Blackjack
Card Counter, developed by an Australian named Travis Yates,
is among the most popular applications for iPhone," Tingle
says. "And it can be purchased for under $10."
And it's
not just Australian casinos that are keeping a close eye out
for the latest iPhone app.. The State Gaming Control Board
of Nevada has already warned about its usage.
This Blackjack
Card Counting program can be utilized on either the Apple
I-Phone or the Apple IPod touch (portable music player). Once
this program is installed on the phone through the I-tunes
website it can make counting cards easy. The program calculates
the "True Count" and does it significantly more
accurately. The card counting program uses a choice of four
(4) card counting strategies. For each strategy the user presses
the button that contains the face cards as they are drawn
from the deck. Depending on the strategy and on the value
of the card the button will either add or subtract 1 or 2
from the "Running Count". The program can utilize
the following card counting methods including Hi-Low, Hi-Op
I, Hi- Op II, and Omega II.
This program
can be used in the "Stealth Mode". When the program
is used in the "Stealth Mode" the screen of the
phone will remain shut off, and as long as the user knows
where the keys are located the program can be run effortlessly
without detection.
Card counting
involves keeping a running tally of the number of high cards
compared with low cards.
When a
higher balance of low cards have already been played, you
have a probability advantage and so should place a bet.
Many casinos
throw players out if they suspect them of counting cards but
using a device to do the maths is strictly outlawed.
The iPhone
application, which trains players using simulation blackjack
hands, can operate in stealth mode while in a player's pocket.
The gambler simply needs to know where to press the screen,
depending on whether the card is valued at less than or higher
than 10, and the phone will vibrate when it's time to place
a bet.
Yates
claims he would typically sell 10 copies of the application
per day, but immediately following a profile on CNN, sales
shot to 500 copies.
"I
developed the app so people could practise card counting and
use it with friends at home," he said.
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