WPBT Charlie Tournament

BG organized a poker tournament this Sunday in memory of Jason’s friend Charlie.

Details:

PokerStars
WPBT “Charlie” Tournament
No Limit Hold’Em

Tournament 9680072
Sunday, July 17th
18:00 ET
$20 buy-in

You’ll find it under Tourney –> Private. The buy-in will go to Charlie’s family to do with as they like. So we’ll be playing purely for bragging rights.

Update: July 14, 2005. I’m happy to report that 46 players are now signed up for the tournament. That’s $920 raised through the blogs, $20 at a time. Let’s push it over a grand. Sign up now, even if you don’t think you’ll be able to play.

Teen pays $7.3m for talking and driving

Stupid teen.

LA Times: Jury sends a message in case involving teen’s cell use

By Ralph Vartabedian, Times Staff Writer

A stunning verdict emerged from a Palmdale courtroom in 2003 that sent a statement about public opinion on cellphone use by drivers, but the case also showed how insurance policies shape the outcome of accident litigation.

The jury was considering the matter of an off-duty Los Angeles police officer injured by a 16-year-old driver of an SUV, who made an illegal U turn.

The teenager was not drunk, under the influence of drugs or otherwise engaged in criminal behavior. The police officer was not permanently crippled, though testimony indicated that he suffered significant pain and that the injuries prevented him from an important promotion.

Although the teenager denied using a cellphone at the time of the accident, her phone records showed that she was on a call at the approximate time of the crash.

“She said she hung up before the accident,” said Hugh J. Grant, the attorney for the young defendant. “The jury didn’t believe her.”

Indeed, the jury delivered a stunning award: $7.3 million for the officer.

Who was going to pay for this and why did the jury give so much? Many cases involving death or permanent disability result in less compensation to victims. Even many drunk driving cases result in lower awards. But this was no ordinary case.

“It was an angry jury,” recalled R. Rex Parris, the Lancaster attorney who represented the police officer.

“It was a very unusual case with some very unusual injury allegations,” Grant said.

What inflamed the jury? Was it the cellphone? The fact that the injured defendant was a police officer? The behavior of the defendant?

The teenager “showed up with a $1,000 Louis Vuitton purse and $1,000 spike heels,” Parris said. “I just wanted the jury to see the purse again. She didn’t want to show it. I asked her if she had the cellphone with her. When she pulled it out, the power was on. She had come to court with a cellphone turned on. The jury was kind of incensed by the whole thing.”

There was other testimony, Parris recalled, that showed the girl’s father, a car dealer in the Antelope Valley, had pressured the police to change the accident report.

Cellphone use has galvanized the auto safety community. In the aftermath of this verdict, the California Assembly considered — but then failed to approve — a bill to outlaw hand-held cellphones by drivers. New York, New Jersey and the District of Columbia have outlawed hand-held cellphones.

Despite the controversy and big verdicts, cellphones continue to gain popularity among drivers.

A study by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration released in February showed that cellphone use by drivers doubled between 2000 and 2004. Surveys of drivers show that 8% of drivers ages 16 to 24 use cellphones at any given time. By comparison, just 1% of drivers age 70 and over use them.

That’s troubling to Parris, who said he believes teenagers’ brains have not developed enough to handle the mental demands of talking and driving. And Grant cautions that using a cellphone carries a clear legal risk.

“It is more and more common in accidents to subpoena production of the driver’s cellphone records,” Grant said. “At all times, drivers are responsible for the safe operation of their vehicles, and when they breach that duty they are liable.”

I wouldn’t just single out teenagers, though. People in general can’t handle walking while talking on their mobiles; they certainly shouldn’t be manoeuvering a 1-2 ton vehicle at speed.

Gambool

In case you haven’t heard, I’ve returned to the US. I jumped right into the gambling frame of mind with the start of the month, playing Blackjack with bonus money at Will Hill and Intercasino (see ScurvyDog for the affiliate links), O8 and NLHE at the LA Blogger Home Game, and 2/4 HE at the Bad Beat Jackpot tables on Party Poker. Yep. I finally got a new Party account after getting myself banned last January for “inappropriate chat.” I still don’t know what the hell that means, but whatever.

There are some excellent tables to be found under that BBJ tab. I happened to catch –EV 4-tabling a few of them, but I opted to play elsewhere. No need to sit down with a known tight-aggressive player who reminds you everytime he sees you about that $50NL session where he took two buy-ins off of you (5 months ago!). Anyway, with several players playing in excess of 35-55% of all their hands, my BBJ sessions evoked fond memories of playing in the LA and Vegas casinos.

Coincidentally, I’ll be heading out to Vegas in the morning to bake in 105 degree sunshine and immerse myself in the madness that is the WSOP. No, I won’t be playing in any of the events–I don’t have the skills or the bankroll for that–but I do intend to sit myself down next to some poker-crazed tourists and try to dodge bad beats while building a mountain of chips. There will be no blackjack or roulette on this trip; then again, Grubby’s a persuasive guy.

The new poker machine

Thrower-induced recovery notwithstanding, it was time to get a new poker machine. I can’t trust my laptop to keep on working the way it’s been working the past few days, and rather than find myself without a computer at what will most likely be the most inconvenient time possible, I figure the best thing to do is get a replacement. I checked out Dell’s site to see what kinds of deals they had available, but they seemed rather so-so. A little over $500 would get me a 2.8GHz Pentium 4 with 512MB SDRAM, an 80GB HD, DVD-ROM/CD-RW, and integrated video with a 2 year warranty.

I don’t really need a high-powered machine. But Glasstrack assured me that for the money I was willing to spend, I could get a much better machine if I were willing to shop around and buy the components I needed. Here’s what we came up with…
Continue reading The new poker machine

Kicking your computer

Back in Beijng my laptop decided to stop working. I’d hit the power button, a few of the LEDs would flash, and nothing. No POST.

I then removed the batteries, the hard drive, and the memory, and tried booting using one DIMM and the power cable. It worked!

I moved the DIMM to a different slot. It worked. Cool. Probably a memory problem.

I tried the second DIMM in the second slot. It worked. Eh?

I tried the second DIMM in the first slot. Okay… this works, too.

I eventually added the hard drive, the second DIMM, and both batteries, and that seemed to work, too. I sealed it up, and boom, no POST.

I took that thing apart and put it back together again for hours and never got it to POST consistently. More often than not, I’d get nothing. I figured there was something broken somewhere on something expensive, and rather than fix a 2 year old laptop for a few hundred dollars or more, I’d get a new one.

I tried getting it to boot a few more times while in China and Korea, but finally gave up. I knew the hard drive was still good, so I could get my old data off the machine at the very least.

Jack: Was it ticking?
Airport Security Officer: Actually throwers don’t worry about ticking ’cause modern bombs don’t tick.
Jack: Sorry, throwers?
Airport Security Officer: Baggage handlers. But, when a suitcase vibrates, then the throwers gotta call the police.
Jack: My suitcase was vibrating?
Airport Security Officer: Nine times out of ten it’s an electric razor, but every once in a while…
[whispering]
Airport Security Officer: it’s a dildo. Of course it’s company policy never to, imply ownership in the event of a dildo… always use the indefinite article a dildo, never your dildo.
Jack: I don’t own…
[Officer waves Jack off]

Well, son of a gun. My computer works. It booted right up when I pulled it out of my suitcase.