Online Gambling Comes to Mac

Posted by Jessie on 05 Jan, 2009

Many people use the Apple Macintosh as an alternative to a Microsoft PC.  Fans claim they are faster, safer and more efficient.  However, the prevalence of PCs in the market means that a lot of programs are compatible only with PCs; leaving Mac users in the dark.  But don’t fret because this is going to change.

However, now many online casinos offer either Mac-compatible software or a no-download flash game that works with the machine. Online casino developers realized that alienating a large potential market base was not a good idea.

Casino Tropez, InterCasino, Slotland and Full Tilt Poker are all Mac-compatible now. If you’re a Mac user looking for a game then Casino Tropez offer an amazing $3,000 welcome bonus and Full Tilt Poker is the home to many of the biggest names and games in poker.  Come on down and meet lady luck all you Mac users!

 

Poker on TV in the UK

Posted by Jessie on 01 Nov, 2008

One of the UK’s top televised poker events is set to return for a new series, I can’t wait.

The first two PartyPoker.com Premier Leagues had a legion of fans glued to their television screens and promoter Matchroom Sport has announced a third series will be filmed in London during late November.

Reigning champion Andy Black is currently the only confirmed participant for the event, but organisers are confident an improved prize pool will tempt 11 of the world’s top players to take him on.

The sponsor has increased its contribution to the prize money and the buy-in for the event has risen to $75,000, giving a total fund of $1.25 million.

Matchroom Sport’s Eddie Hearn claimed: “There isn’t a poker player on the planet that doesn’t want to be part of this event.” Poker shows currently running on British television include the Sky Poker Five-00 and the European Masters.  I am very thankful for my satelite dish.

 

UK Online Gambling

Posted by Jessie on 02 Sep, 2008

There is no doubting that online casinos are legal in the UK, but that doesn’t mean that all companies are interested in gaining a license to operate a gambling site. This means that some internet gambling companies, even those with no direct interest in the U.S. gambling industry are looking for ways to circumvent the bans on unlicensed online casino gambling. A new company, Shropshire, has announced a new form of gambling – except that it isn’t gambling. The SonicWarp.com site is a newly designed site that allows members to win prizes via a monthly drawing as well as participate in other fun acitivities through the site.

The new site is intended for those gamblers who are not interested in losing money through the online casinos but still looking for innovative ways to participate in forms of internet gaming. There is copious information about the process of signing up on the actual site, but basically, gamers are asked to keep their GBP100 refundable deposit in their accounts through the site, and every month, if their deposit is still in place, they are entered into the monthly drawing. The monthly drawing is a virtual “treasure chest” that gains funds all throughout the month according to Shropshire.

The way around the legal issues is the fact that unlike online casinos, the gamers are able to retrieve their GBP100 deposit and can – but at that point they are no longer entered into the monthly drawing. There is a viral element to the marketing of the site where the gamers are encouraged to spread the word to other online gamers and receive more tokens and entries into the drawing.  It is nice to look at some of these more interesting situations and see how they develop.

 

Gambling brings out the worst in us

Posted by Jessie on 01 Aug, 2008

It seems that casinos are a real magnet for crazy criminals or maybe losing money brings out the worst in us humans?

Petty thieves aside, patrons of Harrah’s Chester Casino & Racetrack and Philadelphia Park Casino & Racetrack have found creative ways to get arrested this year - from the Glen Mills teenager who sidled up to the bar claiming to be 45 years old, to the Philly guy accused of grabbing an elderly woman’s butt.

State-police reports from the slots parlors in Delaware County and Bucks County consist mostly of everyday transgressions - thefts, forgeries and the passing of counterfeit bills - but are interspersed with brusque tales of bizarre behavior, much of which is caught on camera:

* Frank Scarcella, 43, of Bristol, was arrested May 30 at Philadelphia Park after he allegedly called another gambler “an evil bitch and said she should die.” Scarcella’s mother, Rita, says her son is profoundly deaf and was wrongly accused by a neighbor with a long-running gripe. “How could he? He doesn’t talk,” she said of the allegation. “The tape showed nothing.” Court records indicate that Scarcella was found guilty of harassment.

* The following month, Gary Hinderhofer, of Wilmington, Del., decided to treat the late-night Harrah’s crowd to a strip show starring his “bare buttocks,” according to police. State Trooper Steven Stigliano wrote in his report that Hinderhofer, 42, faces charges of harassment and resisting arrest for the June 15 incident in which he allegedly mooned casino patrons, knocked over a security officer and cursed out the cops.

* Heather Strain, 19, of Glen Mills, may have thought that she was wise beyond her years when she ordered a drink Feb. 24 at Harrah’s Stir bar - using the ID of a 45-year-old woman. Strain was convicted of carrying false identification.

* Robert Long, 42, of Philadelphia, appears to have a commanding lead in the contest for most unusual crime at Philadelphia Park. He’s accused of grabbing 72-year-old Pham Gerhardt’s rear end earlier this month. “I scared. He grabbed my butt and he run,” Gerhardt, a Vietnamese immigrant who speaks limited English, said from her home in Northeast Philadelphia. “I don’t want people attack me. They caught him.” Long was charged with harassment in the Aug. 8 incident.

* The biggest theft to come out of Harrah’s since its slot machines opened last year was committed by one of its own employees. Qiana Wright, 25, of Philadelphia, pleaded guilty last month to stealing more than $30,000 from the casino by creating false machine vouchers and cashing them. Wright, who worked as a slots hostess, was sentenced to six to 23 months in jail.

* Perhaps the record for the most heartless crime to date goes to Downingtown’s James Fazzini. He allegedly stole $233 on May 18 from a man who collapsed in front of a Harrah’s cash machine from what appeared to be a heart attack. Instead of helping the unconscious 60-year-old man, Fazzini helped himself to his cash then bolted, according to Trooper Gary Onick.

The incident was caught on tape and Fazzini, 55, surrendered to police when his picture was distributed to the news media. Charged with theft and receiving stolen property, his preliminary hearing is scheduled for next month in Chester district court.

So, are casinos a magnet for petty crime any more than, say, a sporting event or anywhere else that serves booze to large crowds? Not necessarily, says Arthur Reber, a former psychology professor at Brooklyn College and author of “The New Gambler’s Bible.”  But sometimes it sure seems that way!

The most common crimes at Harrah’s Chester are thefts, which are down slightly so far this year compared to the same period in 2007, and forgeries and counterfeiting, which are on the rise. Many of the victims are elderly, but casino patrons are generally older to begin with, said Sgt. Frank Cini, who heads the state police gaming-enforcement unit in Chester.

Cini said that police have also recorded 15 assaults and a dozen cases of disorderly conduct or public drunkenness at the riverfront casino, which serves alcohol from 7 a.m. to 2 a.m.

One 66-year-old Philadelphia man was permanently evicted from Harrah’s in June after, police say, he grabbed a 36-year-old slots hostess and insisted that she sit on his lap. He then chased her around the casino floor yelling, “Give me a big kiss! I want a damn kiss, baby!”

A Drexel Hill man was banned from the premises last month when he ordered a beer while playing blackjack “knowing he did not have any money to pay for it,” state police reported. When the server returned, he laughed in her face “and continued to laugh at her as she walked away with the drink.”

While Cini urges patrons to watch their belongings and stay with slot machines with credits on them, many petty thieves are caught stealing anyway - and oftentimes forced to pay restitution to their victims - because of the approximately 1,000 surveillance cameras that monitor the property.

Officials in Chester and Bensalem say they have seen no uptick in crime in their communities that can be attributed to Harrah’s Chester and Philadelphia Park, whose slots parlors opened in January 2007 and December 2006, respectively.

But David Mustard, a University of Georgia economics professor who co-authored a 2006 study that found that casinos lead to increases in most major crimes except murder, said that gambling addiction and other factors that contribute to crime can take years to override the positive impacts of casinos, such as the jobs they provide.

“It’s not like I gamble today, lose $50, and go out and commit a crime,” Mustard said, explaining that gambling addicts typically deplete their own resources or borrow money before they resort to more extreme measures.

Once they reach that threshold, however, the addiction can take over. Just ask Carol Ackley, the former Ridley School District payroll coordinator who devised a crafty scheme to embezzle nearly $600,000 from the Delaware County district. She blew it all at Harrah’s Chester - located less than four miles from her home - and casinos in Atlantic City and Las Vegas.

Her husband, Herb Ackley, who worked as a painter for Ridley schools, initially said he was “shocked” when Carol was arrested in December. But he was later convicted of receiving stolen property, perjury and tax evasion after authorities determined that both he and his wife used the money to play slot machines.

 

Poland one step closer to legalizing online gambling

Posted by Jessie on 03 May, 2008

Deputy Finance Minister Jacek Kapica said recently that the government plans to legalize online gambling by the end of 2008 in order to infuse the economy with some needed tax revenue.  The previous conservative Law and Justice government ruled against legalizing online betting a year ago after Ministry of Finance analysts argued that the cost to the state would be too great.

The analysts claimed that any budget revenues from online gambling would be much lower than expected, whereas the cost of regulating the industry would be too high. However, according to Merrill Lynch estimates, gross online gambling revenues could reach $48 (z?.106) billion by 2010, making it an extremely lucrative business.

“We cannot control this process anyway and it is better that the budget at least derives some revenue from it,” Kapica told reporters. Polish press has suggested that Poland’s change of heart was influenced by last year’s European Court of Justice ruling which said that Italy may not use criminal law to ban foreign online gambling companies from attracting Italian players. I know gambling can have an ugly downside for additcted gamblers but as free people you should be allowed to choose what type of entertainment you want to participate in.

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