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Scarabin

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Scarabin last won the day on October 5 2012

Scarabin had the most liked content!

About Scarabin

  • Birthday 11/30/1931

Previous Fields

  • Preferred Systems
    Roman club,little major,super precision
  • Real Name
    Ian

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Interests
    All types of games especially bridge & war games.
    old bidding systems & computer simulation programming.

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  1. Ree, Teardrop, Jessup, Thump Milton, Ray, are all characters in Winter's Bone. Ree is the leading part, played by Jennifer Lawrence. Teardrop is her uncle, Jessup her father. Thump Milton is the leader of the Milton clan/family/gang. Ray is one of his henchmen and, I think, Jessup's direct killer. :D
  2. I didn't watch enough to be fair but is she really an asset? :D
  3. I guess I should have Googled it. I did suspect it might be too good to be obscure. I find good movies often leave some unanswered questions: (1) I take it Ree & Teardrop's final conversation means Teardrop put up part of Jessup's bail money? (2) What clue caused Teardrop to know Jessup's killer? I think there was a clue just before Teardrop rescued Ree from Thump Milton, but this was before he arrived? (3) Who was Ray? Teardrop took an axe to his truck? Anyone got the answers? :D
  4. I just cannot believe the EU will bail-out the Ukraine financially, and I don't expect the US will do so either. Perhaps they'll go so far as keeping the Ukraine on tether, hoping for more? :D
  5. Good to hear. I am glad I'm not alone in liking this movie. :D
  6. What a load of crap "Noah" is. Now there's something believers and sceptics, moderates and fanatics, could agree upon! Perhaps I could hijack the topic & launch a poll! :D
  7. I think that for me "Elementary" is just a Sherlock Holmes clone too many. I guess I'm satiated. When you are old and long retired, what makes your day is serendipity. So I was charmed when the second series of "The Bridge" suddenly appeared in my planner to be recorded. I think it's because I series-linked the first series and Foxtel remembers this (for a limited time?) :D
  8. Saw a movie, "Winter's bone", which strangely impressed me. It's about hill-billies and seems chillingly authentic. Now this may well not be an obscure movie in the US. After all it stars Jennifer Lawrence and has won a Sundance award. I can't see it making the main cinema circuit in Australia, more like an art-house movie. :D
  9. Studio, one of our TV cable channels, has a new Norwegian crime series called Mammon which, judging by the first episode, may be very good. Caught up with Elementary but disappointed. :D
  10. With two fairly obvious ways of making the contract, one may query why we should look for any other methods. However I think Kaplan's premise is that the contract may be made in any of four ways provided we keep to a cohesive plan. I can see that the contract may be made by throwing East in with the third round of hearts, after eliminating diamonds and clubs, and forcing him to lead a spade into dummy's ten-ace. This requires West's co-operation in not rising with the Ace of diamonds and leading a spade or heart. Perhaps this can plausibly be accomplished by South's leading the diamond queen as if to force an entry to dummy? The only possible squeeze is a criss-cross squeeze against East in spades and hearts. This requires the defenders' co-operation in taking their diamond honours on the first two rounds, cashing the two long clubs and leading only clubs or diamonds. In these two cases, the opening lead is a spade and dummy plays the queen or jack. Now criss-cross squeezes must be the easiest to break-up, and many of declarer and the defenders' plays are less than optimal. Despite my best efforts to co-operate in defence, I cannot get any robot to adopt these latter plans. :D
  11. Sorry, did not mean to criticize your play or judgment. Just meant to give credit to Gib for making a good decision in refusing to ruff. :D
  12. Thanks for an interesting deal but you could have headlined your topic "Report, ahem, good plays by Gib". My experience is that in this situation - ruff to be forced into an unfavourable lead - the robots do not accept the "poisoned chalice"! :D
  13. Interesting hand to analyse with Bridgify. I tried it on 4 robots - Jack, Gib, Wbridge5, and Sharkbridge. All tried to set up hearts. Wbridge played correctly: 4 & A on opening lead to give 2nd entry to dummy and made oontract. All the others played Q or J on opening lead. Gib persevered by trying to create an entry in diamonds - down 2. Jack & Shark seemed to try to recover with Jack discarding the SA on the third heart trick, and Shark overtaking the SQ with the SA on the opening trick. Both down 3. Nobody tried holding-up (ducking the spade lead in both hands). Thanks again. Added later: On the inferior opening lead of a club all the robots successfully set up diamonds. Shark flirted with a heart finesse along the way. Perhaps combining chances? :D
  14. Not a lack of veracity, more that we are on different pages: you, I think are talking about how experts currently play the hand, I am dealing with theory as applied to how the great mass of players, the hoi polloi like me, are taught to play declarer's hand. Let me first admit this is pure speculation. I am not actively researching play theory just reacting to one academic's comments on the present state of play theory. It's not easy to formulate a feasible alternative to the current, traditional approach. If players were allowed to access computers (instead of note pads) then Ginsberg simulations might represent a viable alternative. This is not entirely fantasy I remember when it would have been unthinkable to allow calculators in examination rooms. I also speculated that it might be feasible to program computers to generate random deals and investigate double-dummy which moves would increase the probability of making the contract. This would require enormous time so would have to be done in advance, and the results stored or if possible analysed into principles. Take a simple example: when the opening card is led declarer may have a 50% chance of making the contract. After declarer holds-up this may increase to 100%. The player handles this by recognising the position, or by projecting the play (expert) or by rules (average player). What I'm saying is that I do not think anyone has written a program to generate the best move for every possible/ probable situation. I did warn you it would be boring! :D
  15. Thanks nige1. I think it might be interesting to discover which strategy the robots would choose. :D
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