Mish

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Mish

Mish

@broatives

Trying out the poker life :P

เข้าร่วม Ocak 2012
20 กำลังติดตาม6 ผู้ติดตาม
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Dylan Palacio
Dylan Palacio@greentoepalacio·
Why tf would she do this I’m crying 😭
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Mish@broatives·
@Jebailey How many feet is it across? Will the average 6 foot man be able to lay without dangling his feet?
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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
This is sad. I know as a politician these companies are going to spend a billion dollars against me for saying it but 🤷🏽‍♀️ Pervasive gambling is not good for society. It turns life into a casino, traps people in addiction & debt, surges domestic violence, and fosters manipulation.
Polymarket@Polymarket

We’re honored to announce MLB has named Polymarket as their Exclusive Prediction Market Exchange Partner. Polymarket 🤝 MLB

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123@Lost_to_AI·
@AOC all gambling ads should be required to disclose the percentage of users who lose money on the app. when people find out it's over 90%, they might be less likely to throw their money away.
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Mike Beauvais
Mike Beauvais@MikeBeauvais·
ITALY: Haha, we drink espresso in the dugout! DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: Haha, we’re having so much fun hyping each other up! TEAM USA: We’re listening to a man describe in detail the raid to kill Osama Bin Laden to prepare us to play Canada in baseball.
Jomboy Media@JomboyMedia

Robert J. O’Neill spoke in Team USA’s clubhouse ahead of their game vs. Canada O’Neill was one of the members of SEAL Team Six that carried out the mission to kill Osama bin Laden

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chu
chu@random_chu·
me reviewing my player notes during a session
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Sam Greenwood
Sam Greenwood@SamGreenwoodRIO·
My thoughts on "avoiding flips". Don't do it!
Sam Greenwood tweet media
Faraz Jaka@FarazJaka

. @padspoker recently posted a tweet asking how often a good player busts poker tournaments Bluffing / Coolered / Bad Beat / Losing a flip / Calling off dead. The most common response amongst top pros was: losing a flip is 40-60% of their bust outs.

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Mish@broatives·
@allenanalysis ChatGPT helped him with that “speech.”
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Brian Allen
Brian Allen@allenanalysis·
🚨THIS IS CRAZZYYY: The United States Secretary of Defense just said this out loud: “Flying over their capital. Death and destruction from the sky all day long. We’re playing for keeps.” Tehran has a population denser than New York City. “Death and destruction from the sky all day long.” Those are human beings. Families. Children. And the man controlling the most powerful military on earth is describing their deaths like a movie trailer. Six soldiers dead. An illegal war built on lies. No congressional vote. No plan. And this is who’s running it.
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Mish@broatives·
@pokerheadrush prefer a check back flop and assess turn. anytime our bet gets this much action we're in trouble. as played fold, drawing dead against k10 and while one guy could have a 10 and is semi bluffing, 2 are in. as played we're behind or drawing too thin. no more money in this pot.
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Alexander Fitzgerald
Alexander Fitzgerald@pokerheadrush·
Happy Sunday, everyone. Here’s another hand from the MSPT $1,110 in Black Hawk. This was also early in the tournament, and we were about 100 big blinds deep. It folded to me in the cutoff, and I raised with Q♥ 10♦. The button cold-called and the big blind called as well. Board: Q♠ J♥ 9♦ It checked to me and I continuation bet 4 big blinds into about 10.5. The button then raised to 17 big blinds and the big blind called. At this point, the big question is what we want to do here. Fold, call, or raise? I don’t really care if someone guesses the same answer I came up with. What I care about is the process. Share your process here, please. We can all learn from each other.
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soul nate
soul nate@MNateShyamalan·
my buddy: yo watch my guy cook [pointing to me] hit ‘em with a star wars guy name me: booz chaldo stranger: no way me: gripp tangelese
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Thomas Romain is a French anime artist, he's trying to redraw all his son's drawings [✏️ Thomasintokyo]
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Mageba
Mageba@Mageba_wav·
the fact that when she says "My moms vietnamese" and the lady responds in Vietnamese like she's testing her and then the customer RESPONDS was chefs kiss
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akhil
akhil@fkasummer·
I read this at 18. Had a big influence on me. Interesting finding: difference between levels is not quantitative like hours worked. It’s qualitative. So what an Olympic swimmer calls swimming and what a varsity swimmer calls swimming are two different things.
akhil tweet media
Benjamin Parry@_benjaminparry

We are obsessed with "talent" and people that have the "special something". This is just a way of avoiding thinking about what it takes. Excellence is real. There are people that get ahead nine times out of ten. Olympic swimmers, repeat founders, bestsellers... But, if you watch excellent people there is nothing magic about what they do*. It's just the multi-dimensional set of skills, character, and ways of life playing out. To give one example: Fortune 500 CEOs don't have a magic gift — maybe they are more likely to win if they are born in certain countries and have a slightly above average IQ and stamina but nothing otherworldly — instead what they have are: a willingness to have difficult conversations, a set of mental models to read a balance sheet fast, a mental model of the business they are running, mental models of how other businesses run, an idea of the psychology of their biggest rivals company, a strong motivation to increase profits, private drivers, expensive suits, intense time boxing, public speaking coaches, favourite restaurants they go to every time they are in a city, how well they celebrate after a win, keeping up the right kind of health routine to keep them sharp, spouses that do not create demands on their time.... and so on These things are essentially mundane. There is no invisible special sauce. Pretty much all of it are choices that can be made, skills that can be learned, character that can be developed and more. The key — the reason not everyone is a Fortune 500 CEO — is that these things are not arbitrary. The collection of things that need to be done to get to this level are vast and if the person is missing any of them they simply won't be excellent enough. In other words to be part of the world of Fortune 500 CEOs you need to be perfectly optimized for that world. Sometimes the collection of skills etc. can look arbitrary but this is usually because you are comparing different games. The list of what's needed is different for a software startup founder, a car dealership owner, a university dean, or even in the case of the example perhaps other Fortune 500 CEOs in different industries etc. Even between companies at a similar scale in similar industries the list of what's needed can be different at the margin because of contingent facts about how those particular organisations are constructed. In the same way, while there may be a lot of overlap, being world-class at swimming will not make you world-class in football. If nothing else you will have to live in very different places (swimming pools vs. football pitches). So achieving excellence is like solving of a hyper-dimensional problem. Each level requires a new bundle and a new way of life. It's similar to the way Christopher Alexander describes building a house in Notes on Synthesis of Form. You need to constantly adapt to resolve these internal tensions and enter the next world of skill. So if you're interested in excellence you need to ask: What world do you want to be part of? And what do you need to change? What disciplines do you need to take on? There are probably more transformations that are needed than you expect. But if you're willing to do it there's nothing stopping you. Perhaps if there is something that the most excellent people have it's a willingness to connect with what's real. To be humble before what it actually take to succeed in their given field. *All reflections on the paper: The Mundanity of Excellence: An Ethnographic Report on Stratification and Olympic Swimmers by Daniel F. Chambliss

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Barry Carter
Barry Carter@Barry_Carter·
When a random rich VIP makes a @tritonpoker final table
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