Nov 19, 2009

Learning how to play poker



English review:

Even considering the fact that I am a woman, the truth is that I love card games such as Poker and which tend to be extremely interesting and challenging when we decide to play these games with our friends or simply play poker online. In fact, by playing poker online we will have the chance to both to get some extra entertainment from the game but also the possibility of earning some extra money that we can spend on something that we really love or need.

Still, it is extremely important that before we start playing poker with our friends or online, that we know the basic rules and combinations that will be able to help us achieve victory on this game, making sure that we don’t end up losing a lot of money just because we didn’t know how to plan our own strategy. Keeping this in mind, I would strongly advise you all to take some time to visit the websites to which I have linked just above and where you will be able to find all the important information about poker that you will need in order to play the game with all the confidence that it requires. Moreover, you may even download some poker content (in Spanish people would say “descargar poker” ) so that you can already start practicing at the same time that you read the rules and get the basic ideas on how to plan your games.

Spanish review:

Aun considerando el hecho de que soy una mujer, la verdad es que me encantan los juegos de cartas como el poker y que tienden a ser sumamente interesantes y desafiantes cuando decidimos jugar estos juegos con nuestros amigos o simplemente jugar poker online. De hecho, jugando al poker online, tendremos la oportunidad de conseguir tirar alguno entretenimiento extra del juego, pero también la posibilidad de ganar algún dinero extra que podremos gastar en algo que realmente necesitemos.


Sin embargo, es muy importante que antes de empezar a jugar al poker con los amigos o online, que nosotros nos informemos sobre las reglas básicas del juego y las combinaciones que pueden ayudarnos a lograr la victoria en este juego, asegurándose que nosotros no acabamos perdiendo dinero simplemente porque no sabíamos cómo planificar nuestra propia estrategia de juego. Teniendo esto en cuenta, yo les recomiendo vivamente a todos a tomar algún tiempo para visitar los sitios web a los que he conectado justo encima y donde usted podrá encontrar toda la información importante sobre el poker que necesitará para jugar el juego
con toda la confianza que se requiere. Además, puedes incluso descargar poker de modo que ya puedes empezar a practicar al mismo tiempo que lee las reglas para que puedas tener las ideas básicas sobre cómo planificar tus juegos.

Do you love gourmet? Tokyo is your destination!



People tend to love to eat the best and most incredible plates all around the world. Still, you probably don't know where you should go in order to find the most incredible ones, right? If that's the case and if you would like to know where you will find the most famous dishes, then I would advise you to take some time to read the msnbc.com article just below:

"

TOKYO - The Epicurean king who oversees the Michelin Guide fears he may be banished from France.

His shocking crime?

Awarding Tokyo more three-star restaurant ratings than Paris, thereby crowning the Japanese metropolis the new gastronomic capital of the world.

"Trust me, they'll wait for me at customs there," Jean-Luc Naret, director general of the famed guide to exceptional eateries, joked Thursday at the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan. "Because they'll say how dare could you have more three-stars in Tokyo than in Paris?"

Michelin's latest Tokyo edition goes on sale in Japan on Friday, and Naret has been in town this week promoting what many consider to be the bible of culinary skill. This time, Michelin's undercover team of inspectors has bestowed its highest three-star rating to 11 restaurants in Tokyo, one more than in Paris.

Tokyo also beats Paris in the total number of stars received — 261 awarded to 197 establishments.

That's 34 more than when the venerable guide made its Asian debut in Japan in 2007.

Michelin's ranking system considers the quality, consistency and value of a restaurant's food, with three stars designating "exceptional cuisine, and worth the journey," without taking into account the service or ambiance, according to the guide.

The first Tokyo edition sold 300,000 copies — 150,000 of which were snapped up in the first 24 hours. Since then, Michelin has released guides for Hong Kong and Macau, as well as Osaka and Kyoto in western Japan.

Not everyone in Japan was pleased that Michelin had landed in Tokyo. Critics attacked its culinary selections. Some chefs said they didn't want to be in the book. Others questioned how a group of foreigners could judge Japanese food.

To mollify naysayers, the company used only Japanese inspectors for the 2010 Tokyo edition, Naret said.

Placating his fellow Frenchman may be another matter.

"Forget everything that you know about Japanese food," Naret said he would like to tell Parisians. "Just go to the other side of the world, and you will understand what Japanese food is all about."

Naret added that statistically speaking, it's not really a fair contest. Tokyo is home to 160,000 restaurants, compared to 60,000 in Paris.

And France still wins the country count with 25 three-star establishments nationwide to Japan's 18.

"

Finding the best postcard templates

As a woman, I know how sentimental and incredibly important postcards may be for our emotional stability or the expression of any message to someone else no matter which is the nature of that message.

Keeping this in mind, if you are looking for the best postcard templates so that you can create your own postcards to send to your friends or anyone special, then I am more than sure that you will be able to find all the templates that you will ever need on the website to which I have linked just above. Furthermore, the website is so incredibly user-friendly and easy to navigate that you will find what you are looking for in just a few seconds!

Las Vegas: luxury is just a few miles away from us


Have you ever been to Las Vegas before? Would you say that it is one of your favorite destinations? Well, if you believe that Las Vegas doesn't have much to offer you, then you definitely need to read the msnbc.com article just below and discover a new world for you as I am sure that you will be surprised with what you will find in Las Vegas:

"

By Andrew Lincoln


We sent intrepid writer Andrew Lincoln on a mission to see just how low some of the world's most over-the-top hotels would go. Turns out that, with a little ingenuity, these days you can get it all for a lot less.

A man who works at a casino was sitting next to me in a restaurant not long ago. He had a watch that looked like a hubcap from a Bentley, except that it had diamonds on it. He'd worked for Bellagio, the hotel-casino that helped reinvent Las Vegas as a luxury destination for the masses in 1998. He'd worked for MGM Grand.

He'd worked for Wynn. He would be going to Las Vegas in a week, he said, and he would be staying in a room that was 900 square feet, where you could talk on the phone and watch a flat-screen TV while you were in the Jacuzzi.

The kind of room that even on discount Web sites goes for $900. Only he would be paying, if things went according to his plan, no more than $200 a night. And what was his secret? I asked. Because people who tell you stuff like this are usually dying for you to ask what their secret is.

"The thing people don't realize," he said, lifting his glass of pinot noir, "is that if you want a better price on a room in Vegas, all you have to do is ask. So I'm planning to negotiate. In Las Vegas, you just can't be afraid to ask."

Las Vegas has always been the place where Joe Six-pack could live like a high roller for a weekend. If you couldn't afford to go to Paris and stay at the Hôtel de Crillon, you could at least go to the Paris hotel in Vegas and have men in French sailor hats open the door for you.

But in 2009, those of us on this side of the check-in counter find that the math is even more in our favor. Last year, Las Vegas added close to 9,000 hotel rooms to the existing 133,000. And in 2009, 14,000 more hotel rooms are scheduled to open.

Meanwhile, you've got slumping demand: Last year tourism was down 4 percent compared with the previous year, and this year's numbers are expected to be even lower. That's why you hear about extreme measures. We're talking rooms going for $40 a weeknight at places like the Excalibur.

These days, there are simply too many ridiculous rooms with hot tubs and wet bars and views of the bright, gleaming desert floor to go around—and I consider it part of my patriotic duty to not let all those marble baths go to waste.

So I will accept The Budget Travel Challenge: Spend three days in Las Vegas seeking out the most extreme luxury for as little money as possible, using any sort of bargaining techniques that don't require identity theft and can be reproduced by savvy travelers.

Having been to Vegas several times, I have identified what I believe are the six best luxury hotels: the Bellagio, the Venetian, the Palazzo, the Wynn, the Encore, and the Trump (there's the Ritz, too, but it's miles from the Strip, so it doesn't count for me). I want to stay exclusively in those hotels—and in the high-roller rooms at that. And that's just the beginning. I was going to test the man with the watch's theory and find how much you can get in Vegas simply by asking (and asking, and asking).

Method one: The Internet

The air just smells different in the Wynn Las Vegas. They pump in a fragrance that makes it feel like stepping inside the lint trap of a large, well-maintained dryer. The smell hits you as soon as you enter the atrium and make your way to the front desk, hidden, as all things in Las Vegas are, somewhere beyond the casino floor.

A woman dressed like a flight attendant from a superior society greets me at the front desk with a smile. I wait for her to see that I reserved my room through Priceline and realize that she doesn't have to kiss my butt. It's one of the 2,063 Resort rooms, the lowest grade. The rate for it on Expedia was $200, so I called the Wynn directly. The agent said she could do $189. I called back and told them I gambled a lot and wasn't very good at it. I told them I was going to stay at the Bellagio if they didn't give me a better price.

Every time I called, I got a different rate: $209, $179, $129. But they wouldn't go under $109 (9 is apparently their lucky number). Then I went on Priceline and started the bidding at $60. I kept going up by $5 increments and ultimately scored at $90—a day before checking in.

I'm pretty psyched about the rate, but the thing is, once I'm at the front desk, I want to ask for more; after all, I'm just getting started with this challenge, and I have lots of tricks.

My plan is to call downstairs when I get to my room and tell them something inventive—my room smells bad?—and see where that gets me. But the woman preempts me: "It looks like we're all sold out of our Resort rooms. You've been upgraded to the Tower Suites." My new room would have gone for $350 at full price. I have to admit I'm a little disappointed. It's that easy?

The Tower Suites section of the hotel, with about 300 rooms, has its own entrance and front desk and is even more elaborately marble-paneled, gilded, and flowered than the main section. And the room? Is it really better? Well, yeah, it's better. It's about 650 square feet, with cranberry-colored walls, remote control drapery, Warhol prints, and a phone in the bathroom (hurrah!). But the feature you'd be paying the extra $150 for is the view; my room overlooks the mossy puzzle pieces of the vaunted Wynn golf course, and beyond that the Las Vegas basin.

Besides the high-end hotel room glut, there's another high-end glut in the food scene. Ever since the Bellagio opened its doors and introduced America to Le Cirque, casinos have been all about signing up name-brand chefs to open name-brand restaurants.

In the Venetian alone, you will find Mario Batali's B&B Ristorante, David Burke's eponymous restaurant, Emeril Lagasse's Delmonico Steakhouse, and Wolfgang Puck's Postrio—and that's not counting the seven other fine-dining outposts whose chefs I do not immediately recognize. So what happens during a downturn? You get the tasting menu at Daniel Boulud Brasserie, in the Wynn, for $48 if you eat before 7 p.m.

It's actually not so bad eating at 6:50, which is when I'm seated on my first night and served a tasty glass of viognier. The meal starts with an amuse-bouche (a lobster knuckle on a cracker, topped with green-tea cream) and ends with a plate of petits fours. There's also a very fine piece of skate served with a brown-butter sauce over pureed potatoes and roasted cauliflower. I take a not insignificant pleasure in knowing how much money I'm saving on all of these delicious things—in this case, about $20.

Method two: The walk-up

It's Thursday. Tomorrow is the weekend, when Las Vegas will get more expensive, but for now the dream of the "Scarface" suite for $14 lives on. Today I'm going to test out the cash-in-hand theory. You may be able to negotiate on the phone from your hometown. But, logically, you should have more pull when you're standing there with your bills.

My strategy is to start with the Expedia rates so I know what I've got to beat. Then I'll go to all the hotels and see if I can do better at the front desk.

First stop is the Encore, twin sister to the Wynn, which I want bad. There's no real reason, except that it's newer than the 4-year-old Wynn (it opened last year)—and the prices are generally higher online. Today, the rate is $239 on Expedia, and the woman at the front desk says she can give me a room for $219. Upgrading to a Tower suite is an additional $100.

"But I got the identical thing at the Wynn last night for $90!" I toss back.

Still, I am denied.

I'm quoted a great deal at The Palazzo Resort—$179 for the basic room, and the upgrade to the Siena Suite is only $100. That's $279 for a 1,283-square-foot room with a Jacuzzi, two bathrooms, and a living room that could very well be sunken, the agent says, if I am lucky. I try the Bellagio last. But when the deal isn't as good, I call the Palazzo from the Bellagio's lobby on my cell phone.

"That'll be $469 for the Siena Suite," the woman on the phone says.

"I was just there," I say. "The guy at the front desk told me to be sure to say I wanted the walk-up rate. It was $179 plus $100 for the upgrade."

"It's $469," she says flatly.

The "walk-up" rate seems to require just that. Because once I'm back at the front desk at the Palazzo in person, I'm quoted the $179 rate again—or $279 for the whole-shebang suite, which I go for, naturally. Having checked in, I seek out the fourth floor of the hotel, where, spanning the expanse between the Palazzo and the Venetian, is Canyon Ranch SpaClub, one of the largest known spas in the universe. I got nowhere bargaining with the folks at the Wynn's spa or the one at the Bellagio. Some of them are doing 20-percent-off deals for locals, but I think getting a counterfeit driver's license stretches the journalistic boundaries of this story.

But Canyon Ranch is running an online special: $280 for a 50-minute massage, a 50-minute facial, access to the gym for the day, and a $20 gift certificate for lunch at Canyon Ranch's grill or café. All told, you're saving about $60. And, since I was able to convince the staff to tack on gym and spa access for the next day (normally it runs $40), it's closer to $100 I'm not paying. After three hours of hands-on services and pan-flute music, I emerge from Canyon Ranch in as relaxed a state as I've ever been in Las Vegas. Which lasts about 17 minutes.

Method three: The gamble

And that brings us to what is perhaps the craziest glut in Las Vegas: four separate shows of Cirque du Soleil. There is "O, Love", and "Zumanity", and the act I get tickets for, Kà. How are there that many people on earth who can put their own foot in their ear while bungee jumping through a flaming hoop?

Saving money in Vegas involves an awful lot of taxiing. A concierge at the Wynn tipped me off that the best ticket prices in town are found at the discounter Tix4Tonight, which has an outpost across from my hotel in the Fashion Show mall. I end up paying $100 for a voucher good for a seat that usually costs up to $150.

To be issued the actual ticket, I have to haul myself back to the MGM, where Kà is performed, but the payoff, a 10th-row-center seat, makes the extra effort worth it.

After picking up my ticket, it's back to the Palazzo for my free day at Canyon Ranch. I do everything—the steam room, the Finnish sauna, some kind of herbal hot room that has a rock crystal fixed to the ceiling—and then I fall asleep in one of the relaxing chairs next to a naked guy reading a Martha Stewart magazine.

At dinner the night before—the $60 prix fixe at Craftsteak in the MGM Grand—I met a man who told me he works as a pit boss at the Bellagio. The pit boss is the guy who oversees blackjack dealers and the like, making sure everything is kosher and identifying high rollers in order to give them perks to keep them in the casino.

We were both eating at the bar, having the winter tasting menu, which is a beautifully obscene amount of food: four appetizers, two kinds of steak, scallops, three side dishes (including a copper pot filled with Yukon gold potatoes pureed with at least 17 sticks of butter) and a cranberry crisp with vanilla ice cream. The pit boss told me that the best time to get a deal on rooms is at 8 p.m. At that point, all the rooms the pit bosses haven't doled out to high rollers are turned back over to the salespeople, who are deputized to sell them cheap.

I make the rounds of all my target hotels, step up to the front desks, and ask for deals. It's Friday night, so the prices have soared. The Encore is $750 online, and the staff won't go below $279 at the front desk. The Bellagio's best walk-up rate is $199 (about $50 less than the phone rate), but the woman at the front desk says there's no chance for an upgrade. At the Trump, though, the man on duty quotes me $169.

I pause and see if he'll take the bait.

"Sir, we can go to $129 if you want the best possible rate," he says, poker-faced. "Or we can do our 900-square-foot suite for $169."

"Sir," I say, taking out my credit card, "I am a 900-square-foot kind of guy."

I go to my room—a view of the pool and the Strip beyond, high-thread-count white sheets, and a kitchen with a Sub-Zero refrigerator. Then it's off to Kà, which basically blows my mind. I sit in my seat and mouth "holy crap" over and over (I am not exaggerating, sadly).

Before the show, the couple next to me tell me they paid $150 each for their tickets. I give them the card for Tix4Tonight. Then I start boring them with all the ways I have learned to get luxury on the cheap. The man is polite for a while, but there's an exciting explosion on the stage that indicates showtime is approaching.

"Fireball!" he says, meaning "let's not talk any more." "Fireball!" I say. I refrain from telling him how much I'm paying for my hotel room.

"

The best deals on diesel generators

Even considering the fact that I am a woman who does tend to spend many hours at work, leaving just a few hours in the day to spend at home, the truth is that I am the one who does all the maintenance at home and who is always aware of the needs to replace the diesel generators at home.

Keeping this in mind, I recently had to substitute my old Diesel Generator, which was already malfunctioning, meaning that I had to make a major research on the best deals on generators such as a Pto generator or a Diesel Generator so that I could cover the energy needs at my home. In fact, after browsing the Internet for deals on generators on my area, I was able to find the diesel generators deals to which I have linked above and which are probably the best ones that you will ever be able to find!

So, if you have been waiting for the perfect moment to replace your old diesel generator or if you would simply love to buy a more efficient one for your business or simply to cover your needs at home, then I would strongly advise you to take some time to visit the website to which I have linked above.

Public restrooms: what you should know about them


Even if you have never taken part in any cruise or if you don't have any traveling experience at all, the truth is that it is always vital that you are aware of the risks and advantages of public restrooms. In fact, I would strongly advise you to take some time to read the msnbc.com article just below and see with your own eyes how dangerous these places may be:

"

NEW YORK - Going on a cruise? To cut your risk of getting sick while sailing the high seas, avoid using the ship's public bathrooms.

Stealth investigations of 56 ships operated by 9 large cruise lines found evidence that only about 30 percent of frequently touched bathroom surfaces were disinfected daily.

Though visibly clean, public toilet seats and flush devices, stall handholds and door handles, inner restroom door handles, and baby changing tables "on most, but not all, cruise ships" are not being cleaned and disinfected thoroughly, Dr. Philip C. Carling, of Carney Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, noted in an email to Reuters Health.

Lack of disinfection, he and colleagues note in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, may significantly increase risk for illness, and particularly for the severe diarrhea and vomiting caused by highly contagious Norovirus.

Therefore, Carling cautions cruise passengers to minimize public restroom use, wash hands with soap and water rather than alcohol-based hand rubs, and be aware of the disease transmission potential from all publicly touched surfaces.

Carling's group enlisted 46 health professionals to check 273 randomly selected public restrooms daily during cruises between July 2005 and August 2008. The ships, most originating from U.S. ports and 82 percent from the 5 largest cruise lines, accommodated up to 3600 passengers each.

Armed with handheld ultraviolet lights to pick up florescent traces of a transparent, but easily cleanable solution they had previously sprayed on surfaces, the cleaning spies identified surfaces left uncleaned for 24 hours.

Of the 2010 toilet seats evaluated, just 50 percent had been cleaned. Likewise, just 42 percent of toilet flush devices, 37 percent of toilet stall doors, and 31 percent of toilet stall handhold bars had been cleaned.

And, only 35 percent of interior bathroom door handles and 29 percent of baby changing tables had been cleaned.

Post-outbreak cleaning and disinfection practices on cruise ships, although important, are not enough, the researchers say. Increased efforts to prevent outbreaks with better disinfection practices are clearly needed.

"

Christmas cards for everyone!

As you surely know, Christmas is already by the corner and so everyone is preparing it and shopping all around the city in order to find the ideal presents for everyone in the family. Still, most people simply don’t realize that Christmas cards tend to play an even more important role than expensive presents do!

In fact, if you decide to send some Christmas cards to your family and friends this year so that you can surprise them with a special and unique message, then I would strongly advise you to take a look at these personalised christmas cards which will surely come in handy for you as they can easily be personalized from your computer and all the services provided by the company above are extremely affordable when you keep in mind the quality of the Christmas cards that you will be getting.

Airlines making us pay more...


Even considering the fact that you may not be a very frequent traveler, the truth is that airline fees tent to affect us all no matter how often we travel. Keeping this in mind, if you would like to know more about the lates updates on arline fees, then you definitely need to read the msnbc.com article just below:

"

DALLAS - Call them surcharges or call them fare increases, but either way it looks like you'll pay more to travel next spring or summer.

US Airways said Tuesday it will add a 5 percent surcharge to all U.S. flights on or after May 8. Spokeswoman Valerie Wunder says the surcharge will protect the airline in case fuel prices or other costs increase.

Separately, Delta, Northwest and United confirmed that they bumped the surcharge on some busy days next March and April to $30 each way from $20 — and to $50 on the day after the Super Bowl.

Most major U.S. airlines have been losing money this year, and they're scrambling to add revenue with bag-handling fees and surcharges on heavy travel days. Airlines have also been cutting unprofitable flights, which saves money and reduces the supply of seats on America's jetliners.

"The number of seats they've cut is allowing them to do crazy things," said Tom Parsons, CEO of discount travel site Bestfares.com. "They added bag fees and nobody blinked. They've got $150 (itinerary) change fees, and now the surcharges."

Parsons said consumers should expect higher prices next year, whether they're called fares or surcharges.

"There were a lot of bargains in 2009, but it looks like that's not going to happen in 2010," he said.

It wasn't clear Tuesday afternoon whether the new, higher surcharges would stick. Airlines often roll back fare increases if competitors don't match them.

Continental had not matched the moves, spokeswoman Julie King said.

American Airlines spokesman Tim Smith said the surcharges "seem to be all over the map. It's varying widely by airline and market."

Smith said American had raised surcharges to $30 for some Florida destinations in the spring, and $50 only for flights leaving Miami, Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach on Feb. 8, the day after the Super Bowl in Miami.

The airlines have enacted several broad fare increases this year, as well as $20 surcharges on peak days around Thanksgiving and Christmas. So what's the difference between a fare hike and a surcharge?

"As far as we're concerned, there is none," said Bill Mosley, a spokesman for the U.S. Transportation Department.

Mosley said federal rules require that any advertisement tell the consumer the total price of the ticket, including any surcharges imposed by the carrier. The only exception, he said, is for government-imposed fees.

When you buy a ticket on an airline's Web site, the surcharge gets rolled into the quoted price, said aviation consultant Bob Harrell, who is no fan of surcharges. He said they're harder for the consumer to spot.

The dates on which Delta, Northwest and United raised the surcharge to $30 include March 14, 20, 21 and 28 and April 5 and 11, according to Parsons. Representatives of the airlines confirmed the increases.

Wunder, the US Airlines spokeswoman, said the new 5 percent surcharge beginning next May was designed as a hedge against uncertain costs.

"We take more risk when we take bookings early," she said. "We don't know what the environment will be if fuel goes up or our costs go up because of schedule changes."

"