maine-road11 Nov 25 12:49
STEEPLEDOWNS
The virtuals were the same races played out every time - there were 10 races in total. Basically all they did was move the horses around. Race one would be won by the hose 3rd from the rail race 2 8 from the rail race 3 the nearest the rail and so on. Sprint valley wand portman park wee the same the same stall won the race it just had a different horse in.
The prob with portman and sprint was they were in the stalls so you had no idea of the number. HOWEVER when steepledowns appeared the hoses lined up as in national hunt about 5 second before the race. This gave him time to clock the number so he had 5 seconds to place the bet. It could be the fav or a 100-1 shot. He memorised the colours to make it faster. He cleared up in Ireland then came over here and cleared up again. In the end he sat in a shop in Ireland and had a lad over here on the phone with an ear piece in he would tell the lad the number he would act like he was on the phone to the mrs and just listen then put the bet on. In the end if the irish fella said number 7 he would place £50 on number 7number 8 and number 9 to make it look like a guess. I saw this work with my own eyes
This makes perfect sense in terms of computer programming and how most computerised random were generated 10-20 years ago.
Paddy power roulette machines, side by side would land on the same number on both machines if the 'play' buttons were both pressed at the same time.
I worked out that the number was generated using the the time to the second as a seed.
I didn't manage to exploit this leak (shame) and it stayed until the next generation of machines arrived which were connected to the internet and didn't generate the winning number internally.
Some maths guy worked out that the random number used to generate hands on paradise poker was seeded using the time down to the millisecond (millisec times are a feature of UNIX machines, PC's used seconds mostly)
So your guy saying there were 10 races in total, was probably a factor of what time past the hour they started, and thus the sequence would stay the same and repeat.

Nov 13, 2025 -- 2:05PM, Cider wrote:
Why would you make the lazy assumption that that all gambling addicts are thick?I'm not! This is at the centre of the ideology I outlined. I do have an ideology of my own, adults should be free to make their own decisions, and be responsible for their own choices. Life should not be constructed to account for the lowest common denominator, as people making poor decisions and those resulting in poor outcomes will never be eliminated. That's why we are where we are today.What's the problem, exactly?
Completely agree, no matter what the books did or did not offer, the degenerates would have found a way to lose their money as they are just life's losers. If someone cannot control their vice, they cannot control it. Its not for the other 99.9% to pay the price of that. Its called personal responsibility alongside civil liberties.


Nov 13, 2025 -- 4:41PM, The Management wrote:
Poor old cider (and mitolo) Imagine being so invested and obsessed with an ideology - that you can see (quite rightly) why people should be held responsible and pay a price for their own (entirely legal) choices and actions; but simultaneously just cannot get your head around corporations also being held responsible and paying a price for their choices and actions (even when those actions are illegal).The actions of the individuals (the customers) have been entirely lawful and the actions of the corporations (the bookmakers) have been broadly illegal (for about 20 years). Any you want to hold the customers accountable and for them to take more personal responsibility You are perfectly entitled not to like the 2005 Gambling Act (because it doesn't align with your ideology or you political beliefs) - but that doesn't mean it doesn't exist or that you can pretend it doesn't exist.You might as well be arguing that you don't like the laws around drink driving and therefore you have the right and the choice to drink drive. The basis of everything you are saying is that flawed. To take that analogy to it's conclusion (ignoring the law of the land because you don't much like it), you are effectively saying that a law abiding pedestrian that get his by a drunk driver, is somehow at fault as he should have taken more personal responsibility for his actions and made better choices in order to have avoided getting hit.Only one party has acted illegally. None of your beliefs, likes, dislikes or ideologies can alter the reality of that fact or that it is why we are, where we are today.
The Gambling Act was a nonsense bit of ill thought out legislation which was rushed through to help ride the wave that was "new labour", but in reality is has no real standing at all. Certainly not the most thought out, definitely not one that the big corps needed to really pay too much attention to as when has been challenged various occasions its been found to be flawed....
everyone is different and as I said before Good Luck.
Nov 14, 2025 -- 1:44PM, The Management wrote:
Of course the alternative view to all of this being self-inflicted: is that a rag-tag collection of amateur activists and campaigners, spearheaded the purple-haired commie woman and IDS (a washed up ex-leader of the Conservative Party) have somehow conspired to bring the Gambling Industry in the UK to it's knees!
But this is exactly what has happened. Gambling has been around for centuries with no issues, persons that are the horror story like CH and IDS sitting in parliament are the problem..nothing else.
Nov 14, 2025 -- 2:25PM, The Management wrote:
I've seen the light mitolo. The arguments that you and cider have put forward are overwhelming.The Industry is blameless. It has strived to uphold the law and act with fairness and integrity. The laws they did break persistently for about 15 years are silly and minor ones that I don't like anyway. Punters have put the Gambling Industry into the position they currently find themselves in, by not taking enough personal responsibility for their actions.Coupled with the actions of that Radicalised Lefty and political heavyweight - Iain Duncan Smith.
In fairness IDS can often be found just to the left of Corbyn on many policies so not sure of your argument with this point? You clearly wish to blame to those pesky companies for wanting to have a business model which generates a profit. Spend what you like folks, create debt all over the place without any fear, the state will wrap you in cotton wool and absolve you of any responsibility.....
