Wednesday, June 28, 2006

 

Vegassssssssss

When I am back with all my loot. I will start betting again.


See you in July

Saturday, June 10, 2006

 

The Belmont Stakes - My Wager at Nine

Now I know you are looking for an indepth analysis of the Belmont from the guy that is two for two on the Triple Crown.

Got news for you folks. I'm making money because I go for the easy money.

$89.50 is ALOT TO PAY ON an Exacata in a horse race. i don't give a rat's ass what the history of the Belmont Stake is on Exacata pay-offs. I suspect it must be high to bring up such a high number. But if you throw 1,000 pennies into a room. Somewhere in that room is a location where 10 of 10 pennies came up heads. That does not mean there is something magical about that spot and if another penny is thrown it is likely to be heads if it lands there. There are statistical oddities in sports that do not lend towards the prediction of future occurances. $89.50 is a lot on a horse race that has 4 favors running. It is a lot of freaking money.

If one favor comes in and a mid favor comes in - I win
If two favors come in - I win
If two mid favors come in - I might win
If a long shot and a favor comes in - I might win
If two long shots come in - I will lose

Wager type : Proposition/Future
Description : Horse Racing - Belmont Stakes Odds to Win & Props
Belmont Stakes Exacta Payout
Minimum of 10 horses must start
What will the exact pay based on a $2 wager
238 Under 89½ $ +100
Amount : Risking 150.00 To Win 150.00 USD

Sunday, June 04, 2006

 

Lopezzzzzzzzzzzz



Great job!!!!


It's a good day in Baltimore.

 

Have a problem with one of my sponsers? Email me.

you won't find these guys here... Thanks for the e-mail,. Just so you know. Lodging.com and Hotel.com are not the same company.

Hotels.com Customer Info May Be at Risk
Sunday June 4, 7:02 am ET
By Donna Gordon Blankinship, Associated Press Writer
About 243,000 May Be at Risk After Laptop Containing Hotels.com Customer Info Stolen From Auditor


SEATTLE (AP) -- Thousands of Hotels.com customers may be at risk for credit card fraud after a laptop computer containing their personal information was stolen from an auditor, a company spokesman said Saturday.

The password-protected laptop belonging to an Ernst & Young auditor was taken in late February from a locked car, said Paul Kranhold, spokesman for Hotels.com, a subsidiary of Expedia.com based in Bellevue, Wash.

"As a result of our ongoing communication with law enforcement, we don't have any indication that any credit card numbers have been used for fraudulent activity," Kranhold said. "It appears the laptop was not the target of the break-in."

Both Hotels.com and Ernst & Young mailed letters to Hotels.com customers this past week encouraging them to take appropriate action to protect their personal information.

The transactions recorded on the laptop were mostly from 2004, although some were from 2003 or 2002, the companies said. The computer contained personal information including names, addresses and credit card information of about 243,000 Hotels.com customers. It did not include their Social Security numbers.

Ernst & Young, which has been the outside auditor for Hotels.com for several years, notified the company of the security breach on May 3.

"We deeply regret this incident has occurred and want to apologize to you and Hotels.com for any inconvenience or concern this may cause," said the unsigned memo from Ernst & Young dated May 2006.

Ernst & Young invites those affected by the incident to enroll in a free credit monitoring service arranged by the auditor.

"We sincerely regret that this incident occurred and we are taking it very seriously," said the letter signed by Hotels.com general manager Sean Kell.

The letter from Hotels.com said "Ernst & Young was taking additional steps to protect the confidentiality of its data, including encrypting the sensitive information we provide to them as part of the audit process."

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