Manne wrote:
Recent news that a lucky player has taken home a big win of 180,000 euros from Bet24 a Malta located online casino and sports book is good news for the lucky person. The interesting part of the story is that it was won using live casino action. The live sessions of 13 spins of the live roulette wheel in the first produced 100,000 euros within twenty minutes and then twenty nine spins later another 80,000 euros was realized by the player from the United Kingdom.
This is the biggest live action win at the Bet24 online casino. Kim Larsen the manager at the Bet24 casino commented, “Live Casino was launched in April of 2011 and we had, of course, seen winnings but never at this level up to this streak of luck.”
Live dealer and live roulette are probably the most popular of the live games. Roulette and Baccarat are considered the most often played live dealer games, and of course Blackjack is also very popular in a live dealer version.
The larger the screen the more interesting live action becomes. It simulates the real casino experience with the sounds and a real person dealing the cards or spinning the wheel. Baccarat sees high rollers most often with a professional and elegant gaming experience.
Should the American market for online gambling ever open up it is sure to feature live dealer and casino action streaming from the best Las Vegas and Atlantic City casinos. For now players enjoy the live action from European and Asian jurisdictions.
Betfair recently added live online betting using an upgraded Playtech platform.
Betfair Casino chief Adam Joseph commented in a press release: "This is an exciting time and another step forward for Betfair Casino with the launch of Live Casino, replicating the excitement and immediacy that only comes from a live casino experience. Live Casino will provide a smooth entrance for land-based players and attract online players looking for an exciting new game avenue."
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2011/08/29
Messages:
1
Call it the clash of the silk suit titans.
Gambling interests, from South Florida, from Las Vegas, from around the globe, are hiring fearsome armies of lobbyists to shape or thwart gaming legislation percolating in the Legislature. Particularly, the twin bills sponsored by Sen. Ellyn Bogdanoff of Fort Lauderdale and Rep. Erik Fresen of Miami that would permit three giant “destination casinos” in South Florida.
The Herald’s Mary Ellen Klas reported last week that famed Las Vegas gambling concerns like the Las Vegas Sands. Caesars Palace and Wynn resorts have swept into Tallahassee, hiring big lobbyists and writing big checks. State Sen. Dennis Jones of Seminole, chairman of the Senate Regulated Industries Committee, told me Monday that the Vegas outfits weren’t even among the four largest gambling firms clamoring for an audience with his crucial committee.
He said the four huge foreign gaming corporations were also in the hunt for a “destination casino,” including Genting Malaysia Berhad, the same Malaysian gaming giant that just paid $236 million for the Miami Herald building and 13.9 acres on Biscayne Bay. Genting has reportedly hired three powerful lobbying firms, for an estimated $300,000, to convince lawmakers that a $3 billion hotel and casino resort in Miami would do great things for the Florida economy.
(What’s that you say? Surely you didn’t think that you common peons, without lobbyists, without a few hundred grand to spread around Tallahassee, would have a say in something this momentous?)
Sen. Jones insisted that destination casinos would bring thousands of new jobs to Florida. Certainly, the casino gambling proposal has already lifted the lobbying industry out of recession. The Sands, according to the Orlando Sentinel, has increased its stable of lobbyists from eight in 2010 to 11 in 2011.
For every action, as the physicists say, expect an equal reaction. Particularly when it comes to big money politics. The racinos in South Florida and the parimutuels across the state and the Seminole Indian casinos are hiring their own lobbyists and writing equally hefty checks in a desperate attempt to maintain the status quo. The Sentinel reported that the Seminoles have spent $140,000 on lobbyists to convince legislators to keep big competitors out . Broward racinos are spending even more.
If the Seminoles and their longtime enemies, the racinos, are feeling a little peculiar making a common cause, imagine the discomfit of their other ally in the great casino war. “Here’s an odd spectacle,” said Don Hepburn of the Florida Baptist Convention. “The Baptists and other concerns with the religious and moral perspective on gambling, are joined with existing gambling interests.”
The Baptists, just like the racinos and the Indians, want to keep the giant destination casinos out. But perhaps for different reasons :dirol