Florida Free

Free Florida

All Free Chips from www.allchipsfree.com is more than games and poker Chips

Florida Free

Alabama Free
Alaska Free
Alberta Free
Arizona Free
Arkansas Free
British Columbia Free
California Free

Free for All
Free
Florida


Florida

Florida Free

Face cards (Jacks, Queens and Kings) are worth 10 points. h

Check

A check passes the action to the next player. g If all players check, the next card is turned and the player's options repeat. f

Bet

Initiating action by placing a bet. Florida
Free Florida
Florida Free
Free Florida

Chinese Poker

Chinese Poker is played with a standard 52-card deck. Up to four players can play. Each poker player receives 13 cards, face down, one at a time, in rotation. A hand is dealt to all four positions even if vacant. The hand must be arranged with three cards in front, five cards in the middle, and five cards in the back, where the back hand should rank higher or equal to the middle hand, and the middle hand should rank higher than the front hand. Standard poker rankings apply. Straights and flushes do not count in the front hand except in the event of an automatic win. Scores are kept by points. Each part of the hand is assigned one point. Each point is given a monetary value for each game. Hands are then compared with each player, one at a time. The poker player with the higher ranking hand in the front segment wins one point. The player with the higher ranking middle hand wins one point. The player with the higher ranking back hand wins one point. If two out of three of the players' hands ranks higher than an opponent's hand, the first player wins two points. For example, the player would win two points, minus one point (the one an opponent won) plus one point for a majority of segments win, thereby, winning two points total. If all three parts of the player's hand ranks higher than the opponent's hand, the winner gets four points. (The player wins three points (net win), one point for winning each of the three hands minus zero points (the opponent didn't win any) plus one point for the majority of hands won, totaling four points.)
Automatic Win
There are also hands known as an "automatic win" and the player may declare the win by placing the stack of cards down on the table. However, the player must declare the automatic win before the hands are opened, otherwise the hands will play the way the player sets. The automatic win hands are as follows:
1. The Dragon Hand: Ace through King of any suit. This hand beats all other automatic win hands.
2. Any 13-card hand that has six pairs. Note that four-of-a-kind can be counted as two pairs.
3. Any 13-card hand that has suited cards in all three parts.
4. Any 13-card hand that has straights in all three parts.
A Straight Flush can be used as a Straight or a Flush for bonus hands.
Improperly Set Hands
A hand is set improperly if: Any part of the three segment hands has the wrong number of cards; or, any part of the three segment hands are set out of ranking order. Any player that sets his or her hand improperly must pay four points to all of the other players.


Free Florida All
Florida Links and sponsors


Network Free All Directory

Faro

Faro is a card game, a descendant of Basset. It enjoyed great popularity during the 18th century, particularly in England and France, and in the 19th Century in the United States, particularly in the Old West, where it was practiced by faro dealers such as Doc Holliday and Wyatt Earp. It has since fallen out of fashion and is practiced mostly by dedicated Old West enthusiasts and Civil War reenactors. The etymology of "faro" is uncertain. One popular belief is that the name is a corruption of pharaoh and refers to the Egyptian motif that commonly adorned French-made playing cards of the period; it's uncertain if such cards were ever manufactured or widely used. An alternative hypothesis traces the name to the Irish word Fairadh pronounced "fearoo" and meaning "to turn", which could have been brought to France and the UK through mass emigration from Ireland, in particular in the aftermath of the Flight of the Wild Geese, and among those of the Irish Brigade serving in France. A game of faro was often called a "faro bank". It was played with an entire pack of playing cards and admitted an indeterminate number of players, termed "punters", and a "banker". Chips (called "checks") were purchased by the punter from the banker or house from which the game originated. Bet values and limits were set by the house. Usual check values were 50 cents to $10 each.
The faro table was square, with a distinguished cut-out for the banker. A board with a standardized betting layout consisting of one card of each denomination pasted to it, called the "layout", was placed on top of the table. (Traditionally, the suit of spades was used for the layout.) Each player laid his stake on one of the 13 cards on the layout. Players could place multiple bets and could bet on multiple cards simultaneously by placing their bet between cards or on specific card edges. Players also had the choice of betting on the "high card" located at the top of the layout. A deck of cards was placed face-up inside a "dealing box", a mechanical shoe used to prevent manipulations of the draw by the banker, and was supposed to assure players of a fair game. Many sporting-house supply companies sold gaffed dealing boxes that were designed so that the banker could cheat.
The first card in the dealing box is called the "soda" and is "burned" off, leaving 51 cards in play. As the soda is pulled out of the dealing box, it exposes the first card in play, called the "banker's card", which is placed on the right side of the dealing box. The next card exposed after the banker's card is called the "carte anglaise", "English card", or simply the "player's card", and is placed on the left. The banker's card is the "losing card", and all bets placed on that card are lost by the players and won by the bank. The player's card is the "winning card", and all bets placed on that card are returned to the players with a 2 to 1 winning paid by the bank. The banker collects on all the money staked on the card laid on the right and pays double the sums staked on those on the card remaining on the left (in the dealing box). The dealer would settle all bets after each two cards drawn, and allow for players to bet before drawing the next two cards. A player could "copper" their bet by placing an hexagonal (6-sided) token called a "copper". Some histories claim a penny was sometimes used in place of a copper. This reversed the meaning of the win/loss piles for that particular bet. An abacus-like device, called a "case keep", is employed to assist the players and prevent dealer cheating by counting cards. The operator of the case keep is called the "case keeper". Certain advantages were reserved to the banker: if he drew a doublet, that is, two equal cards, he won half of the stakes upon the card which equaled the doublet. In a fair game, this provided the only house edge. If the banker drew the last card of the pack, he was exempt from doubling the stakes deposited on that card. In most cases, when three cards remained, the dealer would offer a specialized bet called "betting the turn". This bet offers a 4-to-1 (5-for-1) payout if the players can identify the exact order of the last three cards. wikiFaro

Ross Reports

The Ross Reports Magazine is a resource to connect everybody who's anybody in casting and production. Each issue of Ross Reports supplies updated lists of the TV and film people to keep in touch with--casting directors, producers, talent agents and more! With highlights on a different aspect of the business in each issue, including television commercials, voiceovers, comedy casting, soaps, independent films, and more, Ross Reports is the ultimate resource to the business. Most bookstores carry the Ross Reports but if you would like to learn more online, go to Ross Reports.

Scout talent

The term scout talent refers to a Talent Scout. A talent scout is employed by a company or talent agency with the purpose of discovering new talent to add to a companies' talent roster. Many times a talent scout will hold open call auditions, which are announced through the media and are held on a specific day or weekend, depending on the project and the turnout. Open casting calls also give a person who is casually thinking about acting, modeling or performing, a chance to tryout without needing any experience. To find more information about talent scouts, visit talent scout.

Mobile phone

The mobile phone or mobile, also called a cellular phone, cell phone, or cell, is a long-range, portable electronic device used for mobile communication that uses a network of specialized base stations known as cell sites. In addition to the standard voice function of a telephone, current mobile phones can support many additional services such as SMS for text messaging, email, packet switching for access to the Internet, and MMS for sending and receiving photos and video. Most current mobile phones connect to a cellular network of base stations which is in turn interconnected to the public switched telephone network. Mobile telephone use in etiquette is an important matter of social discourtesy, phones ringing during funerals, weddings, in toilets, cinemas, and plays. Users often speak loudly, leading to book shops, libraries, bathrooms, cinemas, doctors' offices, and places of worship prohibiting their uses, and, in some places, the installation of signal-jamming equipment to prevent their use (though in many countries, including the U.S., such equipment is currently illegal). Some new buildings, such as auditoriums, have installed wire mesh in the walls (making it a Faraday cage), which prevents signal penetration without violating signal jamming laws. Trains, particularly those involving long-distance services, often offer a "quiet carriage" where phone use is prohibited, much like the designated non-smoking carriage in the past. However many users tend to ignore this as it is rarely enforced, especially if the other carriages are crowded and they have no choice but to go in the "quiet carriage". Mobile phone use on aircraft is also prohibited and many airlines claim in their in-plane announcements that this prohibition is due to possible interference with aircraft radio communications. Mobile phones generally obtain power from batteries which can be recharged from mains power, a USB port or a cigarette lighter socket in a car. Formerly, the most common form of mobile phone batteries were nickel metal-hydride, as they have a low size and weight. Lithium-Ion batteries are sometimes used, as they are lighter and do not have the voltage depression that nickel metal-hydride batteries do. Many mobile phone manufacturers have now switched to using lithium-Polymer batteries as opposed to the older Lithium-Ion, the main advantages of this being even lower weight and the possibility to make the battery a shape other than strict cuboid. Mobile phone manufacturers have been experimenting with alternate power sources, including solar cells.
Resources





Alabama Free
Alaska Free
Alberta Free
Arizona Free
Arkansas Free
British Columbia Free
California Free

Free for All
Free
Canada Free Canada
Colorado Free
best Connecticut Free Delaware Free
District of Columbia Free
Poker Jacks Or Better Kansas City Low Ball Poker Kansas City Low Ball Poker Pai Gow Poker Pai Gow Poker Pan Poker Pan Poker Pineapple Poker Pineapple Poker Poker Hands Poker Hands Poker Rules Poker Rules Poker-Games Poker-Games Seven Card Stud Low Poker
Florida Free
Georgia Free
Hawaii Free
Home Free
Idaho Free
Illinois Free
Indiana Free
Iowa Free
Kansas Free
Kentucky Free
Louisiana Blues Traveler
Maine Free
Manitoba Free
Maryland Free
Massachusetts Free
Michigan Free
Minnesota Free
Mississippi Free
Missouri Free
Montana Free
Nebraska Free
Nevada Free
New Brunswick Free
New Hampshire Free
New Jersey Free
New Mexico Free
New York Free
Newfoundland and Labrador Free
North Carolina Free
North Dakota Free
Northwest Territories Free
Nova Scotia Blues and Blues Boogie
Nunavut All
Ohio Free
Oklahoma Free
Ontario Free
Oregon Free
Pennsylvania Free
Plan Free
Prince Edward Island Blues Boogie
Puerto Rico Free
Quebec All
Rhode Island Free
Saskatchewan Free
South Carolina Free
South Dakota Free
Tennessee Free
Texas Free
USA Free
USA Free
Utah Free
Vermont Free
Virgin Islands Free
Virginia Free
Washington Free
West Virginia Free
Wisconsin Free
Wyoming Free
Yukon Free

Florida Free


Free Auditions Florida All and All Casting Free Models Free
Florida Going green is the future Florida All Florida




Florida
123-short
Free or All and All two