Julian Braun Blackjack

Le blackjack est l'un. On y retrouve les plus grands joueurs de tous les temps: Ken Uston, Edward Thorp, Andy Bloch, Stu Ungar, Julian Braun, Jeff Ma. Trachtenshoes – at Ludwig & Therese you will find the right shoes that fit with your Lederhose ✔ discover now ✔ large selection ✔ great brands.


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Black Jack Time Line

Braun

Derived from old French card games like 'Chemin de Fer' and 'French Ferme,' the game of blackjack made its first appearance in French casinos around 1700. In France, blackjack is called 'Vingt-et-Un,' which means 'Twenty-and-A.' The game garnered it's now-common name of 'blackjack' because when a player received a Jack of Spades and an Ace of Spades as the first two cards that were dealt to them, they would win an additional amount of money. Blackjack became popular in the United States around the 1800's and continues to be the most popular casino table game to date.

Influential Blackjack Book Timeline

  • The Optimum Strategy in Blackjack (1956)
  • Beat The Dealer (1963)
  • Professional Blackjack (1975)

Roger Baldwin

Roger Baldwin wrote a paper in 1956 titled The Optimum Strategy in Blackjack. The paper was published by the Journal of the American Statistical Association and helped changed blackjack history forever. This paper was the first of it's kind to apply mathematical theory to the game of blackjack. Baldwin used probability, statistics, and calculators to show methods of reducing the casino advantage in blackjack. The paper was approximately 10 pages long and mainly consisted of mathematics and how they applied to card games.

Professor Edward O. Thorp

In 1962, Professor Edward O. Thorp, who is often referred to as the 'Einstein of Blackjack', touched up the basic strategy that Baldwin had worked on and added the first known techniques of the now infamous tactics of card counting. Professor Throp published a famous book in 1963 called Beat the Dealer. The book was a national best seller. The casinos were affected so strongly by this book that they began to modify the game rules making it more difficult for players to win. Once again, the advantage had shifted back to the casino when they began changing the rules. It was during this time that casinos began introducing automatic card shuffling machines and multiple deck blackjack.

Stanford Wong

The next author to publish a famous book on blackjack was Stanford Wong, who wrote Professional Blackjack. This title used computer simulation to teach blackjack strategy and was designed for both beginning and advanced players. This book quickly became the standard blackjack bible for anyone who wanted to learn or master the game.

Julian Brown

Another large contributor to blackjack history was Julian Braun, a former IBM employee. Braun, a computer wizard, programmed thousands of lines of code for an IBM mainframe system, to simulate basic strategy. He developed new strategies for both basic strategy and card counting, which were published in the 2nd edition of Beat the Dealer.

Ken Uston

Electronic card counting devices were introduced in 1977 when Ken Uston's blackjack team built five pocket-sized computer devices that slid into their shoes. The team won over $100,000 in a short amout of time, as they assumed would happen, but eventually one of the computers was found and turned into the FBI. This computer device simply used public blackjack information, such as basic strategy, so the FBI ruled that it was not a cheating device. 60 Minutes, a popular news television show on CBS, aired an episode featuring Uston on their show in 1981 which lead to challenging casinos in Atlantic City on not allowing card counters to play. Ken Uston wrote a book called The Big Player which details all of his work in blackjack.

MIT Blackjack Team

In the early 1990's another famous card counting group called the MIT Blackjack Team formed, continuing in the tradition of basic strategy and counting techniques, but without any computerized assistance. This team won hundreds of thousands of dollars over a short amount of time. Eventually casinos caught the group of card counters and they were barred from casinos across the globe.

This is blackjack history in a nutshell. To this day, blackjack remains the most popular and heavily played table game offered by casinos.

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US Players and Credit Card, BitCoin Deposits Accepted!

Julian Braun Blackjack

Julian Braun was born in 1929 in Chicago which at that time had ill fame. Despite difficult childhood which happened to Julian during the years of the Great Depression and the stage of overcoming its consequences, Braun grew curious and optimistic child. He successfully graduated from high school and decided to connect his life with exact sciences. Being literate and educated person Braun easily entered the University of Chicago, where he received a degree in physics and mathematics. After graduation Julian served in the US Marine Corps. When he removed a uniform he was employed by IBM. Then, the information technology sphere was only formed, therefore it was considered prospective by young professionals. Julian Braun devoted 25 years to work at that enterprise.

In 1962 Braun read a popular Edward Thorp's book 'Beat the Dealer'. The proposals offered by Thorp, especially from programmer’s point of view seemed very interesting to Julian. So he decided that effective methods of card counting could be simplified and improved by using computer technology.

Braun worked in Fortran and used it to automate a set of blackjack card counting systems. Afterwards he began simulating blackjack games to achieve the best result. Many of his programs he immediately offered to professional players, so that they could test them.

Julian Braun - Blackjack

Due to improved characteristics of card counting techniques in Braun's theory the advantage of a player against the game increased by 1-2 percent. This is a significant indicator which visually confirms the high efficiency of the proposed system.

In 1980 long-term works of Julian Braun were described in the edition 'Blackjack: how to play to win'. In the preface, the author specified that he had never played cards, did not work at any casino, was far from gamblings, therefore there would be no interesting stories from personal player's life in the book. In spite of rather dry and formal writing style this book is often called the bible of blackjack. Everyone who tried his hand in this gambling at least once had read this book.

Julian Braun died in September 2000, and in 2005 his portrait was placed with honors in the Blackjack Hall of Fame.