BJ21: Usage Tips and Web Site News

Administrative Announcements

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Navigation and Usage Tips
Power Posting
Trip Reporting Tips

Navigation and Usage Tips

Power Posting

1. Choose your subject heading carefully. Ten times as many people will read your subject line as will read your message.

2. Think the message through carefully before you post it. Having just one message in a given thread reflects much better on you than if you need multiple posts to explain one idea.

3. Accept that no matter what you say, someone can find a way to turn your own words against you. When that happens, do not counterattack.

4. Accept that other people have the right of free speech. Do not argue when someone disagrees with you. As long as your original post still exists, anyone can read it and accept it as if it were a response to your critic.

5. Do not post the same message multiple times, either on the same message board or on different boards.

6. Do not feel obligated to respond to any post. Of course, when someone asks if you meant "Howard Schwartz" when you said "Howard Grossman" and the answer is affirmative, a response is appropriate.

7. Let the other person have the last word in a disagreement. Making the final post in an argumentative thread is perceived as weakness, not strength.

8. Assume that any comment overly critical of you will not be believed, and will soon be offset by a response from someone else, who thinks you are being treated unfairly.

9. People judge you by your own posts. If visitors to BJ21 think you have a particular attribute, it is because your own posts have demonstrated that attribute and not because somebody else has posted accusing you of having that attribute.

10. Use humor, but use it sparingly. A little humor sharpens an argument, but too much humor comes across as meanness.

11. A truth about posts: Meanness is magnified. Posts with a little bit of meanness will be read as having a lot of meanness. So before you post, edit the meanness out of your message. And when you read a message that you interpret as mean, discount the meanness.

12. It is easy for one person to post multiple messages, attaching a different name to each. Therefore, multiple anonymous attacks might all be posted by just one person. The more outrageous the attacks, the more likely that they were all posted by one person.

13. If you are asking a question or requesting information, use a question mark in the subject line.

14. Do not post in all capital letters. This goes for the subject heading as well. Posting in all caps is considered shouting and rude. Posting a subject heading in all caps infers that you think that your post is more important than anyone else's. There are only rare situations when shouting is appropriate. Of course, posting an acronym like ROTFL is done in all caps.

Trip Reporting Tips

Originally posted on Green Chip by EmeraldCityBJ:

There are times when you can get valuable feedback from this forum by posting details from your trip, but you need to take care to not provide enough detail to out yourself.

Here are a few things you can do to get around this:

1) Wait a few weeks or months to post anything. Give anyone who may have been working in the casino at the time who observed your play time to forget about your specific situation. If you have a truly unique story, you will want to wait longer than if you experienced something that happens on a regular basis.

2) When you do post the story, don't provide specifics as to the timeline. Use vague terms like "a while back", "recently," or "several months/years ago." You may even want to lie about the timeline. For example, state "over the summer" when the event took place in October.

3) Avoid disclosing the name or location of the casino unless it's relevant. For example, our response to statements like "When I bought in for $2000 and the pit boss got on the phone", or "When I wonged in, the pit boss pulled out a three ring binder full of flyers and started flipping pages while looking in my general direction" would likely be similar regardless of the casino.

If your story cannot wait, or you need more immediate feedback, it may be best to have the discussion on private email rather than a public board. If you're not sure who to contact, a simple message like "Please email me if you know anything about the tolerance levels at [name of casino]" will often get the ball rolling. You're not disclosing any specific information about your session, and many would assume that you're planning a trip there at some point in the near future rather than wanting to discuss an event which already took place.


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