Joshua van Aalst’s blog

August 25th, 2007

Quick catch up!

Posted by Joshua van Aalst in Interesting Stuff, Josh and Friends, Netbeans

Alright everyone…..

Here is a quick catch up of what’s been happening with me.

Gayscene to be merged into Josh and Friends

Thats right very shortly the content of Gayscene will be merged into Josh and Friends. That means I’ll be adding a new Category group. I still need a name for this group so if you have a good idea for one please email me at josh@joshandfriends.com.au . Basically the category will have a couple of options to describe at what demographic the DJ, Event, News e.t.c. aims at. The options at the moment are Gay scene, Lesbian scene, 18+, Under 18.

Their will be a new forum added for Gay and Lesbian events.

Personal Development

I am working extremely hard at personal development at the moment. Normally when I hear someone say they have been doing personal development I imagine that to be someone trying to find themselves. Believe me when I say i’ve found myself, and i’m only describing what i am doing as such because I can not announce it just yet. It’s all very exciting though!

Facebook

Yes, I have joined the revolution with both my own personal Joshua van Aalst page and also a Josh and Friends group. I must admit so far i’m absolutely loving it. I have managed to contact almost all of the friends i wish i would have kept in contact with but didn’t. It’s great seeing what they are all doing on a day to day basis.

If you haven’t used Facebook it is alot like Myspace except with an exceptional tracking system that provides you with an overview of what all your friends are doing. E.g. “Joshua van Aalst is now friends with Ella Parker”.

New version of Josh and Friends website

I have also been working ‘reasonably’ hard on a new version of the website. Unfortunately I did something rather silly. The site is written in Netbeans 5.5.1 (the current production version). I upgraded to the milestone version of Netbeans 6 which is full of show stopper bugs. I have not been able to migrate back to version 5.5.1. I am left with a choice; persist and wait till mid September when Netbeans 6 goes beta or work off a backup and migrate at a later date. As I am doing the ‘Personal Development’ above I have decided to go with the former. This may mean that an upgrade to the site won’t happen till end of September. What’s in this upgrade i’m speaking of? I’ll blog about it in a separate post.

A Night Of Trance

Tennille has squeezed my arm and we are going to run an A Night Of Trance event on September 21 at ARQ. Their hasn’t been one for 6 months and we are very excited about the return of uplifting Trance to Sydney. It has been a rather depressing time for Trance in Sydney and I hope that everyone will get out in force to support the event and show that we still LOVE our Trance! - Make sure you bring a friend to the event.

Swimming

I’m also back at the pool 3 days a week again. As the months are getting warmer it’s time to trim down and get in shape.

August 4th, 2007

Google adsense. Your working for Google!

Approximately 2 weeks ago I added Google adsense banners to the top of my sites www.joshandfriends.com.au and www.gayscene.com.au . The aim? To raise some money for the increasing cost of web hosting due to site growth.

Adsense = When you put Google banners and adds on your site for other sites
Adwords = When you pay Google to advertise on their search or their adsense network of sites.

We are currently doing an average of 20,000 unique visitors per month on Josh and Friends alone.

Over the 2 weeks that the advertisements have been up we have generated a total of US $3.67 . I could say that is a joke but I think the number speaks for itself.

To make matters worse lets look at how much I was paying Google when i was using their advertising program adwords to advertise on other similar sites to mine.

I was paying between 39 cents and 75 cents a click (Australian). Average of 57 cents. At current exchange rate (84 Australian cents to 1 US dollar) that is 48 cents per click I pay Google.

So how much does Google give back when i put their banners up? I’ve had 62 clicks in the 2 weeks which averages out to 6 cents.

So Google’s markup per click is 42 cents a whopping 88%!!!!!

You can see why their the worlds most successful company right now.

I am currently looking for another advertising agency. One which doesn’t take 88% of revenue. Send me an email josh@joshandfriends.com.au if you know any or reply to this entry.

July 31st, 2007

Automated outgoing calls

Posted by Joshua van Aalst in Interesting Stuff

I just got an automated outgoing call from Vodafone

“Hi i’m Lara,

I’ve recently noticed that you’ve called us at Vodafone and i’d like to help you further.”

The call then went something along the lines of…

Press 1 if your call was answered appropriately
Press 2 if you have futher enquirines

Press 0 to hear these options again

What the?

They didn’t say “Press the red end call button to make me go away”.

The only response that call has had on me is to consider cancelling my contract. What a waste of my time and an invasion of privacy.

It’s almost as bad as the internet provider Exetel’s automated technical support number:

“Hi you’ve called Exetel technical support. For all technical support enquiries please email us at support@exetel.com.au”

July 21st, 2007

Bourke St Bakery. THE place to be!

Posted by Joshua van Aalst in Interesting Stuff

Up until now ridiculous queues for bakeries have been reserved for places like the Magnolia bakery in New York, where people queue for hours in the freezing cold to buy a cup cake.

That was then! This is now….

The Bourke St Bakery in Sydney’s Surry Hills is changing all that. It’s selection of pastries, muffins and cookies is amazing and they taste delightful. Not your typical Bakers Delight or Brumbies bakeries where the pasteries taste fatty and the bread can taste stale.

The efffect has been so intoxicating on the population of Surry Hills you can now find almost hour long queues outside at all hours of the day.

Check it out. It’s at the corner of Bourke and Devonshire st.

July 11th, 2007

Dell pioneers the future of laptops - XPS M1330

Posted by Joshua van Aalst in Interesting Stuff, Java and Web Development

Over the past decade new end user computing technologies have progressively slowed. Their have been fewer and fewer increases in CPU Ghz and increases in RAM that only matched the increase in it’s requirements by modern software applications. The only major improvement in technology has been the move to multiple (’dual’, ‘quad’) core CPUs. Realistically though most of the average end user applications do not take advantage or require continuous multi processing.

In a move that has completely shocked the industry Dell has released it’s new 13inch laptop XPS M1330.

What makes it so special?

Solid State Hard Drive

The XPS M1330 is the first laptop to offer the new Solid State hard drive technology. Solid State is a hard drive where the storage is stored on flash memory rather than a mechanical device. Solid State hard drives are much much faster in every way than traditional hard drives. As the hard drive is the root cause of slowness in almost every application a performance benefit here will be seen in almost every part of computer useage… when starting the computer, starting applications and running multiple applications at the same time (the page file is faster to access). Not only the above but the drive is also more shock resistant than traditional mechanical drives. Their is a great article on the specifics improvements of the Solid State hard drive here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_state_disk

LED display

The XPS M1330 is also one of the first laptops to offer a LED display. Over the last decade every laptop has had a TFT display. What is the benefit of this new type of display? It’s thinner and brighter than the traditional TFT displays which means you need less power to get the same level of brightness.

Centrino Pro CPU

The XPS M1330 is also one of the first laptops to sport the new Centrino Pro CPU/chipset. This is the successor to the current Core 2 Duo. The Centrino Pro has a large cache, faster Front Side Bus and more instructions than it’s predecessor. In english? It’s faster.

More of everything

In addition to the above technology breakthroughs the XPS M1330 also sports 4gig of Ram and Wirless N networking.

So what’s the end product like?

With massive improvements in power saving and component size the Dell XPS M1330 weighs only 1.7kg and is the thinnest, lightest and fastest in it’s class. Far far faster than the Mac Book Pro or any other currently available laptop.

What is the community’s response to the new laptop?

For one of the first times in the history of a new product release the Dell XPS M1330 has received rave reviews from every review site on the net. Just search for “Dell xps m1330 reviews”. The only negative feedback I found was that their was a 2 month wait on the laptop due to the ridiculous amounts of back orders!!

Basically BUY THIS LAPTOP!!

July 1st, 2007

The Ferengi rules of acquisition

Posted by Joshua van Aalst in Interesting Stuff

Sorry haven’t written for a while as I am having trouble inserting html code examples BUT something rather cool is the Ferengi rules of acquisition from Star Trek Deep Space Nine. Yes I am aware that Star Trek and cool can not be used in a sentence together… anyway check these out!

1. Once you have their money … never give it back.
3. Never pay more for an acquisition than you have to.
6. Never allow family to stand in the way of opportunity.
6. A man is only worth the sum of his possessions. (From Enterprise, episode “Acquisition”; sloppy script-writing, as rule 6 (see above) was already given in DS9)
7. Keep your ears open.
8. Small print leads to large risk.
9. Opportunity plus instinct equals profit.
10. Greed is eternal.
13. Anything worth doing is worth doing for money.
16. A deal is a deal … until a better one comes along.
17. A contract is a contract is a contract (but only between Ferengi).
18. A Ferengi without profit is no Ferengi at all.
19. Satisfaction is not guaranteed.
21. Never place friendship above profit.
22. A wise man can hear profit in the wind.
23. Nothing is more important than your health–except for your money.
27. There’s nothing more dangerous than an honest businessman.
31. Never make fun of a Ferengi’s mother … insult something he cares about instead.
33. It never hurts to suck up to the boss.
34. Peace is good for business.
35. War is good for business.
40. She can touch your lobes but never your latinum.
41. Profit is its own reward.
44. Never confuse wisdom with luck.
45. Expand, or die.
47. Don’t trust a man wearing a better suit than your own.
48. The bigger the smile, the sharper the knife.
52. Never ask when you can take.
57. Good customers are as rare as latinum — treasure them.
58. There is no substitute for success.
59. Free advice is seldom cheap.
60. Keep your lies consistent.
62. The riskier the road, the greater the profit.
65. Win or lose, there’s always Hyperian beetle snuff.
75. Home is where the heart is … but the stars are made of latinum.
76. Every once in a while, declare peace. It confuses the hell out of your enemies.
79. Beware of the Vulcan greed for knowledge.
82. The flimsier the product, the higher the price.
85. Never let the competition know what you’re thinking.
89. Ask not what your profits can do for you, but what you can do for your profits.
94. Females and finances don’t mix.
97. Enough … is never enough.
99. Trust is the biggest liability of all.
102. Nature decays, but latinum lasts forever.
103. Sleep can interfere with profit. (DS9 season 2, episode 7 - “Rules of Acquisition”)
104. Faith moves mountains … of inventory.
106. There is no honour in poverty.
109. Dignity and an empty sack is worth the sack.
111. Treat people in your debt like family … exploit them.
112. Never have sex with the boss’s sister.
113. Always have sex with the boss.
117. You can’t free a fish from water.
121. Everything is for sale, even friendship.
123. Even a blind man can recognize the glow of latinum.
139. Wives serve, brothers inherit.
141. Only fools pay retail.
144. There’s nothing wrong with charity … as long as it winds up in your pocket.
162. Even in the worst of times someone turns a profit.
177. Know your enemies … but do business with them always.
181. Not even dishonesty can tarnish the shine of profit.
189. Let others keep their reputation. You keep their money.
192. Never cheat a Klingon … unless you’re sure you can get away with it.
194. It’s always good business to know about new customers before they walk in the door.
202. The justification for profit is profit.
203. New customers are like razortoothed grubworms. They can be succulent, but sometimes they can bite back.
211. Employees are rungs on the ladder of success. Don’t hesitate to step on them.
214. Never begin a negotiation on an empty stomach.
218. Always know what you’re buying.
223. Beware the man who doesn’t make time for oo-mox.
229. Latinum lasts longer than lust.
236. You can’t buy fate.
239. Never be afraid to mislabel a product.
242. More is good … all is better.
255. A wife is a luxury … a smart accountant is a necessity.
261. A wealthy man can afford anything except a conscience.
263. Never allow doubt to tarnish your love of latinum.
266. When in doubt, lie.
284. Deep down everyone’s a Ferengi.
285. No good deed ever goes unpunished.
286. [Quark’s rule] When Morn leaves, it’s all over.

Thanks to: www.sjtrek.com/trek/rules/ for the list

June 19th, 2007

The Google monopoly tightens it’s grip

Posted by Joshua van Aalst in Interesting Stuff, Josh and Friends

If you thought Google was the dominant search engine then think again!

Here is an interesting result from www.joshandfriends.com.au .

So far for the first 18 days of June Google search and Google images was responsible for a whopping 97.7% of inbound links from a search engine. That is 5,056 inbound hits.

Compare that to Yahoo with 0.2% with 15 inbound hits and MSN Live with 0.1% and 9 sultry inbound hits.

That’s an insane result. I would have expected Google was maximum around 80% of inbound hits.

To compound this the site actually ranks higher in Yahoo and MSN Live than it does in Google!

June 15th, 2007

Evaluating Debts… and why not to get into them!

Posted by Joshua van Aalst in Interesting Stuff

When people consider whether or not to go into debt be it for a purchase, a service or an investment they almost always miss-judge the full costs of debts.

Debts are made up of several different costs:

1) The face value cost i.e. a loan for $20,000 with monthly repayments of $500
2) The hidden costs
a) Ability to repay debts when other un-planned situations arise
b) Personal time
c) Emotional toll

Lets look into the 3 hidden costs a little more.

Dealing with un-planned situations.

When we are repaying debts, changing situations inevitably arise. We have a new job and need to purchase a car to travel. We move houses. A new type of movie player (ala HD-DVD) is released and we *have* to buy one. The share market drops and we want to take advantage of the low share prices and buy in.

All the above will require financing. Financing must come from 1 of to 2 places. Either we borrow money or we divert existing funds away from other payments.

Either of the above will place increasing pressures on any existing debts that we have.

The longer the debt the higher the risk is for the above to occur.

So the end result is? It takes longer to pay off the debt or we need to re finance the debt. Both of which create issues with regards to Personal time and consequently have an Emotional toll.

Some would argue that as our wage increases over time it is easier to pay off the debts. I strongly disagree as over time not only does our wage increase but so does total interest, amount of debts and of course the price of goods (inflation).

Personal time.

So what happens when we have to re-finance debt or extend the payment terms?

Inevitably one will have to phone not just one but many financial institutions multiple times.

Why?

To find out what is the most efficient way to re-finance the debt.
To hear the precise terms of the re-finance.
To accept the offer.

If you consider that financial institutions like to make customers wait on hold for around 20 minutes and have those dreadful computer answering voices (press 1 for blah, press 2 for blah e.t.c.). The personal time invested in the debts and the emotional toll increases dramatically.

To make matters worse lets add to the mix a house move. Now one will have to phone all related financial institutions to notify them of the new address. If it takes 30 minutes to call each one and you have multiple institutions financing your debt you could be in for a very long haul!

… and what happens if your working 9 till 6 with a 1 hour lunch break? Calling such institutions could take weeks of free time!

Emotional toll

So you’ve spent all lunch time for a month on the phone to financial institutions listening to “You have progressed in the queue” messages. Un-planned for costs have dramatically increased the length of time you will need to close off the debts and the size of the debts and the total interest has increased.

What happens?

Stress.

You lye awake at night. You get angry at your partner, friends and family.

What’s worse is that as new debts come in and old ones are extended due to re-financing the situation will get worse and worse spiraling out of control.

The moral of the story.

Research and way up the debts you are entering. Their will always be hidden costs. Make sure you plan for them!

Can you really afford that debt?

June 10th, 2007

What’s hot in the USA! and how it compares to Australia.

Posted by Joshua van Aalst in Interesting Stuff

Well almost back from my tour of the US (Los Angeles, Vegas, Orlando, New York and Boston).

I thought I’d jot down a couple of insights and mini reviews of places we went to and what was cool and what wasn’t.

Firstly though, a couple of general points for people visiting the US:

1) Always bargain. Even if you think you can’t bargain try anyway! And don’t look like you will purchase the item anyway, that would obviously be silly.

A great example, on my first day in Los Aangeles I visited Melrose St and bought a pair of shoes for $90 US without bargaining. Later in a non tourist district (St Marks St) in New York, I saw the same pair for $69 US. Sales staff will laugh at you if you pay full price…. And so will I!

2) Extreme sales people

Due to the extreme capitalist nature of the US (employees working for tips, no public health e.t.c.). People are forced to sell as their lives (literally) depend on it. Be careful. A good sales person will have you walking out of their store in a skirt that is 2 sizes too big and a putrid shade of bile green. You have been warned!

3) Awesome service.

Again due to the dependency on tips service people have to provide the best service to generate the maximum tips. This is pretty cool for an Aussie who’s used to waiters who put a plate in front of you and that’s all you ever see of them.

4) Sales Tax

My personal favourite in the USA! No one seems to be able to explain how this works. According to a camera dealer in Orlando you pay sales tax on TOP of the price of all items other than food. Seems simple right?

In all the clothing vendors in Boston and New York (that I visited) the sales tax was included in the price but in the diners it wasn’t! Opposite to Orlando.

Sales Tax is absolutely random. Always ask if it is included. Prices in America are ridiculously misleading. By the time you’ve added sales tax and a tip onto the beer you just ordered, it’s more than doubled from what you had sat down for.

5) Queues, queues and more queues.

From my travels it appears that American’s love to queue. In Australia if your in Martin place (central business district) at lunch it is a free for all, people shoving to the front to get served. In the US from Disney land to New York’s famed Magnolia bakery. People politely queue and patiently wait.

6) Cigarettes and Liquor everywhere.

In America you can pick up your medicine at the Pharmacist whilst buying a pack of your favourite cigarettes and a bottle of hard liquour. There is also absolutely no health warning on cigarettes and they are much bigger than Australian cigarettes. That being said their’s nothing better than stepping into any restaurant and ordering an alcoholic drink. No need to worry about who’s licensed and not. They all are!

7) Hotels are NOT your friends.

Don’t accept hotels special airport taxis! You are generally offered 1 of 2 options by the hotel. A shuttle bus to the airport. These take hours longer than a direct taxi as they generally stop at multiple hotels and they aren’t much cheaper. The other option hotels like to offer is a ‘special’ taxi. The special Taxi from the Holdiay Inn in midtown New York to JFK airport was $60 US. A normal taxi was only $45!

Also of note baggage storage, according to hotels should cost you $1 to $2 tip per bag checked. This is too much and is what they want you to pay to compensate the fact that they don’t pay their concierges and valets (Yes a Valet at the Hilton in Las Vegas confirmed this), $2 will be fine for 3 bags.

The following places rock! Visit them … (In order of coolness):

O, Cirque Du Solieu (Las Vegas)

This show was utterly amazing. O is Cirque Du Solieu’s water show in the Belagio. The Belagio’s theatre is massive, closer to a stadium than a theatre. About 4 times the size of the biggest theatre we visited in Broadway (New York). The show itself was amazing. 60 performers in perfect unison performing syncronised swimming, trappese, rope, swings, circus tricks, fire tricks and more. The best part of this show was it’s scale. 60 performers really is a very large ensemble. To put it in perspective a big Broadway musical will have around 30 (maximum 40 performers). So it is double that. Also the stage was amazing, transforming from a water stage to a fire stage and even to a diving pool all whilst the performance continued.

Also a bit of Trivia there are 4 different Cirque Du Solieu shows throughout Las Vegas and a show like O above has 2 performances a day! That’s Las Vegas for you!

Melrose St (Los Angeles)

If your looking to buy medium range clothing between $50 to $200 US. Then this is your place. Easily the best male clothes shopping that I have ever experienced (and some great girls clothes too). The shopping area of Melrose St extends for approximately 10 blocks and is filled with local designers and boutiques with amazing and awe inspiring clothing (at decent prices). The clothes really were amazing often with large custom prints and designs covered in studs, patches and other decorations. Lots of attention to detail, these are the clothes that General Pants, Urban Outfitters and Supre homogenize to make accessible for the general public. One sentence…. SHOP THERE!

Marks St (Manhattan, New York)

Similar to Melrose St in Los Angeles but with a focus on Goth and Punk clothing. One of the most amazing aspects of Marks St is the atmosphere. You’ll find locals out in force dressed to the teeth in the hottest Goth, Punk and alternative clothes with a somewhat silly amount of accessories. One of my favourites was a really big guy in hot pink stilettos (no not a drag queen either) and a shop assistant who had a massive gun as a belt buckle. The prices are again very reasonable and it’s a great place to see artists designing clothes right there. Defiantly worth a visit, the street is not on the maps so happy hunting (head to lower Manhattan).

Mary Poppins, the Musical (New York)

A stunning example of a Broadway production and the massive spectacle you expect from it. Awesome moving set too. Props to the actors dancing upside down on the roof of the theatre and Mary Poppins soaring through the air!

Blizzard Beach (Disney World, Orlando)

One of Disney Worlds 2 massive water parks, check it out for some of the most amazing water slides in the world. They really are inspiring. Plenty of long rides and even better … to get around the park simply hop in a massive rapid river in a blow up rubber tire and you’ll be taken on a ride around the whole park.

Virgin Music and Toys r Us (Times Square, New York)

These stores are both almost next to each other. Both are amazing 4 leveled beasts. The Toys r Us store has a 4 storey high Ferris wheel in the middle of the store where the wheel’s seats are My Little Pony’s, Bob the builder cars and many other famed kids shows. Virgin Music has an amazing selection of DVDs, the largest i’ve seen, with plenty of DVD’s from TV shows i never knew existed.

Spamalot, the Monty Python Musical (Broadway, New York)

This was the funniest show we saw. Lots of laughs and the story does not follow any of the Monty Python movies exactly (contrary to popular opinion) although it does draw a few scenes from the Holy Grail. The only downside was that the theatre was ridiculously crammed. The seats were so small and close together you felt you would fall over the person in front of you. Also the Gay scene could have been done far better. They needed an actual Mardi Gras coloured flag and a drag queen.

Star Trek, The Experience (Hilton Hotel, Las Vegas)

Hidden away in the Hilton Hotel is Quarks bar and grille and 2 massive Star Trek rides one based on Voyager’s Borg episodes and another based on the Klingon encounters. Not only were the rides great but so were the drinks. I dare you to order a large warp core breech! The drink is made with over 5 full shots and dry ice that creates a smoke effect pouring from the oversized glass! ?

Delta Shuttles

Delta is one of America’s biggest airlines. The Delta shuttles are like a bus service from major city to major city. They are fantastic:

1) You can sit anywhere
2) Planes fly every half an hour so you can get one as soon as you check in. No need to wait around in the air port
3) Planes are extremely roomy. I could open my laptop!
4) Planes are not over crowded. Often you’ll get 2 seats to your self.

Yes and before you question the praise we were flying in peak holiday season and we did fly delta shuttles twice.

New York food!

In general New York food was supurb. Meals were large and absolutely delicious. I heard some people talking: “If a resteraunt is not amazing in New York it dies instantly”. I Could not agree more.

The following places we were told to visit but were a little disappointing (You might still enjoy them though):

Century 21 (New York)

We heard lots of good things about this discount department store but to put it frankly it was ? . Firstly it was totally overcrowded and secondly all the branded clothes (Guess, Marcs, Levis e.t.c.) were 2 years ago’s seasons and were quite obviously the lines that didn’t sell. If you are buying an item purely for the brand name this might suit you but I didn’t like it at all. That being said branded underwear was very cheap and for guys you can’t really go wrong there.

Grays Papies (New York)

Heard a lot of good things about this chain of hot dog vendors. Although hot dogs were good they were tiny and well were just plain hot dogs. They were dirt cheap though which was a plus but given how small the hot dogs were you’d need to have at least 2 for anyone to be full.

Magnolia Bakery

We first passed it in a Taxi and saw the massive queue. Having seen it on Sex and The City, Donna and I decided to make the trek and after walking miles to find this little hotspot I was wondering how awesome a cup cake could possibly be. We each bought a different flavour of cup cake but although each was very nice they were still…. Cup cakes! They were really rich and I ended up throwing most of mine out.

Avenue Q, The Musical (New York)

I had heard rave reviews about this musical. It was a comedy done with puppets. I and Donna found it just not funny and rather boring. Their was absolutely no plot and the jokes were a tad bad taste “We’re all racist” e.t.c. and the very overdone Jewish weddings. If your going to do a Jewish comedy segment. Do it well ala Seinfield. Props to the leading lady in this she was the best thing in it. See Spamalot it was much funnier.

Los Angeles Hotels that are downtown.

I wrote a bit about Los Angeles already. Golden rule: Los Angeles is ridiculously large and busses go in straight lines only (You will often have to catch 2 buses to get anywhere). Make sure you get a hotel that is near the location you are going to visit. Downtown is really in the middle of nowhere that a tourist would want to visit. Be careful of the maps too. They only show about 1 in every 10 streets. They are deceiving.

Apple Store (5th Avenue, New York)

Totally boring and huge mark ups, exactly the same Apple products as every other store with no exception.

June 2nd, 2007

Josh’s Las Vegas survival guide!

Posted by Joshua van Aalst in Interesting Stuff

Las Vegas is without a doubt the worlds most finely tuned money sucking machine. Having spent almost 3 days there I thought I’d write a mini guide so you can be prepared for the onslaught.

1) Beware major price differences between drinks at different casinos.

If your planning to walk through any of the 5 stars like the Belagio or the Wynn e..t.c. do NOT stop to buy drinks or play the pokies. A standard beer like a Budweiser will cost you $8 US. If you walk across the road to the cheaper Casino Royale, you can buy that same Budweiser for $1.50 US!

2) Beware the odds of the pokies!

This is a big one. In Australia the Government controlled odds of winning on the pokies are 80% (I need a precise stat on this). In Las Vegas this is totally not the case. When I mentioned this to pokie girls (they bring drinks to pokie players) at the Belagio, The Luxur and Casino Royale they laughed.

The pokie machines in Las Vegas are tourist machines. The wins are extremely rare. Occassionally someone will win big but that is normally a local who has gambled so much it is somewhat ridiculous.

3) Beware the free drinks if you play the pokies.

One of the hypes of Las Vegas is the…. Free drinks if you play the pokies. This is most definitely true at the bigger casinos. That being said there is normally only 1 girl per 20+ patrons playing the pokies. This means your likely to get 1 drink every 30 minutes max!

Of course you have to play the pokies which even on a 1cent machine delaying the press of the button is loosing you around $20 every 30 minutes.

Head over the road and buy your drinks. It will work out cheaper.

4) Do your sitting down at the hotel room or the pool.

Do not head out tired. There are no seats anywhere other than at pokies! Even if you go to the bathroom the only waiting seats outside are at the pokies.

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