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Old 08-02-2005, 05:14 AM
ChipWrecked ChipWrecked is offline
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Default Handheld Gaming Devices at B&M Casinos

From AP:


CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) - It won't be long before gamblers are shooting dice while queued up to see their favorite comedian. Or playing poker and roulette under a poolside umbrella. Even a trip to the buffet will no longer keep casino patrons from playing slots.

A law signed last month by Gov. Kenny Guinn made Nevada the first U.S. state to approve the use of wireless, handheld gambling devices at its hotel-casinos.

It's a step forward for casino companies aching to offer Internet-based gambling - a business that federal law bars them from entering, even as offshore competitors reap huge profits.

"I think every major casino company wants to get into online gaming but without access to the U.S. market it becomes a costly venture," said Deutsche Bank gambling analyst Marc Falcone.

The gadgets, Falcone said, are the "first step in a long process."

Under the law, the devices can be used only in public areas of casinos that have 100 or more slot machines and that offer at least one other gambling game. The devices would be barred from hotel rooms and other private areas.

And they won't be available overnight.

Dennis Neilander, the State Gaming Control Board chairman, says it will be several months to a year before regulators set rules for using the handhelds.

One force behind the bill is Cantor Fitzgerald LP, the New York-based financial services company that suffered mightily in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. The company says an adaptation of its interactive bond-trading technology will work for casino gambling.

Another backer was Louisiana-based Diamond I Inc., which has developed its own device.

"The tech-savvy generation, the late baby boomers and the next generation all grew up with a Nintendo in their hands. Everyone has a PDA," said David Loflin, president of Diamond I Inc. "This is an extension of that."

The world's No. 1 slot machine maker, Reno-based International Game Technology, also pushed for legalizing the wireless gambling.

"Nevada is the first state to have a bill to allow this. Once Nevada does it, you'll see the New Jerseys and the Mississippis do the same thing," Loflin predicted.

Cantor Fitzgerald's prototype device isn't much bigger than a checkbook, can slip easily into a coat pocket, and is already used in Britain for sports betting.

Falcone doesn't expect the devices to account for any serious revenue or be a significant driver of growth. And besides, state regulators won't approve them until they're convinced that they can be effectively monitored.

Cantor Fitzgerald says that won't be a problem.

Its wireless device uses a form of encryption to ensure security, said Joe Asher, managing director of Cantor G&W.

Asher would not disclose details about the encryption method, and said a biometric system that reads a user's fingerprint could also be used if regulators prefer.

The wireless devices would be linked to a server that could verify the gambler is the person who checked out one of the devices at a casino.

Asher says the devices could be set to stop working in non-authorized areas, and players could establish limits in advance by depositing money in an account.

High losses in a short period could cause the device to shut down - keeping problem gamblers from going too far in the hole.

"Security is a big deal and we are very familiar with it because we operate in that world today," Asher said.

While Cantor Fitzgerald may see money in wireless gambling, the lone state legislator to vote against the bill sees nothing but headaches and lost income for people like her.

Sen. Maggie Carlton, D-Las Vegas, a waitress at the coffee shop at Treasure Island * resort in Las Vegas, says it's bad enough that the state has allowed Keno to be played away from the casino floor.

"There needs to be places where there aren't two and three gaming devices at your disposal," she said. "It's hard enough to get somebody's order when they're trying to fill out a Keno slip. All I need to find out from them is how they like their eggs and what kind of toast they want."

And what about enforcing rules for who can use the devices and where, asks Carlton.

"What's going to be my responsibility?" she wonders. "Am I going to be obligated to turn someone in if I see them hand it to their kid?"


* I love Vegas.
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  #2  
Old 08-07-2005, 04:18 AM
Martin Martin is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2004
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Default Re: Handheld Gaming Devices at B&M Casinos

[ QUOTE ]
Sen. Maggie Carlton, D-Las Vegas, a waitress at the coffee shop at Treasure Island

[/ QUOTE ]

How the hell... Oh well Vegas never mind [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img] At least you could find your senator no problem.
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  #3  
Old 08-07-2005, 09:10 PM
Kevmath Kevmath is offline
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Location: Syracuse, NY
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Default Re: Handheld Gaming Devices at B&M Casinos

Nevada legislators usually work 120 days every 2 years, but get $130/day just for the first 60 days. At least you can't call her one of them fatcat politicians.

Kevin...
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