Old School Vs New School Poker

David “Chip” Reese was an American poker player that has been described by many as the greatest cash game player that ever lived. He was inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame in 1991 and, at 40 years old, was the youngest player to have received that honor. Old School Vs New School Poker, signal and slots buttons, the-online-casinos-reviews c, slots client.

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Old School K vs New School K- HK SP5K vs B&T APC9K. Jump to Latest Follow 1 - 16 of 16 Posts. Joined Sep 6, 2013 137 Posts. That frustration leads to an extra lack of respect for the poker skill of the 'Old School,' and a desire to 'prove' our skill. (By the way, each generation overestimates their edge vs. Their counterparts.) You can tell the New School to “get over it,” but you have to understand that they will never stop wanting their skill to be recognized. That frustration leads to an extra lack of respect for the poker skill of the 'Old School,' and a desire to 'prove' our skill. (By the way, each generation overestimates their edge vs. Their counterparts.) You can tell the New School to “get over it,” but you have to understand that they will never stop wanting their skill to be recognized.

So much has changed in DJing in the last generation – so for a bit of fun, we thought we’d compile an “Old School vs New School Disc Jockey” list.

Old School Vs New School Poker Games

To be clear, here at Digital DJ Tips we think DJing is best as it’s done right here, right now – so we’re not judging modern DJs with this list, not by any means.

(Of course, some things will be seen as better or worse depending on who you are and where you stand, but there’s frankly little worse than having to listen to a “it was great in ’88!” bore – right?)

So anyway, have a look – we hope our list makes you smile, and we’d love you to share your “old school vs new school disc jockey” ideas in the comments!

Old school vs new school: 25 things that have changed…

Old school: Disc jockey
New school: DJ

Old school: Records
New school: Digital files

Old school: Manual beatmixing
New school: Sync

Old school: Music ownership
New school: Cloud & streaming

Old school: Pester DJ for title, locate vinyl at record store, practise mixing new track
New school: Shazam, Beatport, sync

Old school: Record crates
New school: USB drive

Old school: DJ flight case
New school: DJ backpack

Old school: Records in hold luggage
New school: Controller in hand luggage

Old school: DJing all night
New school: 45-minute set

Professional

Old school: Promo vinyl in the mail
New school: DJ edits from digital music pools

Old school: DJ hidden in corner
New school: DJ star of show

Old school: Jealously guarding record titles
New school: Everyone Shazam-ing your tracks

Old school: Mixtapes
New school: Spotify playlists

Old school: DJing was enough
New school: Have to produce music too

Old school: Club
New school: Festival

Old school: 2 copies of same track
New school: Own re-edits

Professional Poker School

Old school: Sorting out your crates
New school: Sorting out your playlists

Old school: Watching the record grooves
New school: Watching the waveforms

Old school: Needle skipping
New school: Software glitching

Old school: Badly pressed vinyl
New school: Low bitrate MP3s

Old school: “Sorry, I don’t have it”
New school: “No, I won’t play it from your phone!”

Old school: Lighters in the air
New school: Phones in the air

Old school: Smoking in clubs
New school: Social media sharing in clubs

Old school: Running out of music to play
New school: Too much music to play

Old school: Learning from a friend
New school:Learning from a video course

Have your say…

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Poker Schools Near Me

So that’s what we could come up with in the office. But do you agree? Disagree? Have you got something to add? Remember, we’d love you to share your “old school vs new school disc jockey” ideas in the comments!

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The battle of New School and Old School is always a trendy storyline in poker and that generation gap was tackled in the “Nets vs. Vets” cash game episodes of Poker After Dark.

The Season 5 offering matches up players of differing skill sets and ages as internet wunderkinds face off against the live veterans. The newest extension to THE VAULT on PokerGO features a high stakes cash game with a battle of skill and bragging rights on the line.

The “Vets” side feature some of the cowboys of poker with Doyle Brunson and Gabe Kaplan on centerstage. They were joined by Eli Elezra and squared off against three of the top young minds in the game.

Representing the “Nets,” Taylor Caby and Cole South were ahead of their generation by miles. The pair were major players in the former training site Card Runners and used their online cash game prowess to amass a small fortune.

David Benefield is the best known of the three young guns as a result of his final table finish in the 2013 World Series of Poker Main Event. Referred to as “Raptor” online, Benefield played high stakes cash games for many years and found solid footing in live tournaments with cashes in multiple $50,000 buy-in events.

All players bought in for at least $100,000 but that’s not the big number that jumps out from the table. The combined ages of the “Nets” were 68 at the time of the episode’s taping. That is four years less than Brunson, who was 72 when the battle of ages took place.

Kaplan opens the conversation by saying “Doyle, it’s nice of you to bring your grandsons here to play with us.”

The table chatter is not as lively in this episode as it is in other but there are fun barbs thrown in by both sides.

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Notably, Benefield comments on the tighter play of the “Vets” and says the episode should be called “Nets vs. Nits.”

All six players at the table are sharp in their own right but were also ahead of their time by mutually agreeing that a 30-second shot clock would be good for poker. We all know by now what a great idea they had but it took multiple years before the tanking epidemic hit its peak and tours decided to implement it.

The full cash game battle of “Nets vs. Vets” is now available on PokerGO inside THE VAULT. It may be new school versus old school but great poker never skips a generation.

New episodes of Poker After Dark start on October 17 with the highest stakes yet as “Perks of the Trade” week kicks off.