You Built What?!
A card table that turns any game into the World Series of Poker

How The Video Poker Table Works:  Paul Wootton

How The Video Poker Table Works

3 months; $8,500

Capturing the Action
Four cameras (two dome, two rail) record the game, and capture devices convert the video to MPEG4 format and load it onto the PC. A custom software application combines the video files with RFID data from the tagged chips and cards to create a simulcast. (Televised tournaments instead use concealed cams to peek at players' hands.)

Following the Money
The RFID reader tracks what cards are played and what chips have been bet. Milner's Game Engine program reads that data and applies the rules of poker to come up with each player's chance of winning the hand and to generate graphics to lay over the video. When a player dumps his cards over the antenna into the "muck" pile, the application notes that the player has folded.

Putting it Onscreen
A commercial library of code called TVideoGrabber contains instructions for getting the video from the capture devices to stream onscreen. The video-processing engine uses information from the Game Engine -- such as who's in, who's out, who's up and who's down -- to determine which camera feed to show during a hand. When only two players are left, the cameras zoom in on those players.

Better Luck Next Time: Losing players watch the rest of the game in another room  courtesy Jason Kiely

Page 2 of 2 « first‹ previous12
Want to read more articles like this, plus tips and tricks, home hacks, DIY projects, and more? Subscribe to Popular Science and enter to win $5,000!

5 Comments

dengland

from Rockledge, FL

Being a poker fan, I read this article with enthusiasm in my printed version of the January 2009 issue. I was excited to see the tag "For more details, goto POPSCI.COM/POKERTABLE."

Well here I am...and this online version is identical to the printed version. No extra pictures or text. What a disappointment.

I also went online to see additional information to the magazine article but have not found any. I am disappointed in popsci.com.

King of NERDS - I was also disappointed that the didn't tell me any more I was hoping for a video to tell me how he made it or a 3-D picture of it but other then that I was very impressed with all the other cool things this table had to offer. (but I still Would like a vid)

midiwall

from Bothell, WA

Google is your friend. Using the author's name and "poker table" brought up a few copies of this article, which has video:

http://gizmodo.com/5115041/crazy-rfid+enabled-poker-table-knows-every-card-in-the-deck

:: Mark

Google is your friend :)

Maxson
-----------
www.emailextractor14.com/
www.emailextractor14.com/?page_id=121

Popular Tags

Regular Features



Download Our iPhone App

Stay up to date on the latest news of the future of science and technology from your iPhone with full articles, images and offline viewing



Follow Us On Twitter

Featuring every article from the magazine and website, plus links from around the Web. Also see our PopSci DIY feed



Become a Fan On Facebook

Share links with friends, comment on stories and more


December 2009: Best of What's New

In our December issue, Popular Science names the 100 best innovations of the year: bombproof wallpaper, self-parking cars, the fastest helicopter, and 97 more. Plus inventor profiles and videos.

Check out the best of what's new here.

Popular Science Photo Pool


Share your photos in the Pop Sci pool at www.flickr.com!
tags_sprite.png
POP_embeddedForm_cover_May09.jpg