About Alex Joe
Hi, I’m Alex Joe. I build focused, session-ready tools for roulette players who want structure, speed, and honest signals. SpinLens started as a small side project to understand my own decision making at live tables. It grew because I needed something simple that updates fast, shows the next steps clearly, and keeps me accountable with a transparent hit/miss record.
Why I built SpinLens
I like orderly workflows. Roulette isn’t orderly, but the way we react to it can be. I wanted a tool that turns the last hits into a tight, readable shortlist without noise. Early prototypes were spreadsheets and scratch scripts. They were clumsy, and I often second-guessed results. The current web tool is the outcome of many small iterations: quick inputs, ranked Top-13 numbers, section totals, and sequence timing signals that are easy to read while the dealer is moving.

What I believe
- Clarity beats complexity. A compact Top-13 is enough to guide action without flooding the screen.
- Timing matters. Repeated three- and four-number patterns can help with timing, not prediction alone.
- Honesty first. A live hit/miss summary prevents “peeking” or selective memory.
- Your choices are yours. SpinLens is informational. It doesn’t promise outcomes and never will.
- Responsible play. Use limits, take breaks, and stop when it stops being fun.
How the tool thinks
SpinLens uses a one-step transition approach. I look at what tends to follow what, based on the spins you’ve entered. Recent data can be weighted a bit more with recency decay, but older context isn’t thrown away completely. I also group the shortlist by wheel sections (ORP / VOI / TIER / ZERO) so you can see if your coverage is balanced or leaning too far to one side. For timing, I track Length-3 and Length-4 sequences. When the latest two or three numbers match a stored pattern, the next number in that pattern is flagged. The result is not a promise; it’s a nudge that says “pay attention now.”
What SpinLens is not
SpinLens doesn’t sell certainty. It does not guarantee profits, hit rates, or “systems.” It won’t replace judgment, bankroll rules, or table awareness. It won’t make poor risk control disappear. I avoid marketing claims that sound like magic. You deserve a realistic tool and straight talk.
My approach to privacy and data
I prefer minimal data. Most work happens in your browser. When you paste sequences for audit or backtest, they stay local by default. If you ever share logs for support, I handle them carefully and delete them when the job is done. I don’t sell personal data. The Privacy Policy explains what gets collected, why, and how long I keep it.
How I test and improve
I test changes in three ways:
- Dry runs and unit checks to make sure ranking, sections, and sequence flags behave as expected.
- Replay audits using known sequences, verifying that live rules match backtest rules (no peeking).
- Real-session pacing to confirm the UI stays readable and controls remain quick (0–36 pad, Undo, Reset).
I ship small updates rather than big rewrites. When I remove or add features, I do it with session speed in mind. If something doesn’t help you act faster and stay disciplined, it likely doesn’t belong.
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Responsible play
Roulette has variance. Some days nothing lands your way. SpinLens can keep you organized, but it cannot change the nature of chance. If gambling is starting to affect you or someone close to you, step away. Limits, breaks, and conversations help. You can also find confidential support at reputable services in your region (for example, GamblingTherapy.org). I am not affiliated with them; the reminder is here because it matters.
Roadmap and philosophy
Near-term goals focus on clarity, not more dials. I’m exploring gentle improvements in:
- Session ergonomics: fewer clicks, clearer contrasts, and consistent spacing under time pressure.
- Audit clarity: cleaner step-by-step traces and export options.
- Optional weighting: small, transparent tweaks to recency behavior (not black-box models).
I will not add features that dilute speed or encourage overconfidence. SpinLens remains a practical, readable helper for live sessions.
Working with me
I read feedback carefully. Many of the most useful touches—grouped section display, honest hit/miss summary, and sequence prompts—came from real usage. If you have an idea that trims seconds or removes confusion, I want to hear it. If you need multi-seat or special licensing, ask first so we can do it correctly.
Contact
If you want to talk about SpinLens, report a bug, or suggest an improvement, reach me at imalexjoe@gmail.com. You can also join the Telegram group for quick updates and practical tips, or visit my YouTube channel for demos. I’m a one-person builder. I care about fast support and clear answers, even if the answer is “no promise, but I’ll try.”