@Monty3038

1. This is right, and you can also open up preflop knowing you can take down more pots on the flop. For example, someone who limp/calls a lot preflop and folds to a lot of c-bets on the flop you could isolate with some pretty weak hands in position and it be +EV. Being heads-up in position is the nuts.
2. This is right, and another adjustment could just be to c-bet the flop as a bluff less often, especially if you won't have a lot of good turn opportunities to double barrel.
3. This is right, you should steal more often since your fold equity is higher.
4. You're right on this one too, but I was looking for 3-bet bluffing the flop more, and obviously c-betting with air less. You could also look to value bet the flop more depending on how they play to 3-bets.
5. This one is key to beating calling stations, and even though it seems like common sense here reading this and working it out, how often do we really think in these terms?
6. I threw this in as sort of a trick. Yes, you can adjust by 3-betting more, but you don't know if you'll be 3-betting more as a bluff or for value because I didn't tell you how often they're just calling your 3-bet. If they're almost never calling, then bluff them a lot, and if they're almost always calling, value bet them a lot. It's basic stuff applied to another scenario.
7. You could be calling more of their raises in position because of your increased implied odds. This sort of ties in to what EasyPoker quotes at the beginning of this thread http://www.flopturnriver.com/pokerfo...in-178211.html
8. Like most of the questions above, there are multiple things that could be considered a "right" answer depending on what else we know about our opponent's play. You could bluff raise the flop more, float more, or call him down with a wider range.

This is just like paper-rock-scissors. Each action has a natural counter, and you find this natural counter by looking at the strength of your opponents' ranges. For example, if they have a strong range, you tend to bluff less, and if they have a weak range, you tend to bluff more. In number 7 you probably wouldn't adjust by 3-bet bluffing more often because your opponent's range is stronger. But in number 8 you could adjust by bluff raising more often because your opponent's range is weaker.

Good work, now start to think about this when you're playing. If you see a nit raises from EP 100bb deep, call him with 65s and try to stack him. If some tagg opens preflop and c-bets 90% of flops, call with 65s in position and raise his c-bets if you catch a favorable board (like a board that his range doesn't hit super hard and that gives you some equity, like J73r).