Two or three points. First, I never look at the edge to edge pattern, just the length of the buff. That is the biggest difference in sport patterns and house patterns. The end of the oil determines when the ball starts to move, no matter where you play the lanes on sport patterns. On a house shot the hook spot depends on when the ball gets right of the oil line.
Also, very good advice on trying to know where the house track is. Older synthetics track just like wood did. Especially important on longer patterns where you are looking to get the track to open a bit.
Finally, there are exceptions to every rule. I recently bowled three weeks on the Badger pattern in a summer league. I previously bowled a rolloff on this pattern in a different house in April. In the rolloff the best strategy was just what they say, square up inside 10, keep your break point tight. I was able to average a bit over 200, as the pattern opened up to 2 and 1 moves after less than 2 games. In the recetnt situation on similar Anvil lane surface with a similar lane machine the shot was totally unplayable deeper, and nobody scored inside. I finally went out to about 7 board, and just jammed the ball toward the pocket using a solid IQ. Even out there I was leaving a pocket hit split every game, but I out averaged the rest of the house by 10 pins per game.