Totally agree with Lankeela above. While I understand the enormity of the number and the resulting improbability, the tiny probability does not mean a particular card order will only occur every that many shuffles. That would only be true if you were deliberately arranging the cards in a succession of different orders, changing each time. In which case it would take you that long (an unimaginably long time as others here and Stephen Fry rightly state). But when shuffling you are arranging the cards in a random order, and therefore every possible order can be obtained on each shuffle. If you shuffle an infinite number of times, the average gap between identical card orders will be the huge number discussed, but there may be two consecutive identical configurations, or within a few hundred or thousand shuffles of each other within the overall sequence. Thus you cannot say for sure that a given configuration has never been obtained before, it just depends where in that infinite number of shuffles you happen to be.