Date: Mon, 4 May 2020 12:19:50 +0200 From: Jacques Foucry <jacques+freebsd@foucry.net> To: Polytropon <freebsd@edvax.de> Cc: Steve O'Hara-Smith <steve@sohara.org>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Local_unbound and (opn)vpn Message-ID: <20200504101950.GE73151@mithril.foucry.net> In-Reply-To: <20200504120151.d82a5a04.freebsd@edvax.de> References: <20200504054312.GA73151@mithril.foucry.net> <20200504080728.GC73151@mithril.foucry.net> <20200504104935.c3106837a6582028853b623f@sohara.org> <20200504120151.d82a5a04.freebsd@edvax.de>
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Le lundi 04 mai 2020 à 12:01:51 (+0200), Polytropon à écrit: > On Mon, 4 May 2020 10:49:35 +0100, Steve O'Hara-Smith wrote: > > On Mon, 4 May 2020 10:07:28 +0200 > > Jacques Foucry <jacques+freebsd@foucry.net> wrote: > > > > > Well forgot my question. The solution was in this mail :-) > > > > > > I was thinking duriong writing but not testing before sending it. > > > > Doing this in person is a powerful debugging technique known as > > 'cardboard man debugging' because the person having the problem explained > > to feels like they could have been a cardboard cutout. > > If I remember correctly, the modern terminology for this > kind of action is "rubberducking". It's also available as > a web-based cloud-hosted ML VR SaaS, of course... ;-) It's happend very often to me, specially when I write a mail. The solution came just when the mail is sent :-) May be should to more to my cats :-) Take care. -- Jacques Foucry
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