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searching |
Fravia's |
(banal but effective approaches) |
Yep. The pen you are "missing" simply rolled under the telephone. The spectacles that you carelessly left on the table's marge,
fell behind the table's leg. The cat pawed with gusto your "lost" ring/keys/plane reservation/heart bypass under the sofa.
The letter you cannot find any more lies quietly inside that newspaper. Your scarf is "hidden" inside your coat. Your jacket has completely covered the wallet you left on the table, nope, it has not been stolen, calm down. Classical cases: a book "buried" behind other books on the shelf, a newspaper or magazine (or letter) inside another newspaper or magazine. On the right the correct procedure for sailing vessels in order to expand a "man overboard" square search, starting from the "most probable position". A "search and rescue" technique. Yet you can use a similar approach when searching for a lost item, starting from the "most probable position" of your target. Use those same numbers... as centimeters. Incidentally I discovered that if you play the easy to find and apparently now in the public domain Silent Hunter III, a tactical fairly good WWII sub-simulation, of course using wine (so that it will run better in GNU/Linux than in windows) your own navigator will suggest various "man overboard" search patterns in order to find your preys :-) |
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Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius