I was taught Computer Science by Jennifer Haselgrove in Glasgow. Her first lecture concerned talking to your cat, and as I remember telling your cat the steps needed to make a cup of tea. So you are wrong - it is cats, not teddy bears. Something surprising about Dr Haselgrove - she lectured in Comp Sci bit had no degree in the subject. Why? Well when she was an undergrad no such field of study existed.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenifer_Haselgrove On Wed, 23 Dec 2020 at 10:43, Andrew Black via GLLUG < gllug@mailman.lug.org.uk> wrote: > Happy christmas everyone.... > > Some time ago someone suggested the idea of solving a tech problem by > explaining something to you teddy. He is very stupid so it makes sure you > explain it well. Sometimes the process of explaining makes you find the > thing the clue you have missed. > I cant put my finger on where it came from (does it matter). Google is > taking me to all sorts of sites like "how to make teddies" and "why teddies > are called ted". > > I find it SOMETIMES explaining helps, but sometimes can get you further > into the misunderstanding that is causing the problem. Googling for a > solution when you are looking at a bad solution... Asking on Stackoverflow > and like can be same: > "You dont want to do X, you want to do Y" "Yes in an ideal wolrd but if > I do Y I will ahve a partial X and partial Y".... > Any thoughts... > > -- > Andrew Black > -- > GLLUG mailing list > GLLUG@mailman.lug.org.uk > https://mailman.lug.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/gllug
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