(Q - Séboustien: Hello, I don't know if I can be heard?)
MB: Yes, we hear you.
(Q - Séboustien: This is the first time I'm speaking, I dare.)
MB: Well done, that’s good.
(Q - Séboustien: It’s Séboustien. I had a few questions so.)
MB: Oh yes, definitely, it's the first time, but it's for a few questions, well, it's not for nothing.
(Q - Séboustien: I took a little cold shower earlier so there you go.
MB: A cold shower compared to what I said?
(Q - Séboustien: Yeah, exactly… I think I have this annoying tendency to delve into puzzles, but not enough on the reflex side and therefore…)
MB: You are not the only one, you are not the only one.
(Q - Séboustien: So, a first question is, if we have a tendency to delve into the 9 enigmas, is it obviously due to the fact that the expression chosen n is it not the right one or that we have not understood it well, that we have not understood it well in its application? That is to say that we must only apply this expression to the sentinels, for example?)
MB: Good. If we put ourselves in the role, we've already talked about that... If we put ourselves in the role of a real pirate. The real pirate, one day he stumbles upon a treasure map, with a cross as we all imagine or as we have read in childhood stories. Well, he finds this map, it's a place, it's an island. Usually pirates are always on an island. Well, we're not on an island, but pirates are always on an island. They find this map, they find a place, there is a cross, they know that there is a treasure, they want to go and get it.
That means that they are going to… they are not there, they are going to make a journey to get there.
So, I talked about it on foot, on horseback, by car, by boat, by plane. Well, and then…, it was generally by boat, so they take a route. They arrive where the map is located, on the map area, you can tell. And from there, they get off the boat, they get into the boat, they dock and they go on foot to find what needs to be found, to locate the place. If it's not very precise because treasure maps are not always very precise, they will try to aim, align, do I don't know what to define a precise point. That's exactly what the Owl's hunt happened.
It is that from the moment we arrived at what we were talking about earlier and that we, to which we will continue to use the term zone, we arrive at a place that we will define as being a zone without going further than that. From the moment we are there, we get off our boat, we dock and we try to change our method. Because to navigate, the pirate, he will use his nautical charts… [inaudible] navigation, the direction of the wind, the stars and everything you want. But once he is on the island, they are no longer the same, they are no longer the same tools, they are no longer the same parameters. We change gear, it’s another approach.
MB: Yes, we hear you.
(Q - Séboustien: This is the first time I'm speaking, I dare.)
MB: Well done, that’s good.
(Q - Séboustien: It’s Séboustien. I had a few questions so.)
MB: Oh yes, definitely, it's the first time, but it's for a few questions, well, it's not for nothing.
(Q - Séboustien: I took a little cold shower earlier so there you go.
MB: A cold shower compared to what I said?
(Q - Séboustien: Yeah, exactly… I think I have this annoying tendency to delve into puzzles, but not enough on the reflex side and therefore…)
MB: You are not the only one, you are not the only one.
(Q - Séboustien: So, a first question is, if we have a tendency to delve into the 9 enigmas, is it obviously due to the fact that the expression chosen n is it not the right one or that we have not understood it well, that we have not understood it well in its application? That is to say that we must only apply this expression to the sentinels, for example?)
MB: Good. If we put ourselves in the role, we've already talked about that... If we put ourselves in the role of a real pirate. The real pirate, one day he stumbles upon a treasure map, with a cross as we all imagine or as we have read in childhood stories. Well, he finds this map, it's a place, it's an island. Usually pirates are always on an island. Well, we're not on an island, but pirates are always on an island. They find this map, they find a place, there is a cross, they know that there is a treasure, they want to go and get it.
That means that they are going to… they are not there, they are going to make a journey to get there.
So, I talked about it on foot, on horseback, by car, by boat, by plane. Well, and then…, it was generally by boat, so they take a route. They arrive where the map is located, on the map area, you can tell. And from there, they get off the boat, they get into the boat, they dock and they go on foot to find what needs to be found, to locate the place. If it's not very precise because treasure maps are not always very precise, they will try to aim, align, do I don't know what to define a precise point. That's exactly what the Owl's hunt happened.
It is that from the moment we arrived at what we were talking about earlier and that we, to which we will continue to use the term zone, we arrive at a place that we will define as being a zone without going further than that. From the moment we are there, we get off our boat, we dock and we try to change our method. Because to navigate, the pirate, he will use his nautical charts… [inaudible] navigation, the direction of the wind, the stars and everything you want. But once he is on the island, they are no longer the same, they are no longer the same tools, they are no longer the same parameters. We change gear, it’s another approach.