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- TidBITS#112/23-Mar-92
- =====================
-
- The main shadow and substance of this issue comes from Apple,
- with a combination of soft rumors and hard products, including
- the new LC II and a hot new laser printer. Check out an
- excellent review of SuperPaint 3.0, and read about yet another
- virus rearing its slimy head. You'll also find an article on a
- user group that keeps Reflex Plus alive against all odds and
- some clarifications of last week's review of Panorama II.
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
- publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Other
- publications please contact us. We do not guarantee the accuracy
- of articles. Publication, product, and company names may be
- registered trademarks of their companies. Disk subscriptions and
- back issues are available.
-
- For more information send email to info@tidbits.halcyon.com or
- ace@tidbits.halcyon.com -- CIS: 72511,306 -- AOL: Adam Engst
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/23-Mar-92
- Classic PowerBook Rumors
- New Apple Crop
- INIT 1984 Virus
- Imaging Updates
- SuperPaint 3.0 Review
- Reflex Orphans Uniting
- Panorama II Clarifications
- Reviews/23-Mar-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-112.etx; 28K]
-
-
- MailBITS/23-Mar-92
- ------------------
- Michel Langereis writes, "The 1992 MACWORLD Expo Benelux, to be
- held in Amsterdam from May 4th to 6th, has been cancelled, as
- confirmed by the organizers. There was no comment on the reason
- but I'll dig into it. What the heck is going on in Europe? Several
- expos have already been cancelled and I wonder if more will
- follow, although there aren't that many left."
-
- Information from:
- Michel Langereis -- neabbs!amichel@relay.nluug.nl
-
-
- PowerBook Modem Fix?
- Jonathan Feinstein of Shrink2Fit Software passes along a useful
- hint for people having problems connecting to remote modems from
- their PowerBook's internal Apple modem. Apparently, these
- difficulties come from some non-standard aspects of Apple's error
- correction firmware routines, which Apple wrote that way to avoid
- infringing on Hayes's modem patents. This is not related to the
- problem we reported on earlier with the PowerBooks losing input
- data at high speeds.
-
- Jonathan says that Apple tech support suggested that he replace
- the standard "ATDT" dialing command with "AT&Q0DT" (that's a zero,
- not a capital letter O, after the Q). In other words, the command
- to dial Memory Alpha BBS would be "AT&Q0DT 1-607/257-5822" instead
- of "ATDT 1-607/257-5822". Note that many programs dial
- automatically, so you may need to reconfigure your program's
- default dialing command.
-
- Information from:
- Jonathan Feinstein
-
-
- Classic PowerBook Rumors
- ------------------------
- Pythaeus tells us that Apple is preparing to ship its internal 80
- MB hard disk drives for the PowerBook series. This should come as
- welcome news for PowerBook power users who have been feeling
- scrunched between the small 20 MB and 40 MB standard hard drives
- that have been shipping in Apple's notebooks.
-
- More interesting, and a bit more surprising, is the rumour that
- Apple will offer a trade-up deal to owners of the smaller drives.
- As a result, all those existing PowerBook owners should be able to
- acquire an 80 MB drive without having to keep the original drive
- or try to sell it in a market with practically zero potential
- customers (after all, every PowerBook already has one of the
- smaller drives in it).
-
- As much as those 80 MB drives will be extremely welcome, we wonder
- if they will have the same, ahem, feature that some of the current
- 80 MB drives have (notably the drives in some IIsi's). Apple ships
- drives pre-formatted, but the standard formatting often doesn't
- create as large a partition as possible. With some of the 80 MB
- drives, up to 4 MB of disk space may be wasted in a free space
- partition. You can recover this space by backing up your entire
- hard drive (not a bad thing to do while you're thinking about it
- anyway), running Apple's HD SC Setup program, and increasing the
- size of the default partition with the Partition button. If you
- don't know what you're doing, don't mess with this, since you will
- have to reformat your drive in the process, erasing everything on
- it. This is one of the advantages of Silverlining - you can resize
- partitions on the fly without reformatting. It's always a good
- idea to backup before performing any task of this sort though.
-
- Finally, as of April 15th, Apple will officially remove the 2 MB
- Classic and 2 MB Classic II from the price lists, thus admitting
- that 2 MB is really not enough RAM to run System 7. The 4 MB
- versions of those Macs will stick around, and you can bet that
- Apple won't introduce any more 2 MB versions of the desktop Macs
- again.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
-
- New Apple Crop
- --------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
- Continuing in its plan for a major set of product introductions
- every six months, Apple today announced several new hardware
- products, including one new Mac. The Macintosh LC II, a 68030
- version of the popular Mac LC, leads the pack, followed by a
- spiffy new LaserWriter, a new CD-ROM drive, and a version of the
- Apple OneScanner for Windows users (which we'll talk more about in
- a future issue).
-
- The new Macintosh LC II is, plain and simple, a replacement for
- the original LC. The new computer offers a 16 MHz 68030 processor
- in place of the 16 MHz 68020 in the LC. The '030 doesn't offer a
- tremendous speed advantage over the 68020, but it does provide a
- small improvement... and more importantly, provides virtual memory
- capability to the smallest member of the modular Mac line. The LC
- II also sports a newer '030 processor direct slot (PDS) for
- expansion purposes, allowing users to add '030 PDS cards while
- supporting most '020 PDS cards created for the LC (software
- upgrades may be necessary for such cards). [Adam: I certainly hope
- that the new '030 PDS slot is compatible with the current SE/30
- and IIsi PDS slots. The last thing we need is yet another slot
- format.] The LC II joins Apple's product line at the same retail
- price level as the LC ($1700 for a 4 MB RAM, 40 MB hard drive
- machine), making it an extremely affordable path to '030
- computing. An upgrade from the LC will be available in several
- months, but we don't have a price on that yet.
-
- One long-rumoured addition to Apple's printer line-up is the
- Personal LaserWriter NTR with a 16 MHz AMD Am29005 RISC processor
- and Adobe PostScript Level 2 at its heart. Otherwise, this printer
- uses the same engine as and is similar to the Personal LaserWriter
- NT, which will remain in the product line. The high-speed RISC
- processor allows this printer to work about three to five times
- faster than the Personal LaserWriter NT, a welcome speed increase.
- The NTR has the same built-in multi-purpose paper tray as the
- Personal LaserWriter LS, and you can add an optional 250-sheet
- paper feeder base. Like its competition, the QMS-PS 410, the NTR
- uses "intelligent" port and protocol switching, so it can be used
- with Macs, PCs, and mixed networks at the same time.
-
- One new product that I hadn't even heard about in the rumour mill
- is the AppleCD 150, a new CD-ROM drive that replaces the Apple CD
- SC Plus, which shipped just last year. The new unit has basically
- the same performance as the old drive at about 380 millisecond
- access time, but more importantly it has a new, trim case design
- for those of you who are picky about peripheral aesthetics, and is
- about $200 less expensive than the older drive, so it will fit
- better in the checkbook as well as on the desktop. It's not
- technically interesting, but the lower price will help to make
- some of those interesting new CD-ROM products accessible to a lot
- more people.
-
- Apple also announced that it is removing the PowerBook 140 2/20
- and the 21" monochrome Two Page Display from the product line (a
- delicate way of saying those products have been "terminated"). No
- replacements are planned for these products. Of course, Apple is
- also removing the existing Macintosh LC products and the Apple CD
- SC Plus. It's not surprising that the PowerBook 140 2/20 is
- disappearing - 2 MB of RAM and a 20 MB hard drive is ludicrous for
- that machine running System 7, but it is curious that the 21"
- monochrome monitor is going away.
-
- Still missing is the faster Macintosh IIsi that we're hoping to
- see some time this year. A 25 MHz IIsi would help differentiate
- that machine from the new '030 LC II, which is only slightly
- slower than the 20 MHz IIsi, especially when the IIsi is bogged
- down with internal video. The main gap in the product line,
- though, is a machine to replace the SE/30, which had the excellent
- combination of small size, good speed, and some expandability.
- Apple seems to be relegating the compact Mac line to the pokey
- Classic and the moribund Classic II, ignoring the fact that power
- users might want a compact Mac too.
-
-
- INIT 1984 Virus
- ---------------
- These things come in fits and spurts. We went a long time without
- a new virus, and the world was a better place for it. Then wham,
- two viruses within a few weeks of each other. People who have
- files infected with this new virus will definitely want to get the
- attention of the as-yet-unknown anti-social troglodyte author,
- although I expect that attention will again fall into the category
- of violence to the knee cap region.
-
- This new virus is called "INIT 1984" presumably for the resource
- number that it installs in infected files. It differs from
- previous Macintosh viruses in two ways, one fortunate, one
- unfortunate. Luckily, it only installs itself in system extensions
- of the type INIT and does not affect the System file, the desktop
- file, control panels, applications, or data files. This is good
- because INITs are shared less than applications, which means that
- INIT 1984 has spread slowly, and indeed, only a few infections
- have been reported, one in the US and one in Europe. Apparently
- the virus works under both System 6 and System 7 though on old
- Macs with the 64K ROMs (the 128K and 512K Macs), the virus will
- cause crashes at boot time.
-
- Unfortunately, this is also the first virus that intentionally
- causes damage to the files on infected hard disks when it is
- triggered on any Friday the 13th in 1991 or later years. Damage
- includes changing the names and attributes of a large number of
- folders and files to random strings and the deletion of
- approximately 2% of your files. Needless to say, the file deletion
- aside, changed file and folder names and attributes would be
- almost completely impossible to fix if a backup was not available.
-
- The virus was discovered when it activated a few weeks ago on
- 13-Mar-92, but it's possible that other Macs were damaged when the
- virus would have activated on 13-Sep-91 and 13-Dec-91. If you
- think you may have had files damaged or deleted on one of those
- two dates, please contact Gene Spafford at <spaf@cs.purdue.edu>.
- If you are not on the Internet, feel free to send mail to TidBITS
- and we'll forward it to Gene.
-
- Looking quickly at a calendar, I see that the next Friday the 13th
- isn't until November of 1992, so the virus is not likely to damage
- your data until then if it hasn't already. However, you should
- immediately get an updated version of your favorite anti-virus
- utility to avoid further spreading of any existing infections. My
- favorite anti-virus utility, Disinfectant, has been upgraded to
- version 2.7 by its erstwhile author, John Norstad of Northwestern
- University and should be available at your favorite purveyor of
- public domain and shareware software. Do note one important change
- with Disinfectant. The Disinfectant INIT must now load _before_
- all other INITs to be able to detect and prevent INIT 1984 from
- doing its dirty deeds. All other anti-virus utilities will also be
- updated to detect and eliminate INIT 1984 as you read this, so go
- grab one now. Incidently, the current versions of both Gatekeeper
- and SAM Intercept generate an alert if this virus attempts to
- spread to other files. However, you should still get the updates
- to those programs so they specifically recognize that virus for
- what it is.
-
- Information from:
- Gene Spafford -- spaf@cs.purdue.edu
- Mark H Anbinder, TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
-
- Imaging Updates
- ---------------
- QuickDraw was pretty neat when it came out, since it allowed the
- Mac to be a true graphics-based machine. Later on, Apple added
- color, turning it into Color QuickDraw, the standard in color-
- capable Macs today. QuickDraw is starting to age, though, and
- Apple has been working on some fixes. We've heard about two
- projects. The first will work with QuickDraw, providing additional
- 2D and 3D drawing features and some other nifty stuff, whereas the
- second project, which looms far in the future, will essentially
- act like Display PostScript, but will run faster and won't have an
- Adobe licensing albatross hanging from its neck.
-
- In the meantime, QuickDraw's new sidekick will work with graphic
- objects rather than merely lines, as QuickDraw does now. Objects
- will include a line, a curve, a path, a rectangle, a polygon,
- text, a bitmap, and a picture, which is a combination of one or
- more of the other objects. Even better will be the built-in
- features that have only been available in drawing packages, such
- as rotation, skewing, scaling, and enhanced color support for
- various color output devices.
-
- TrueType will gain from the new model, with Apple adding more
- sophisticated typographical controls for tasks like tracking and
- even some optical scaling, which allows you to significantly
- modify a font based on various variables. Currently only Adobe's
- Multiple Master fonts offer such capabilities, although Altsys
- recently announced Fontographer 3.5 which not only opens and
- creates Multiple Master fonts, but changes the weight of existing
- fonts or even interpolates between two different fonts. Of course
- Fontographer is for creating and editing fonts, whereas Multiple
- Master and the enhanced TrueType will allow font modifications
- within documents, but the end results are similar.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Altsys propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 09-Mar-92, Vol. 6, #10, pg. 1
-
-
- SuperPaint 3.0 Review
- ---------------------
- by Matt Neuburg -- clas005@csc.canterbury.ac.nz
-
- SuperPaint, the old workhorse that started life as little more
- than a combination of a MacPaint clone and a MacDraw clone, has
- been given a new lease on life in the competitive world of
- increasingly sophisticated drawing and painting programs. Version
- 3.0, produced by a Silicon Beach now subjugated to Aldus, adds
- some splendid color tools to its already solid and easy-to-use
- capabilities.
-
- SuperPaint 2.0 had lately been overshadowed by low-priced paint
- and draw programs (Color MacCheese, UltraPaint) incorporating the
- sort of color and texture tools associated with higher-priced
- programs; version 3.0 is clearly an attempt to reclaim some of the
- lost territory, and I suspect it will be successful. Serious
- artists may still need the greater power and precision of Canvas,
- FreeHand, PixelPaint Pro, or Illustrator, but if you want to buy
- just one all-around program for occasional use (pictures for
- HyperCard, diagrams for teaching, custom color icons, and the
- occasional desktop image are my main uses), and you'd rather spend
- a bit over $100, not something over $300, SuperPaint may prove an
- excellent choice.
-
- The original SuperPaint idea of combining a single draw layer and
- a single paint layer in one document remains a clever and powerful
- one. The draw layer permits precision work with basic geometrical
- shapes and text, and objects remain objects after you've created
- them: you can move them, delete them, or modify their attributes,
- at any time and independently of one another. It also allows
- objects to be encoded more precisely than the screen will show: a
- circle that looks jagged on the screen will be perfectly round in
- a higher-resolution print (such as laser printing), and you can
- edit at that higher resolution as well. The paint layer is just a
- collection of 72-dpi pixels; but even so, you can edit close up
- for precision work, and SuperPaint comes bundled with lots of
- "fun" paint tools and patterns (streams of bubbles or musical
- notes, that sort of thing). The result is that even the most
- hamfisted operator (like me) can have a good time and make
- something acceptable.
-
- The burning question is whether SuperPaint can add color features
- without sacrificing the ease of use that has been its trademark
- and greatest advantage over its higher-priced, more powerful
- rivals. The answer appears to be "Yes." The color tools are built
- conceptually onto the back of the old black and white tools in a
- thoroughly intuitive and straightforward way, and clever use of
- palettes that pop up from palettes allows easy mouse-driven access
- to everything (with keyboard shortcuts as well, but I can never
- remember them). Only one thing is clumsier to do than it was in
- version 2.0: making the widths for horizontal and for vertical
- strokes be different (though there is also vastly more flexibility
- here than there was, so perhaps the trade is a fair one).
-
- Using color is just plain easy. If your line or fill is solid, you
- can choose a color for it (from a pop-down palette); if it is a
- pattern, you can choose one color for the "white" part and another
- for the "black" part. SuperPaint remembers all your pattern-color
- combinations, and posts images of them on a floating palette so
- that you can recreate them with a single mouse-click.
-
- And that's not all. Included are a number of "textures" - complex
- color images, such as a water-surface or a delicately shaded brick
- wall, that can repeat at intervals of any size, even so large that
- no repetition may be visible on an ordinary page. Also, a number
- of gradient structures are included, so you can shade a round ball
- with a round smear of color. A solid line or fill, or the "black"
- part of a pattern, may be one of these textures or gradients
- instead of a color. You may edit the gradients, and you can create
- and save new textures. Since SuperPaint can also import EPS and
- TIFF images with full resolution (into the Draw layer as single
- objects), you have tremendous power and flexibility here
- (especially if you happen to own a scanner).
-
- Finally, when one image appears over another, you can set the
- nature of the interaction between the two: the front image's line
- and fill may each be opaque, transparent, or translucent. The
- possibilities for fun and experimentation seem endless.
-
- Now for the down side. First, SuperPaint can be a little slow if
- your machine is slow; and, more significantly, it is a terrible
- memory hog the moment you start using color. The program tries to
- compensate by using a virtual memory scheme (only showing on
- screen what it can maintain in memory, and keeping the rest on
- disk); but when I've assigned the program 4500K and I keep getting
- "Not enough memory to do that" alerts, I believe I've a right to
- be a bit exasperated, especially when "that" is something simple
- like save my document as a startup screen.
-
- Second, don't throw away your copy of Adobe Illustrator.
- SuperPaint has no facilities for making text follow a path. Worse,
- its Bezier tools (for determining mathematically the
- characteristics of a curve) remain as clumsy as in version 2.0:
- handles are not marked as to what point they belong to; you are
- not shown changes smoothly as you work and have mostly to operate
- by blind guessing and then waiting for the result to appear; and
- you can easily accidentally rocket yourself out of Bezier mode
- when you are not finished editing.
-
- Finally, if there isn't a PostScript (e.g. laser) printer in your
- life, be prepared for a disappointment at print time. On a laser
- printer, even a black and white one, SuperPaint will reduce
- everything intelligently to simulated gray shades, and will show
- all items from the draw layer (including rotated text and Bezier
- curves) in perfect high resolution. But on a QuickDraw device such
- as a StyleWriter, your output won't be much better than on an
- ImageWriter: nearly everything is reduced to 72 dpi, a waste of
- your 360 dpi capacity. Come on, Silicon Beach, I know you can do
- better than this, because Adobe Illustrator translates Bezier
- curves into high resolution and complex color blends into
- beautiful smooth simulated gray-shades on a StyleWriter. My
- crystal ball says some third party has or will develop an engine
- for converting SuperPaint's PostScript output into nice
- StyleWriter images. But then, my crystal ball has never been right
- yet.
-
- Aldus -- 206/628-2320
-
-
- Reflex Orphans Uniting
- ----------------------
- The unwashed masses of computer users do have clout, though it has
- seldom been used to effect change in the overall strategy of a
- company bent on, well, screwing its users. The best recent example
- of this clout came when Apple decided under user pressure to
- license MODE32 from Connectix to solve the problems with unwashed
- ROMs on some of the older Macs. There has been talk of a similar
- campaign to free FullWrite Professional from the depths of PC-
- oriented Borland after the acquisition of Ashton-Tate. That talk
- has yet to lead to any concerted action, but another movement
- against Borland is just gathering steam.
-
- Remember Reflex Plus? Nah, I didn't think you did. It was a
- powerful and well-liked relational database that had its roots
- back in the early days of the Macintosh in 1985. Many people
- bought into Reflex Plus and spent thousands of hours and dollars
- creating custom databases to run their businesses. Then, in 1988
- Borland decided that they had to concentrate on their DOS and
- Windows products to remain in the marketplace at all, and in the
- process cut off all future development work on Reflex Plus,
- abandoning the entire user base. Many people switched from Reflex
- Plus to one of the other powerful relational databases but many
- others, an estimated 40,000, liked the Reflex Plus environment
- and/or did not wish to throw away the significant investments they
- had in Reflex Plus. Thus was born the Reflex Plus Orphans
- Association (RPOA), a volunteer user group dedicated to supporting
- users of Reflex Plus when Borland would not.
-
- The RPOA has provided support for Reflex Plus users on America
- Online and CompuServe for over a year now, and recently started a
- campaign to find a third party developer who could take over the
- Reflex Plus code and provide updates and support to existing and
- future users. Philippe Kahn, the CEO of Borland, said on
- CompuServe: "We love the [Mac]. So tell me of a concrete solution
- and we'll work on it." Despite this apparent (though never
- concrete) willingness, the RPOA has still met with much difficulty
- in dealing with Borland, although several developers have shown
- interest. Part of the problem is that Borland does not want to
- sell the Reflex Plus code to a company that will be unable to
- stand behind it and continue supporting its users, although
- Borland may get even worse PR for sitting on the code. Ironically,
- many people used Ashton-Tate as an example of a company that sold
- its software when it no longer wished to support it. Ashton-Tate
- sold dBASE Mac to New Era Software, which renamed it nuBASE and
- has recently suffered massive mismanagement, threatening its
- chances to continue supporting nuBASE.
-
- Borland does have a point in not wanting to just let anyone take
- over Reflex Plus, but at the same time, four years of neglect have
- done little for Borland's image in the Macintosh market. I
- wouldn't be too surprised to see Borland get back into the Mac
- market at some point, and although there is no indication that
- they are working on anything, there is all that code from
- Borland's Sidekick utility and Ashton-Tate's FullWrite
- Professional, Full Impact, and FullPaint just sitting around. Kahn
- is not stupid and selling Reflex Plus to a good home would do a
- lot towards helping the company regain some respect among Mac
- users, respect that might be of some use in the continual battle
- with Microsoft.
-
- What does all this mean for you? For most of you, not too much
- short of general knowledge of industry workings. If you are
- interested in lending support to the campaign to find a developer
- and know a company well-versed in the Mac, 68000 assembler, and
- Reflex Plus, you should tell them about the RPOA's efforts. If you
- harbor hopes of rescuing FullWrite Professional or Full Impact in
- the same way, I'd pay attention and see what works and what
- doesn't for the RPOA. Kahn is no pushover. Finally, if you own and
- use Reflex Plus, you can join the Reflex Plus Orphans Association
- for $25 per year and get a year's subscription to the RPOA News,
- online and phone support, discounts on support disks, and the
- latest version of the program (7/7/88) to its legal
- owners/licensees. In meantime, we wish the RPOA all the best in
- their quest to liberate Reflex Plus.
-
- RPOA
- 3142 Beaver Brook Lane
- Baldwinsville, NY 13027 USA
- 315/635-7550 (email is preferred)
-
- Information from:
- Fred Rushden/RPOA -- FredAR on AOL -- 72230.143@compuserve.com
-
-
- Panorama II Clarifications
- --------------------------
- Well, no one's perfect, and I missed a few things in my review of
- Panorama II last week. My overall comments stand, but there are a
- few things I feel the need to clarify.
-
- It is easy to display the results of calculations on forms using
- what Panorama II calls an auto-wrap text object and a variable
- merged in with the text. I can't believe I didn't realize that,
- especially since I have used formulas in auto-wrap text objects
- for creating intelligent addresses that know not to include a
- space for company name if there is none present.
-
- One cool feature that I forgot to mention is Smart Dates. Panorama
- II knows how dates relate to each other, so you can enter dates
- like "May 21" or "3/17" and have Panorama II expand into that the
- date format you are using in that particular field, even adding
- the current year automatically. Neater yet is the ability to enter
- "last Tuesday" and have the program figure out the proper date. It
- can be easier to remember a relative date than the absolute date,
- and it's always nice to have Panorama II enter the current year
- for you if you wish.
-
- Jim Rea of ProVUE explained the rationale behind the Design Sheet
- to me. Apparently, ProVUE assumes that most people will use the
- Field Properties dialog to define and modify fields at first, but
- once a user becomes more comfortable in the Panorama II
- environment, he or she will prefer to use the Design Sheet, which
- is much faster and more efficient for making multiple changes. I
- must be abnormal, then, because I've almost never used the Field
- Properties dialog. Maybe if I had read the manual more
- carefully... :-)
-
- Information from:
- Jim Rea, President of ProVUE -- ProVUE on AOL
-
-
- Reviews/23-Mar-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- High-end OCR Software -- pg. 45
- WordScan Plus 1.0
- OmniPage Professional 2.0
- OmniPage 3.0
- AccuText 3.0
- PowerPort/V.32 -- pg. 45
- Comet/CG -- pg. 52
- Now Up-to-Date -- pg. 54
-
- * BYTE
- Quadra 900 -- pg. 229
- Outbound Notebook System Model 2030 -- pg. 233
- XGator 1.0 -- pg. 233
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 16-Mar-92, Vol. 6, #11
- BYTE -- Feb-92
-
-
- ..
-
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