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- TidBITS#168/15-Mar-93
- =====================
-
- TidBITS goes international this week, with news of a free Italian
- extension that activates the delete forward key on extended
- keyboards, the announcement of "Caring For Your Wrists," a file
- we distributed to the world at large for free to help prevent
- repetitive stress injuries, a report on the latest update to
- Nisus that makes it even more language-savvy, and a great
- article from Tig Tillinghast looking at problems with overseas
- software prices.
-
- Copyright 1990-1993 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. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and company
- names may be registered trademarks of their companies. Disk
- subscriptions and back issues are available - email for details.
-
- For information send email to info@tidbits.com or ace@tidbits.com
- CIS: 72511,306 -- AppleLink: ace@tidbits.com@internet#
- AOL: Adam Engst -- Delphi: Adam_Engst -- BIX: TidBITS
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/15-Mar-93
- Delete Forward Usage
- Caring For Your Wrists
- Notes from the Apple Catalog
- Nisus 3.4 Hits the World
- European Software Bargains: Who's Gouging Whom?
- Reviews/15-Mar-93
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-168.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/15-Mar-93
- ------------------
- It turns out that the Celestin Company mentioned in the last
- TidBITS just moved. The new address, effective 15-Mar-93 is:
-
- Celestin Company
- 1152 Hastings Avenue
- Port Townsend, WA 98368
- 800/835 5514 toll-free
- 206/385 3767 main number
- 206/385 3586 fax
-
- America Online: Celestin
- CompuServe: 71630,650
- Delphi: PCELESTIN
- GEnie: P.CELESTIN
- National Videotext Network: pcelestin
- WELL: celestin
- Internet: celestin@netcom.com
-
-
- Rumor Correction
- Oops - Pythaeus wrote to tell us that Apple's forthcoming active-
- matrix color LCD PowerBook will be called the 180c and will sport
- a 640 by 480 screen, as opposed to the 640 by 400 LCD screens we
- are used to on the PowerBooks. Why do I suspect that the 180c will
- sell as fast as Apple can make them despite a ludicrous price? The
- PowerBooks strike me the best answer to the "PC's are cheaper"
- argument. When it comes right down to it, the more-capable and
- thus more-expensive PowerBooks have consistently outsold the
- cheaper PowerBooks, excepting the fire sale PowerBook 100s, of
- course.
-
-
- Delete Forward Usage
- --------------------
- In his article on the Apple Adjustable Keyboard (TidBITS#166), Joe
- Clark commented that the keyboard product manager claimed that
- Apple's tests showed that no one uses the delete forward key.
- Fabrizio Oddone had a few comments on that topic:
-
- It is true that few people use the delete forward key, but that is
- because the System Software doesn't support it. Normal people use
- key combinations when they are consistent. You probably use the
- command-Q key combination to quit applications. Would you use this
- combination if only one tenth of your applications supported it?
- Would you use the undo/cut/copy/paste key combinations if every
- application sported a different layout? The Mac has been
- successful in great part due to its consistency, and only some
- applications support the delete forward key.
-
- If you use an extended keyboard, you will probably find my free
- Forward Delete extension useful since it enables the key in
- applications that use Apple's TextEdit routines. It is stored for
- at <sumex-aim.stanford.edu> as:
-
- info-mac/ex/forward-delete-10d2.hqx
-
- [I haven't yet tried Forward Delete. Instead, I've been using
- Steve Stockman's DEL Key Control panel, which achieves the same
- thing most of the time by translating delete forward keystrokes
- into a right-arrow and backspace combination. -Adam]
-
- Information from:
- Fabrizio Oddone -- Fabrizio.Oddone%bbs@osra.sublink.org
-
-
- Caring For Your Wrists
- ----------------------
- As you know, both Tonya and I suffer from wrist problems, carpal
- tunnel for me and tendonitis for her. Our special issue on the
- subject is in the making (special issues are a bear to get out),
- but we recently put something together for people who either have
- or are at risk from the same problems. Along with our graphic
- designer friend Jon.Hersh, we've created a double-sided page that
- you can post near your computer to remind yourself of things you
- know you should do to help your wrists.
-
- In a slight break with TidBITS tradition, we make this file freely
- redistributable and copyable by anyone in any medium, commercial
- or not, as long as the page stays in its original form, though we
- would appreciate a message if you wish to place it in a commercial
- publication. We strongly encourage everyone to make copies and
- give them to anyone, encouraging them in turn to distribute the
- page. The point is to help as many people as possible.
-
- You'll notice below that there are two files posted in most
- locations. The first is a PageMaker 4.2 file that you can download
- and use if you have PageMaker 4.0 or later and a PostScript
- printer. The second file is larger (and it gets really big when
- you expand - StuffIt Deluxe 3.0 compressed it from about 1.8 MB to
- less than 300K), but it is a straight PostScript file that you can
- download to any PostScript printer (I hope) with the free
- LaserWriter Font Utility that comes on the System 7 disks. If you
- use System 6, I suppose something like SendPS would work too. So,
- if you have PageMaker 4.0 or later, download the first file. If
- all you have is access to a PostScript laser printer, get the
- second file. Sorry, but the design and methods of distribution
- preclude us from making it available for QuickDraw printers (but
- see below).
-
- We posted the files to various places, including the Macintosh
- Hardware Forum New Files library on America Online, ZiffNet/Mac's
- ZMC:DOWNTECH Reference library (#7) as TBWRIS.SIT, MAUG's MACCLUB
- Magazines library (#8) on CompuServe as TBWRIS.SIT and TBWRPS.SIT,
- in the GOODHEALTH forum's Issues at Work library (#15) on
- CompuServe as TBWRIS.SIT and TBWRPS.SIT, and on <sumex-
- aim.stanford.edu> for anonymous FTP as:
-
- /info-mac/report/caring-for-wrists-pagemaker.hqx
- /info-mac/report/caring-for-wrists-postscript.hqx
-
-
- The front of the page...
- For those of you who don't have access to a PostScript laser
- printer in any way, here are the reminders from the front of the
- page. Print them out in a large typeface and post them on your
- wall to look at while you work.
-
- Reduce Stress!
- * Take a break every hour. Relax, stretch, or talk with someone.
- * Massage your hands, forearms, and the muscles in your neck.
- * Evaluate your environment for ways to reduce stress.
- * Learn to change your reactions to unavoidable stress.
-
- Ergonomics
- * Watch your posture.
- * Don't crane your head and shoulders forward.
- * Use a keyboard wrist rest properly.
- * Drink plenty of water regularly.
-
- Exercises
- * Squeeze a soft ball (don't do this if it hurts!).
- * Stretch and curl your fingers.
- * Drop your hands to your sides and shake them gently.
- * Breathe deeply, exhale slowly. Yawn.
- * Stretch your neck.
- * Rest your eyes.
-
-
- Notes from the Apple Catalog
- ----------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@tidbits.com
-
- Macintosh Portable Supplies
- Macintosh Portable owners will be pleased to hear that Apple
- hasn't abandoned them. Mac Portable batteries are in short supply
- at most dealers, who understandably don't want to stock
- infrequently requested items, but Apple's latest catalog includes
- this hard-to-find item. The Macintosh Portable Battery (item
- B1023) is $39, and the companion recharger (item B1022) is $105.
-
-
- Manual Replacements
- "Did your dog eat your manual? Or maybe you've just bought a used
- computer or other Apple product that didn't come with a manual."
- That's how the latest Apple Catalog describes possible situations
- that could lead you to need a replacement Apple manual. We've
- heard better stories, but we'll leave them to your imagination. In
- any case, if you need a replacement, chances are Apple has an
- extra and will sell it to you for $15.
-
- Within the United States you can call 800/795-1000 twenty-four
- hours a day, and orders over $50 receive free overnight shipping.
- Apple's catalog does not provide a non-800 number for customers
- outside the U.S.; the ordering information says they can only
- deliver to U.S. purchasers, but I think you could have a friend
- purchase a manual for you in the U.S. and then mail it to you.
-
- Apple Catalog -- 800/795-1000
-
- Information from:
- Apple Catalog
-
-
- Nisus 3.4 Hits the World
- ------------------------
- Nisus Software just announced availability of Nisus 3.4, an
- upgrade from the current 3.06-040 version of Nisus. Although 3.4
- includes a number of significant normal features that I'll discuss
- in a bit, Nisus Software is targeting users of multiple languages
- since Nisus 3.4 is the only high-end word processor that takes
- advantage of all the languages available in the WorldScript
- system, mixing up to 18 different languages in a single document
- (reading them all is your problem). That set includes right-to-
- left languages such as Arabic and Hebrew along with other non-
- Roman alphabets and languages from the Far East.
-
- Academics have long needed multi-lingual word processing features;
- if you study another language you need to be able to switch back
- and forth between at least two. Such needs extend beyond academia
- though, since corporations have international subsidiaries or
- clients, and numerous governmental organizations work with
- counterparts in other nations.
-
- Nisus has come up with two different editions of Nisus, based on
- the type of language. In both cases, you get the English
- dictionary and thesaurus and your choice of one foreign language
- dictionary (you can order more dictionaries if you wish for $30
- each). Nisus 3.4L (Limited Flag) supports text entry in languages
- based on the Roman alphabet, including English, French, Finnish,
- German, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish, along with Japanese
- (including inline input), which will work with KanjiTalk or System
- 7.1 or the kanji WorldScript module that Apple has announced for a
- 15-Apr-93 ship date. Nisus 3.4L requires System 6.0.7 or later and
- lists for $395. You can upgrade for $20 from any Nisus version.
-
- The Complete Flag edition of Nisus (3.4C) allows you to enter and
- manipulate text in all the languages supported by the Limited Flag
- version plus Arabic, Chinese, Czech, Farsi (Persian), Hebrew,
- Hungarian, Korean, Polish, Russian and Thai, all of which require
- special language modules. Nisus will sell you modules for Arabic,
- the Eastern European languages (Czech, Hungarian, and Polish),
- Farsi, Hebrew, and Russian for $45 each, but you get one module of
- your choice free with the Complete Flag edition. Other modules
- should come from Apple later this year.
-
- Nisus 3.4C lists for $495, but you can upgrade from 3.06 or
- earlier for $120 or from 3.24 or 3.26 (which I believe were only
- sold overseas) for $20. Nisus 3.4C requires System 7.0.1 or later,
- and is copy protected with Nisus Software's PETlock ADB dongle.
- Edwina Riblet, Nisus Software's Director of Marketing, said, "We
- don't like it any more than anyone else, but our distributors in
- those areas won't carry the product without the ADB copy
- protection because of rampant piracy." Edwina said that the
- requirement started with the Korean distributor and has been
- echoed by Israeli and Saudi distributors as well others in the
- Middle East and Eastern Europe. She also noted that this copy
- protection is not new - Nisus has always been copy protected in
- those markets and Nisus Software doesn't know of any conflicts
- with any ADB devices when you put a PETlock in the middle of an
- ADB string. I'm not pleased about the ADB-dongle copy protection
- but I can't really complain to Nisus Software about it if
- distributors won't sell Nisus without copy protection. The root of
- the problem lies with users in those areas of the world. Those
- people must work to reduce piracy and convince the local
- distributors that copy protection is an unnecessary hassle, and
- only then will all copy protection disappear.
-
- The people most affected by the ADB dongle are Duo users, who have
- no ADB port without a dock or floppy adapter. Edwina said Nisus
- Software is working on a solution, so if you use a Duo and want to
- buy Nisus 3.4C, call Nisus first and check on the progress of the
- Duo solution.
-
- Even if you don't need the new language features, the upgrade to
- Nisus 3.4L is worth the $20. First of all, $20 is a thoroughly
- reasonable cost, especially since Nisus hasn't charged for the
- little upgrades like 3.06, which added XTND file translation (not
- a trivial addition). Second, according Nisus Software, Nisus 3.4
- includes drag & drop editing, which has proven popular in Word
- 5.x, a Fuzzy Find that finds approximate, "sounds-like" words, an
- improved spelling checker, a user dictionary that you can edit
- like a normal document and add words to in batches, tracking,
- glossing (lets you add text above words for definitions or
- comments), a full-justified tab, the ability to open a PICT or
- EPSF document directly into Nisus via XTND, and a clock in the
- Information Bar. Hey, I'm updating.
-
- Nisus Software -- 800/922-2993 -- 619/481-1477
- 619/481-6154 (fax)
-
- Information from:
- Nisus Software propaganda
- Edwina Riblet, Nisus Software -- nisus.mktg@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- European Software Bargains: Who's Gouging Whom?
- -----------------------------------------------
- by Tig Tillinghast -- tig@dartmouth.edu
-
- Right now the cheapest software deals in all of Europe are just
- south of where I live, in Marlow, New Hampshire, home of mail
- order giant MacConnection. European netters writhe with envy every
- time some New Englander mentions having just picked up PageMaker
- 4.2 for $400. The cheapest deal in Europe right now is more than
- twice that. It should be no surprise then that American mail order
- firms like MacWarehouse find many people ordering software from
- Helsinki to Milan. Even after value-added taxes exceeding 25
- percent and shipping that can be as much as $40, U.S. mail order
- firms consistently provide cheaper deals than any offered by a
- European retailer.
-
- This point has not been lost on European netters. Unless you've
- been under a cybernetic rock, you've read complaints from the
- Continent about the evils of American software corporations. U.S.
- manufacturers have been accused of everything from conspiratorial
- pricing to naked greed to plain stupid marketing. But there seems
- a reason to the madness. And that reason may not have much to do
- with the software manufacturers.
-
-
- THE PROBLEM
-
- "Prices for the end users are too high and the level
- of service is too low."
- -David Steiner; Vechta, Germany
-
- Put simply, it seems non-American software consumers are getting
- soaked. Over the past six months, a rather large and random
- sampling of American-made software products sold from about one
- and a half to two times as much as it did back in the colonies.
- (The variation in relative cost came not so much from changes in
- prices, but rather from wildly shifting exchange rates.)
-
- Also, several major American software companies are beginning to
- garner consistent complaints about a lack of customer support for
- European patrons. Even worse, when Europeans spring for a call to
- U.S. customer support, they are often turned away, told that they
- must go through their recalcitrant European distributor. One
- TidBITS reader from Vienna said he used his American parents'
- address when he registers software to guarantee decent support and
- cheap upgrade prices.
-
- David Steiner, a researcher in Vechta, Germany recalled a time
- when he tried to get a question answered from Symantec's European
- office (Netherlands). His fax was never answered.
-
- "We report bugs," said Jan Steinman, a Swiss who often tries to
- help clients find customer support, "and companies disappear off
- the face of the earth, or at least the face of Europe."
-
- Many registered purchasers of Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel,
- Norton Utilities and other name-brand American products still have
- yet to receive update notices for the latest software
- incarnations.
-
- "The sad part of this," added Steinman, "is that, due to the weak
- dollar, U.S. goods should be real bargains these days."
-
- Dr. Alan Hewat, of Grenoble, France, told of an experience where
- he failed to get any sort of a response from Adobe Europe (both
- offices, in the Netherlands and Scotland) until he finally sent
- back his original Illustrator disks with a nasty letter to Adobe's
- offices in America.
-
- Adobe, as Mike Glendinning of Britain reported, also proscribes
- U.S. retailers and mail order firms from selling to foreigners,
- denying better deals to non-domestics.
-
- Some companies do better than others, however, when it comes to
- service and prices. Dr. Hewat noted that in a recent French
- MacWarehouse catalogue, Aldus PageMaker and Adobe Illustrator both
- cost over $1,000 (this before an 18 percent tax!) while Microsoft
- Word cost $374 - roughly comparable to the U.S. street price.
-
- When Erkko Autio of the Institute of Industrial Management of the
- Helsinki University of Technology was asked what was going on, he
- responded, "Many American companies are suffering from what I call
- the home market myopia."
-
- He said that since U.S. companies have already determined that
- their home markets are large enough to sustain them, they "tend to
- focus on that only and ignore the international dimension." He
- went on to add that if the U.S. is not careful, its software
- industry might follow its car industry - into the red.
-
- "To put it simply," summed up Autio, "some American software
- companies are acting arrogantly toward their European customers."
-
- Europeans are not alone, however. All countries but the U.S. and
- Canada suffer from the same pricing structures. Frank Horowitz, of
- Mt. Waverley, Australia listed about 50 items offered in a Sydney-
- based catalogue. Americans buying from the very same company pay
- only one half to two thirds as much as Australians.
-
- Judging from the frequent protests seen on the nets, people are
- beginning to take notice of the opportunities they are being
- denied. And they are demanding an accounting.
-
-
- AN ACCOUNTING
- Software companies by and large do not charge different prices in
- European markets - at least for the original, English versions.
- For the most part, the mark-ups are perpetrated after they've been
- sent over the Atlantic.
-
- Licensing, taxes, various certifications and so on add to the
- cost, according to University of Connecticut marketing professor
- and well-known network omnipote Murphy Sewall.
-
- "In short," said Sewall, "it really may be more expensive to make
- products available in some markets, but perhaps not 70 percent
- more expensive."
-
- Companies do spend a good amount of money localizing their
- products. You can't just use ResEdit to change all the words to a
- different language. Manuals and other documentation must be
- translated and printed. Multi-lingual technical service employees
- must be hired. This, however, fails to explain the entire price
- difference.
-
- "It costs a lot of money to translate the manuals and other paper
- documents, but that does not explain why the English versions of
- the software I buy is as expensive or, sometimes, more expensive
- than the German one," noted transplanted American David Steiner.
-
- Here's the low-down. Large companies have the capital outlays to
- create a national subdivision for a particular market - say Italy.
- This subdivision can then take advantage of the tax, labor and
- product regulation benefits given to domestic Italian companies.
- Smaller software companies, however, must hire a local distributor
- in order to compete from afar. The distributor, however, asks for
- rights to a monopoly for the product in the particular market
- since the market is so tiny to begin with. No monopoly, no deal.
- This creates a situation in which distributors feel they must
- charge a high mark-up because of their relatively minuscule market
- and the market constituents feel they're getting the rod due to
- the monopoly - and, in some respects, they are.
-
- "Distribution monopolies undoubtedly drive European software
- prices up, either through waste or greed," noted a recent Info-Mac
- Digest contributor. "But, even in a perfect world, software in
- Europe would be more expensive than in the U.S. because the
- expenses are higher and the markets smaller."
-
-
- SOFTWARE COMPANIES RESPOND
- "I know of no software company that charges a penny more for
- exported copies of software. In fact, we often lower our prices to
- overseas distributors," said Terry Morse of Fifth Generation
- Systems, makers of AutoDoubler and other utilities. "The real
- problem is that no other nation can compete with the U.S.A.'s
- efficient and highly-competitive distribution and sales channels."
-
- U.S. manufacturers give European distributors identical deals to
- those they give the Americans, according to Morse. The higher
- prices come from foreign markups. "50 percent is the low end of
- markups overseas. 100 percent is more typical," said Morse.
-
- Another executive from a different utilities developer, who asked
- that he not be identified, concurred, "The end-user price
- differential comes from the fact that the foreign distributors
- mark up the product a lot more than the domestic ones, mainly
- because they serve much smaller markets."
-
- He noted that "advertising costs roughly twice as much per
- subscriber in foreign markets," and "there are costs associated
- with shipping, customs and the administrative expenses of
- maintaining an international vendor/distributor business
- relationship."
-
- He also defended the monopolistic nature of software distribution:
- "Most international software distribution is territory exclusive.
- If there were two distributors in a territory and one does a good
- job of building the market, the other would lowball the marketing
- and support budgets in favor of a cut rate price and get the
- business generated by the 'good' distributor."
-
- Finally, several executives pointed out that retail channels
- outside the U.S. are simply not as efficient as they are in the
- U.S. There is limited mail order, practically no superstores and a
- much less well-developed dealer channel.
-
- Larry Zulch, of Dantz, was reticent to lay all the blame on
- distributors, however, noting that "the number of distributors
- going bankrupt is at record levels." Instead, he blames the "fact
- that the services distributors provide are expensive, particularly
- when the volumes are low."
-
- Zulch highlighted the differences between domestic and foreign
- distributors. Here in the U.S., distributors rely on the software
- company to provide customer support and upgrade programs. "It
- makes no sense for a German end user to call us: not only are they
- likely to call at 2:00 AM, but we don't speak German," Zulch
- pointed out. "So our distributor provides tech support - in
- effect, they become Dantz in Germany."
-
-
- THE SOLUTIONS
-
- "If the American companies do not treat their European
- customers well, it is certain that someone else will."
- -Erkko Autio; Helsinki, Finland
-
- When pressed for a solution, Fifth Generations' Morse said half-
- jokingly, "Do away with borders so markets will be big enough to
- support large distributors and dealers. Do away with value-added
- taxes that escalate the price of software through every step of
- distribution."
-
- More seriously, several companies are beginning to experiment with
- new forms of distribution. For instance, one company said it was
- experimenting with dissemination via loaned CD-ROMs.
-
- "I believe that the end of full service distributors is in sight,"
- said Dantz's Zulch pondering the future. "It has already happened
- in the US, and it will happen in other markets as well, starting
- with Europe."
-
- Already Dantz ends up making less per copy sold overseas than
- those sold here despite the price differences. They sell products
- at roughly 50 percent of suggested retail price to companies like
- Ingram Micro, Merisel, and Kenfil who go on to take on the
- expenses of foreign marketing.
-
- "US distributors don't deal with end users at all. For the most
- part, they rely on us to provide telephone support, run upgrade
- programs, and generate demand," noted Zulch.
-
- He said we shouldn't be surprised to find those relatively
- expensive services no longer offered in foreign markets sometime
- soon. And, he adds, that might not be such a bad thing.
-
- It's all a matter of waiting until the foreign markets become more
- like the American one, said Erkko Autio. "Achieving economies of
- scale similar as in the U.S. is what the European integration
- process is all about: to create an integrated market."
-
- One thing European computer users tend to forget occasionally is
- the fact that most other consumer technologies are also more
- difficult and expensive to come by on the Continent. The U.S.
- simultaneously suffers from and enjoys a full-blown consumer
- economy. Europe is both cursed and blessed with a more producer-
- driven economy. Just try finding a 24-hour ATM machine in
- Mannheim, Germany and you'll see what I mean. Outside the U.S. Air
- Force base located there, it's practically impossible - as it is
- in most German towns.
-
- When I asked an electrical engineer in Viernheim, Germany if he
- missed having a Radio Shack down the road where he could pick up
- most anything he needs, he replied rather simply, "But I can just
- order something and go to Frankfurt to pick it up in a few days.
- Why would I need that?" He simply did not perceive he needed the
- convenience. And because he didn't perceive he needed it, he
- probably doesn't. But other electrical engineers who do perceive
- they need that local Radio Shack shouldn't be surprised that Tandy
- decides not to plant a store in their European town because it
- doesn't see a seething demand.
-
- The mainstream European culture does not yet perceive it needs
- immediate service 24 hours a day at cut-rate prices. Things then
- become particularly dissonant when Europeans gaze over the pond at
- Americans who get their software Fed-Ex'd to them 12 hours after
- they call a toll-free number and shell out only one half to two
- thirds the money. It's a great incentive to join the consumerism
- culture.
-
- Unfortunately, barring a cultural revolution, it does not look as
- though many Europeans will be boycotting their fishmongers and
- tobacconists in deference to supermarkets and 7-11s. It's simple
- market sense. Software and hardware distributors simply won't feel
- safe trying to exploit the same market that can't even make
- EuroDisney profitable. Discount-minded computer consumers in
- Europe must either wait for compatriots to join them to create a
- large enough market or somehow figure a way to finagle software
- and hardware from America.
-
-
- Reviews/15-Mar-93
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 08-Mar-93, Vol. 7, #10
- Painter 2.0 -- pg. 47
- Tektronix Phaser 200i -- pg. 47
- Iomega Transportable MultiDisk 150 -- pg. 49
- DATDisk -- pg. 50
-
-
- ..
-
- This text is wrapped as a setext. For more information send email
- with the single word "setext" (no quotes) in the Subject: line to
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-
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