TidBITS#130/22-Jun-92
=====================
 
 Hot news arrives in the form of the PowerBook 145 and Salient's
   acquisition. Mike O'Connor contributes some little-known tips
   for working with QuickTime movie players, and for you network
   junkies we have a detailed look at the Internet, the first in a
   series of articles on network connections. Finally, for those
   of you using PowerBooks, check out our review of Nisus
   Software's smaller word processor, Nisus Compact.
 
 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
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 -----------------------------------------------------------------
 
Topics:
    MailBITS/22-Jun-92
    QuickTime Tips
    Salient Acquired!
    Gateways 1: Internet
    PowerBook 145
    Nisus Compact
    Reviews/22-Jun-92
 
[Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-130.etx; 29K]
 
 
MailBITS/22-Jun-92
------------------
  Nigel Stanger writes about Apple's choice of the name Newton:
  "It's quite obvious when you think about it. What was Apple
  Computer's first logo? Newton sitting under the apple tree. The
  original company slogan also mentioned Newton. Unfortunately I
  can't remember it, and I left the book [West of Eden] at home. It
  was profound, anyway. Whether this is actually the reason they
  chose "Newton" is anyone's guess, but I wouldn't be surprised if
  factored into the decision."
 
  Information from:
    Nigel Stanger -- stanger@otago.ac.nz
 
 
QuickTime Tips
--------------
  Mike O'Connor, author of Navigator and programmer extraordinaire,
  passes along some QuickTime tips of interest.
 
  Here is a user interface command I'll bet _nobody_ knows. In any
  QuickTime movie window that uses the standard movie controller you
  can hold down the Control key and click in one of the single step
  buttons at the right end of the controller. A tiny slider bar
  appears which you can then drag to play the movie at variable
  speed forward or backward!
 
  Here is some other control stuff that works in standard QuickTime
  movie windows.
 
    Double-click on image = play
    Single-click on image = pause
    Shift-double-click on image = play backward
    Left, Right arrows = single step
    Up, Down arrows = volume
    Space, Return = toggle play/pause
    Option-click on speaker icon = toggle sound mute
    Shift-drag the play bar = select section of movie
 
  Finally, a good, little-known way to select a section of a movie
  is to first position yourself at the start of the selection. Hold
  down the Shift key, and type Space or Return. The movie starts
  playing, selecting the played portion as it goes. When you release
  the Shift key, it stops playing and the played portion is
  selected.
 
  Wild, wacky stuff! -Mike
 
  Information from:
    Mike O'Connor -- 76004.1447@compuserve.com
 
 
Salient Acquired!
-----------------
  Talk about frustration. I was watching America Online's FlashMail
  download my mail earlier this week, and I'd received a couple of
  files that were going to take 20 minutes to download. But, just
  under the file transfer dialog box, I could see a mailfile from
  Salient with the tantalizing title "Salient Acquired!!!" Tonya and
  I spent the next 20 minutes speculating on the who and why of the
  deal, and we were still surprised when we finally read the letter.
 
  It turns out that Salient wanted to expand their services overseas
  (hurrah!) and didn't have the capital or the organization to do
  that. I also wouldn't be surprised if they were vaguely looking at
  other platforms for their patented compression technology, but
  that's just a supposition. In any case, and this seems to have
  happened fairly quickly, Fifth Generation Systems expressed an
  interest in purchasing Salient, and last weekend, the deal was
  done. Neither company has commented on the price, but I suspect
  that Salient was worth a good deal.
 
  Salient will probably retain its name, and will stay at its
  offices in California rather than move to Louisiana. Primarily
  though, they will have the financial backing of Fifth Generation,
  which will allow them to expand beyond what they can do now.
  Interestingly, Fifth Generation doesn't have a high profile in the
  Macintosh market despite publishing Suitcase, SuperLaserSpool,
  FastBack+, and various other utilities. Adding the popular
  AutoDoubler and DiskDoubler to their line will help enhance Fifth
  Generation's image in the eyes of Mac users, something which won't
  hurt now that Fifth Generation is gearing up to compete directly
  with Symantec's Norton Utilities and Central Point's MacTools with
  the new Public Utilities package that we mentioned briefly in
  TidBITS#123.
 
  Information from:
    Terry Morse, Salient -- 76174.2440@compuserve.com
 
 
Gateways 1: Internet
--------------------
  The time has come. You've probably noticed that I usually write
  out addresses in the so-called Internet format. For example, when
  I give a CompuServe address, I replace the usual comma with a
  period and append "@compuserve.com" to the end. Look above at
  Terry Morse's CompuServe address for an example.
 
  I settled on that method some time ago for a good reason. TidBITS
  is very popular on the commercial services, but they are nowhere
  near as large as the worldwide Internet. Our Internet mailing list
  holds around 2500 people, and an estimated 42,000 people read the
  Usenet group comp.sys.mac.digest, where all the issues are
  distributed as well. Thus, it makes sense to bias the address
  styles to the majority of readers. In addition, I figured that
  CompuServe readers would realize how to reverse-engineer the
  address format.
 
  The networks are all becoming more interconnected, a move that I
  highly applaud. The latest addition to the Internet gateways came
  from America Online, which announced its gateway several weeks
  ago. GEnie has long promised to add an Internet gateway, and I
  even heard rumors about the paranoid censors at Prodigy thinking
  about adding some sort of connection to the rest of the world. If
  only they'd link to reality in the process.
 
  In this series of articles I'm going to take you to many of the
  services that carry TidBITS and talk about how these services
  connect to each other. These articles are not meant to be the
  ultimate in gateway information because this information changes
  frequently, and quite frankly, I'm sure that there's a ton of
  stuff I haven't seen yet. I also believe strongly in
  experimentation, so I haven't provided moron-proof instructions
  here. Consider it an exercise in network navigation. One thing I
  should note right off. AppleLink and CompuServe both charge for
  mail sent to and from the Internet, something worth checking into
  before using those gateways heavily. I'll say more about the
  charges in later articles.
 
 
Internet mailing list
  As I said above, the best places to find TidBITS on the Internet
  are via our mailing list and the Usenet newsgroup
  comp.sys.mac.digest. To subscribe to our mailing list, send email
  to:
 
    LISTSERV@RICEVM1.RICE.EDU
 
  with this line in the body of the mailfile:
 
    SUBSCRIBE TIDBITS your full name
 
  You will be automatically added to the group if the LISTSERV can
  return mail to you. Keep the acknowledgment letter you receive
  confirming subscription because it tells you how to leave the list
  if you're going away for the summer. All you have to do is send
  the command SIGNOFF TIDBITS to the same LISTSERV address. Signing
  off and then subscribing again is a good way to switch addresses
  if you start using another machine.
 
 
Usenet
  I can't tell you specifically how to find the Usenet group
  comp.sys.mac.digest because every machine is set up differently
  and there's no telling if yours even carries the Usenet groups. If
  you want to check, try typing "rn comp.sys.mac.digest" at the
  command line (most of these sort of machines have command lines).
  For help, type the letter h,, or, before you get into the program,
  type "man rn" for more general help. The best resource is a friend
  who knows - please don't ask me for any more help with your
  specific setup since I won't be able to help.
 
 
FTP Sites
  TidBITS is stored on many FTP (File Transfer Protocol) sites
  around the world. I've compiled a short list from searching with
  Archie, which I'll talk more about in a minute. In each case, you
  can reach the site in question by typing "FTP <hostname>", where
  <hostname> is the name of the machine or its associated IP
  (Internet Protocol) number. Many people use "FTP sumex-
  aim.stanford.edu" but you should pick the site closest to you to
  cut down on network traffic. Check in the online help or with your
  local gurus for instructions on how to further use FTP.
 
    Host akiu.gw.tohoku.ac.jp   (130.34.8.9) [Good for Japan]
      Location: /pub/mac/doc/tidbits
 
    Host wuarchive.wustl.edu   (128.252.135.4) [A big site]
      Location: /mirrors/info-mac/digest/tb
 
    Host uhunix2.uhcc.hawaii.edu   (128.171.44.7)
      Location: /mirrors/info-mac/digest/tb
 
    Host sumex-aim.stanford.edu   (36.44.0.6) [The main site]
      Location: /info-mac/digest/tb
 
    Host sics.se   (192.16.123.90) [Good for people in Europe]
      Location: /pub/info-mac/digest/tb
 
    Host plaza.aarnet.edu.au   (139.130.4.6) [Good from Australia]
      Location: /micros/mac/info-mac/digest/tb
 
 
Mailservers
  Those of you on the other side of the gateways were just
  frustrated by the above paragraphs because you can't read Usenet
  and you can't FTP files. However, there are some sites that will
  deliver files to you via email as well. This is not foolproof
  because almost every gateway has a limit on file size.
  CompuServe's limit is about 50K; MCI Mail goes up to about 70K;
  AppleLink is a strict 30K, which includes the headers; and America
  Online will truncate incoming files (destroying them if they are
  programs) at 27K. Incidentally, you can only request programs that
  have been encoded in the Binhex 4.0 format (look for a .hqx
  filename extension) because it changes binary files to text files.
  StuffIt Deluxe Lite and Compact Pro both include deBinhexing
  functions. Despite these quirks, mailservers (of which our
  fileserver is one) can be very useful. If you send email to
  <fileserver@tidbits.com> with the single word "locations" (no
  quotes) in the Subject: line, you'll receive a file listing known
  locations of TidBITS, which will also tell you about a few
  mailservers. For simplicity's sake, I will only mention the one
  run at Rice University at the moment. To find out what files are
  available and to request a file, send email to:
 
    LISTSERV@RICEVM1.RICE.EDU
 
  with lines like this in the body of the mailfile.
 
    $MAC DIR
    $MAC GET tidbits-130.etx
 
  Do be aware of the file size limits on the gateways because it's
  simply rude to overwhelm them and these services will only exist
  as long as they aren't abused. In addition, sites like the
  LISTSERV at Rice often have internal limits of how much you can
  request per day. Rice sets that limit at 256K of files, although
  it will still deliver a single file per day if it is over that
  size.
 
 
Network Guide
  I strongly recommend that everyone interested in gateways request
  a very specific file from a different LISTSERV. This is the best
  list of all the available gateways and how to address mail from
  one to another. Anyone who uses the Internet heavily should read
  this file. At about 23K, it should fit through all gateways. To
  get the Network Guide, send email to:
 
    LISTSERV@UNMVM.BITNET
 
  with this line in the body of the mailfile
 
    GET NETWORK GUIDE
 
 
Archie
  Archie is a truly cool program that makes searching the world's
  FTP sites for a specific file far easier than doing so by hand.
  Archie has a database of a large number of FTP sites and can
  search that database on a keyword, returning the name of the file
  and its location. Those of you on the Internet can telnet to an
  Archie machine and search interactively, and those not directly on
  the Internet can send email searches to Archie machines and
  receive the results back via email. I'll warn you though, doing an
  Archie search on "tidbits" will create a file larger than most
  gateways can handle because it finds every instance of the word at
  every machine in the database. I'm only going to give one Archie
  machine address here because of space reasons, but there are at
  least nine all told. The entire list is in the Special Internet
  Services list, which I'll talk about in a bit.
 
  If you're on the Internet, you can "telnet archie.rutgers.edu" and
  login in as "archie", at which point you'll get basic directions
  and pointers to other Archie machines. A simple search would
  entail typing "prog <keyword>" and remember, you want to be quite
  explicit or you'll find too much. To get more information about
  using Archie via email send email to <archie@archie.rutgers.edu>
  with the single word "help" (no quotes) in the Subject: line.
 
 
Special Internet Services
  Scott Yanoff took up the task of compiling a list of neat Internet
  services some time ago, and it has grown into a 14K file offering
  brief connection information on services ranging from the useful
  to the esoteric. Some of them include machines on which you can
  play real-time chess and Go with other people and machines
  containing information on the weather, flying conditions,
  geographical statistics, recipes, and NASA. You can find the list
  posted regularly on the Usenet group alt.bbs.internet (and
  probably others, but that's the one I read) and you can get on
  Scott's mailing list by sending a polite request to:
 
    yanoff@csd4.csd.uwm.edu
 
  Well, I think that's enough for now. The information I've provided
  here could keep anyone on the Internet busy for the rest of their
  lives since so much of this stuff points to other things. Those of
  you who work with the Internet only through mail gateways will
  find plenty of interesting stuff too.
 
 
PowerBook 145
-------------
  The latest solid rumor, oxymoronically enough, concerns the next
  round of PowerBooks to emerge from Cupertino. From the sounds of
  it, Apple will be upping the ante in the middle of the line with a
  PowerBook 145 that will essentially be a 170 without the active
  matrix screen or the FPU. The main change from the 140 is a 25 MHz
  68030, although we would prefer it with the floating point unit
  (FPU) to bring it to full IIci/170 speed.
 
  Apple will also drop the price to below what 140 currently goes
  for - rumor has it as much as 30% less. As with all of Apple's
  price drops, this may not affect the street price. However it also
  may mean that you'll be able to pick up a 140 at a fire sale price
  this fall when the 145 ships, and we have no reason to believe
  that it will be delayed since there's little new functionality
  promised.
 
  Information from:
    Pythaeus
 
 
Nisus Compact
-------------
  Small, modular programs are among us. Not many, but a few, and
  it's a trend I hope to see more of in the future. Why pay for and
  store the program code needed to do something you don't want or
  need. This is one of the main design philosophies behind Nisus
  Software's new low-end word processor, Nisus Compact, which costs
  about $95 discounted. Nisus Compact has three main draws. First,
  it includes a number of useful features for PowerBook users.
  Second, it introduces a neat categorizing utility called File
  Clerk that actually may succeed where the Hierarchical Filing
  System fails, and third, Nisus Compact is a good example of a
  program that sacrifices frills, not power, in the quest for a
  small, fast, word processor. I'd also like to congratulate Nisus
  Software for naming Nisus Compact using real English words and
  avoiding the ad-speak "Lite" or "Kompact."
 
 
What's gone
  I'm not just beating a dead pet peeve above. "Compact" really does
  describe Nisus Compact, because it looks at first glance like
  nothing so much as Nisus with about half of the menu choices
  missing. Gone are the colors and the more esoteric styles like
  boxed text. Gone are the macros, entirely, as are the indexing and
  table of contents tools. Cross referencing, glossaries, graphics,
  placed pages... Nisus Software removed it all. Considering what I
  do, which is write a lot of straight text without pretensions of
  desktop publishing, I only miss a few things in Nisus Compact.
  High among those are macros, the Get Info... feature (which I use
  constantly to check how much space I've got when creating a
  TidBITS issue), and the more sophisticated items in Nisus's
  Preferences like Auto Indent and the ability to tell it not to
  open an Untitled document at startup. Luckily, Nisus's Intelligent
  Paste, which puts spaces in around pasted words correctly 98% of
  the time (unlike any other Macintosh program that I use), has been
  built into Nisus Compact as the default.
 
 
What's still there
  But why am I talking about what's _not_ in Nisus Compact? I've
  already cheated significantly in this review, but with good
  reason. Above I told you what Nisus Software took out of Nisus to
  create Nisus Compact; in this section I'll tell you the major
  items that are still present; and in the next section I'll talk
  more about what is new to Nisus Compact. As a result, you may wish
  to find issues #116 through #118 of TidBITS, which is our
  definitive review of Nisus, perhaps the most complete one ever
  done (Nisus has a lot of features worth writing about). After
  you're more familiar with Nisus's standard features, you'll
  understand better what's cool about Nisus Compact.
 
  Nisus Software left a shell of Nisus's GREP-based pattern-matching
  searching abilities. By that I mean that you are limited to about
  what you can do in Microsoft Word 5.0. Well, it's not that bad,
  since you can find the GREP patterns matching Any Character, Any
  Word, Any Text, Any Digit, and you have the OR function and, most
  importantly, the Found replacement value (so you can search for
  any set of three characters, a dash, and four numbers, and replace
  each set with precisely what you found, but in bold, for
  instance). Unfortunately, some of the more powerful parts of
  Nisus's PowerSearch aren't present. I see no reason why they took
  out PowerSearch as it stood in Nisus - if you're going to include
  pattern matching at all, why cripple it?
 
  You can define character styles and attach Named Rulers to them,
  giving you all the power of Nisus's styles, and all of the fancier
  keyboard shortcut tricks like command-up arrow work just fine. You
  can have as many Undo's as you could possibly want, limited only
  by memory and the number 32767, and you can even place and move
  graphics in the graphics layer, rather than as characters, if you
  hold down the Control key when selecting them. Everything in the
  file format (which is identical to Nisus's) is supposed to
  transfer back and forth without problems. In my tests, that was
  true, so even though Nisus Compact can't create colored text or
  certain special styles, it can display them and retain them in
  files. Even goodies like the Nisus Catalog are present, although
  Nisus Compact doesn't manage files as well as Nisus can.
 
 
What's new
  Nisus Compact has two main features that do not exist in Nisus -
  the PowerBook utilities and the File Clerk. Nisus Compact can
  store itself in memory via a checkbox in the Preferences, a
  feature which presumably limits disk accesses on the PowerBook,
  extending battery life. There's an option for thicker cursors, and
  I gather that you also get a battery monitor in the Info bar at
  the top of the screen. Nisus Compact adds the current time to that
  Info bar too, so you don't even have to run SuperClock or Now's
  AlarmsClock. Finally, I hear that you get a Sleep item in the File
  menu when on a PowerBook.
 
  The File Clerk is completely new, and a bit harder to explain. It
  has two parts, the File Clerk Catalog (a list of files you've
  categorized) and the Categorize dialog, which lets you categorize
  files. If the File Clerk Catalog is open when you close a file, it
  will pop up the Categorize dialog, which has four columns of
  categories. You can also select a file in the normal Catalog (a
  list of files in the current folder) and click the Categorize
  button to pull up that dialog. Anyway, Nisus Software has defined
  the four columns as File Type, File Contents, Action, and Proper
  Names, and they've also provided a decent-sized list of
  suggestions, so File Type includes things like Letter, Notes, and
  Report, and Action includes things like To Send, Urgent, To
  Finish, Finished, and so on.
 
  You can add your own items to these four categories, and you can
  change the column names as well, if they aren't appropriate. I
  think most people will find them more or less on target. To
  categorize a file, you simply click on one or more items in one or
  more of the columns. Click to select, click again to deselect, no
  shift keys or anything else to fool with. For instance, if I was
  going to categorize a letter to my mother about visiting her, I
  would select Letter from the File Type column, Personal and Travel
  from the File Contents column, To Send from the Action column, and
  my mother's name from the Proper Names column. I'm quite impressed
  with the File Clerk because I've found it a quick and unobtrusive
  method of categorizing files without having to type in categories
  each time or select items from pop-up menus. From what I've heard,
  it blows Word's Summary feature out of the water.
 
  What good will categorizing do? Well, if you've got a ton of
  documents like I do, you probably have a decent method of
  organizing them. Even still, it can be hard to pick the right one
  at any given time. The File Clerk Catalog provides a list of all
  the files that have been categorized, and since that list is
  likely to be pretty long, you just click the Show Categories
  button, then click on the appropriate categories, and the File
  Clerk will narrow the selection for you. What I especially like is
  that as you narrow the selection, it removes unnecessary
  categories from the list, so the available category choices shrink
  as you go. When you finish the selection, you go back to the File
  Clerk Catalog window and only the matching files are listed.
  Double-click, and there's your file. There's also a pop-up menu
  for limiting the files to ones created within certain dates, and
  if the several choices aren't appropriate, you can type in your
  own specific date ranges. Overall, I think the File Clerk is an
  excellent way to avoid the tyranny of the Hierarchical Filing
  System, and I anxiously await its arrival in the full-fledged
  version of Nisus.
 
  One other new feature - despite the fact that the Find feature
  isn't as powerful as Nisus's, Nisus Software did add fuzzy find,
  so you can find words (more likely names) that you can't
  necessarily spell. For instance, "nekecerie" matched "necessary,"
  despite being abysmally spelled. I don't know how often I'd use
  this, but it's neat nonetheless.
 
 
What should be there
  What I'd like to see more than anything else in Nisus Compact is
  the ability to transfer macros to it from Nisus. If Nisus Software
  really expects us to use Nisus Compact on our ubiquitous
  PowerBooks and the full-fledged version on our more powerful
  desktop Macs, then this single feature would allow us to keep a
  basic set of personal functions on both machines. Many of the
  features that Nisus Software has removed from Nisus aren't really
  necessary for working with text on a daily basis. If you use Nisus
  and have a bunch of macros built up, your macros are an integral
  part of your writing environment. I don't need a glossary or
  indexing, but I do need my personal macros that do Smart Quotes
  correctly, unlike all known Smart Quote features, and re-wrap
  return-delimited lines from online services. People could also
  create libraries of macros for the public, so if you wanted one
  little feature, you could just download that macro. Commands that
  weren't appropriate to Nisus Compact would have to be filtered
  out, of course, but I still think it would be a spiffy addition.
 
 
What should be fixed
  I heard that Nisus Software's main programming team took only
  three weeks to convert the core of Nisus into Nisus Compact.
  That's impressive, and they did an excellent job on the whole.
  Nonetheless, there are still some problems. Nisus Compact is as
  much of a CPU hog in the foreground as Nisus is, and some
  communications programs will work very slowly in the background.
  However, MicroPhone II 4.0's ZMODEM implementation never so much
  as hesitates, even with Nisus running full tilt in the foreground.
  Nisus Compact claims it prefers 900K of RAM, which is odd for a
  program designed for the anemic memory systems of many PowerBooks.
  Nisus Software said that you can set the memory size down to 500K,
  but that will limit your number of Undo's and the size of the file
  you can have open. 700K is probably a fine compromise. The
  programming haste also shows in a few places cosmetically. For
  instance, if you try to use a module that's not loaded, the
  resulting SFDialog that lets you find it has some icons at the
  bottom that are cut off a third of the way down. These are nits,
  and Nisus Software has probably fixed them already since I have a
  very early version.
 
 
Modularity
  As it ships, Nisus Compact has no dictionary, no mail merge, and
  no ability to customize the keyboard shortcuts. You do get a
  balloon help module, but you have to purchase the dictionary and
  the mail merge/menu keys module separately from Nisus Software for
  $29.95 for one or $39.95 for two, and other cool modules are in
  the works. If you own Nisus already, Nisus Compact can use the
  same dictionaries, and you may not want the mail merge or menu
  keys module. I think Nisus Software chose wisely which modules to
  break out so Nisus users don't pay for something they already have
  and no one has to mess with mail merge or menu keys if they don't
  wish to spend the money. Interestingly, unlike Word 5.0, you can
  load modules after startup if you wish. Nisus Compact will simply
  ask you to locate them, although it doesn't store the locations
  for future use, which would be nice.
 
 
In the end...
  I think Nisus Software is on the right track with a small, fast
  word processor that doesn't bristle with desktop publishing
  features. They are specifically aiming Nisus Compact at the
  PowerBook user, and there's no reason to assume that a PowerBook
  user will want less power, just fewer speed- and space-consuming
  frills. On the whole, Nisus Compact succeeds admirably - it is
  small, fast (even usable on a Classic), and capable of almost
  anything you could want to do on the road as far as document
  creation and manipulation goes.
 
  Aside from smoothing the rough edges, I think Nisus Software could
  go further in providing a powerful, yet quiet (free of bells and
  whistles) word processor. A Macro Player module would be great, of
  course, and I'd like to see the full PowerSearch (but not
  PowerSearch+ - no one carries a GREP manual on the road)
  implemented as well. By leaving out these important text-
  manipulation features, Nisus Software unfortunately reduced the
  power in the name of compacting the program. There's a difference
  between power and frippery - Nisus Compact has little or no
  frippery, and with just a touch more power in the areas I've
  mentioned, it would be an absolute killer of a word processor for
  home or the road, especially for those of us used to the full
  power of Nisus.
 
    Nisus Software
    107 S. Cedros Avenue
    Solana Beach CA  92075
    800/922-2993
    619/481-1477
 
    jon@weber.ucsd.edu
    75300.1243@compuserve.com
    D0405@applelink.apple.com
 
 
Reviews/22-Jun-92
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK
    AutoCAD Release 11 -- pg. 41
    Atex Renaissance -- pg. 42
    CoStar AddressWriter -- pg. 44
    MicroMac Plus -- pg. 44
    Image Manager 1.0 -- pg. 46
    EHelp 2.0 -- pg. 47
    System 7 Pack 3.01 -- pg. 48
 
References:
    MacWEEK -- 15-Jun-92, Vol. 6, #23
 
 
..
 
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