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New Year's Day Architecture 2/28/06 22:26 - permalink - email - category: Flow Ania birthday-gifted me with two wonderful stacks of tree and ink today: The Complete Calvin and Hobbes and an excellent Taschen book on Frank Lloyd Wright. The Complete Calvin and Hobbes is a massive set of three hardback tomes, a beautiful 1440 pages collecting every strip Bill Watterson ever released for circulation. Simply flipping through, I'm struck with wonder at every smile, every arc of tiger through air, every well-wrought flip of social commentary disguised as the shenanigans of a six year old: all simple pen strokes placed deliberately by the artist's hand. The book on Wright is filled with gorgeous photos of his architecture and blueprints. I can never get enough of Wright's work: sweeping lines, complex geometries made deceptively simple, an interdependence with setting to the extent setting becomes a part of the creation. Wright created dwellings the way Watterson imbued his characters with life: every beam, every angle, every space an expression of its creator's pulse. These works of art, these breathing embodiments of aspects of their artists, live equally in our minds as in the physical world. That's where the creation began: in an artist's mind. Through artistic expansion and expression, their creations as avatar allow simultaneous appearance throughout the world and throughout time. Watterson walks our minds still in the eternal pair of boy and tiger, and Wright is very much alive as modernity and progress itself. I like New Year's Day for the mass cleansing and renewal our society longs for and attempts, but my true, personal measurement of year to year is from birthday to birthday. My life as lived, like those of all artists, all human beings, is an aspect of my mind, which popped from void into this improbable place on this day. What I see is what I create, what I do is what I will, what I am is what I believe. A new rotation, a new creation... architecture, sketches, tigers and fallingwater.... I wonder what I'll build in this brand new year? SixCylinder 2/24/06 21:30 - permalink - email - category: MaxMSPJitter One recipe for very strange sound- Stack six oscillators in two columns of three. Each oscillator node provides a range of waveforms: sin, triangle, saw, triangle/saw composite, stairstep, sample & hold, pulse, bipulse. Each oscillator will spin out any frequency from LFO range upwards, and has selectable drift. Drift can be jump-started by a control signal based on amplitude in the source material. Since peaks will kick off new drift, it works a charm on rhythmic material. Pass left and right signals through each columnar chain, oscillating the amplitude progressively with each node. Here's where it gets fun. Create a ladder of variable recirculating feedback connections between the nodes. The signal flows back and forth between the columns and upon reaching the base... rolls through a delay and heads right back to the top of the ladder. This short demo clip was made with all six oscillators in the chain set to sin wave. First is the dry loop, then a solo of the amplitude modulation effect, then a mix of both wet and dry. SixCylinder Hood_Modulator (0:42, 44.1KHz, 128kbps, 668k). Infinite Ascent 2/20/06 22:51 - permalink - email - category: Futurism Evolution is a fact. As in all life and science, there are rough spots and yet-to-be-understood aspects, but the evidence for evolution is overwhelming at all levels. If you're in the small percentage of the human populace attempting to ban the teaching of evolution and create an environment hostile to rational thought, I refer you to the recantation of Galileo Galilei in 1633. Galileo was forced by the Church to renounce his writings claiming our Earth revolved around the Sun. Galileo's forced denial of heliocentrism factually changed absolutely nothing. Sol still anchors our planetary system and we continue circling it on our blue world. In our near future, evolution is likely to make its presence known in unavoidable fashion. Doug Miller and I recently exchanged posts about Sweden's social and technological push to become oil-free by 2020, and shortly before this exchange Doug made an excellent post titled Meritocracy & Uselessness: I am a beneficiary (today) of the meritocracy. My success is entirely founded on my ability to learn and apply new skills at a ferocious rate — a rate so fast, in fact, that I really can say that I have forgotten more about any number of subjects than most people know. ...At the same time, I suspect the day is coming when, due to age, I start to slow down. When I can’t learn as fast, and when it’s cheaper to hire someone younger and faster and sharper than continue to pay me. I’ve seen the under- and unemployed Baby Boomers — and I know how easy it would be to join their ranks. Doug's thoughts above weave the common thread: evolution operates on more than the physical. We generally conceptualize evolution as descent along the branches of a relationship tree. I think the term ascent is truly the proper descriptive framework. Any idea, action, or process which can confer an advantage or disadvantage to continued existence is part of the game. Advantages over others are selected for and propagate. Disadvantages are selected against and are out-reproduced. In this science fiction novel we're all living inside of, the technological remaking of humanity is proceeding at an ever-increasing pace. Ideas and the ability to give them life as action are the world's currency. In the physical arena, we're up against a hothouse of pandemics, global warming, energy depletion and all the problems of overpopulation. Evolving in an environment like this, what would beneficial traits be? - an understanding of crisis: we cannot wait to be saved As we climb the slope of The Singularity, as we rocket into infinite ascent, as the forces of everything come to bear upon each other in increasing tension, evolution kicks into progressively higher gear. Those who cannot work with the very stuff of which we are made and make, the thoughts and words which allow us to move forward and stay intact... will be selected against. In a world trading in ideas, those who cannot think will find themselves without coin of the realm. Triptych 2/15/06 21:47 - permalink - email - category: MaxMSPJitter Triptych is my latest Max/MSP madness. Another in a line of plugins designed to stave off sterility, Triptych is an organic, triple pitch shift.
First, I split the incoming audio signal out into three discrete pitch shifters. Each pitch shifting abstraction ranges +/- one octave. In addition to transposition, each shifter also has its own gain, pan, instability range and duration until next instability event. The instability values are randomly chosen within the specified range and change smoothly from one value to the next over the course of the chosen duration. Mix the pitched signals to taste with original signal and endlessly samey-samey drumloops are set free to wobble as they wish. The effect can range from very subtle pitch blurring to drastic, wild swings. It sounds great on everything, and layered beneath the original audio changes a static mix into something more unpredictable. Automating the parameters in Live creates serious sonic chaos. This demo clip has been treated with moderate, quick pitching. The original loop is a classic Roland CR78 preset I recorded direct from the machine. Triptych CR78 Pitch Twizz (0:18, 44.1KHz, 128kbps, 292k). I'm working on a slicker interface for Triptych next, then some standardized components to speed up the plug-in writing process. Parts like stereo submixers with channel soloing and mute functions are very similar in every plugin I've written over the past year, and can be abstracted easily. Charles Darwin Has A Posse 2/12/06 23:36 - permalink - email - category: Incantation
Today is Darwin Day. As I generally post late in the evening, for most readers this will effectively extend Darwin Day from the actual date of Charles Darwin's birth, February 12th, to February 13th, thus claiming another day for the celebration of rational thought. I read Darwin's The Origin Of Species when I was nine, and it changed my life. I already knew this story of men being made from earth and women from ribs was a fairy-tale, so when Darwin gave me his grand scientific explanation, everything fell into place. I was overwhelmed by the logical sense of the world, and by the power of my mind to comprehend it. I credit Uncle Charles with pointing me to the rational path which eventually became my rocket ship: humanism paired with a deep, logical agnosticism. There are many things I don't know, and perhaps cannot know. I don't know how life itself began... no-one does. Beyond that flash point, I know the likely way all life differentiated and continues to change, because Charles Darwin shared his thoughts on evolution with me. Here are some Darwin resources: The official Darwin Day Celebration site DailyKos' groovy write-up on evolution The Panda's Thumb, a great forum on evolutionary theory The Talk.Origins archive Charles Darwin Has A Posse, evolution awareness stickers designed by Colin Purrington (print and paste 'em everywhere... I do.) One of my favorite passages from The Origin Of Species: "On the ordinary view of the independent creation of each being, we can only say that so it is; -- that it has pleased the Creator to construct all the animals and plants in each great class on a uniform plan; but this is not a scientific explanation. The explanation is to a large extent simple on the theory of the selection of successive slight modifications, --each modification being profitable in some way to the modified form, but often affecting by correlation other parts of the organisation. In changes of this nature, there will be little or no tendency to alter the original pattern, or to transpose the parts. The bones of a limb might be shortened or flattened to any extent, becoming at the same time enveloped in thick membrane, so as to serve as a fin; or a webbed hand might have all its bones, or certain bones, lengthened to any extent, with the membranes connecting them increased, so as to serve as a wing; yet all these modifications would not tend to alter the framework of the bones or the relative connection of the parts. If we suppose that an early progenitor --the archetype as it may be called --of all mammals, birds, and reptiles, had its limbs constructed on the existing general pattern, for whatever purpose they served, we can at once perceive the plain signification of the homologous construction of the limbs throughout the class. So with the mouths of insects, we have only to suppose that their common progenitor had an upper lip, mandibles, and two pairs of maxillae, these parts being very simple in form; and then natural selection will account for the infinite diversity in the structure and functions of the mouths of insects. Nevertheless, it is conceivable that the general pattern of an organ might become so much obscured as to be finally lost, by the reduction and ultimately by the complete abortion of certain parts, by the fusion of other parts, and by the doubling or multiplication of others, --variations which we know to be within the limits of possibility. In the paddles of the gigantic extinct sea-lizards, and in the mouths of certain suctorial crustaceans, the general pattern seems thus to have become partially obscured." The Future Looks Like Sweden 2/11/06 23:11 - permalink - email - category: Futurism This summer, friends of mine are leaving San Francisco to permanently relocate their family to Stockholm. With the impending departure of Yoram and Maria, my filters are trapping many references to Sweden I may have missed before. The UK Guardian has a short, excellent business article on Sweden's plans to be the first oil-free economy. The plans call for a complete move to renewable energy for Sweden's populace of nine million people... within fifteen years. Some interesting stats appear in the article: For 2003, 26% of Sweden's energy came from renewable resources. Compare this to 6% for both the EU as a whole and the United States in the same period. In 1970, Sweden's oil dependency clocked in at 77% of their energy usage. By 2003, oil had been reduced to only 32% of their total. "The attempt by the country of 9 million people to become the world's first practically oil-free economy is being planned by a committee of industrialists, academics, farmers, car makers, civil servants and others, who will report to parliament in several months. The intention, the Swedish government said yesterday, is to replace all fossil fuels with renewables before climate change destroys economies and growing oil scarcity leads to huge new price rises." Here in the United States, we consume around 7.3 billion barrels of oil per year. If our elected representatives in congress would simply enact legislation mandating a minimum vehicular fuel efficiency requirement of 35 miles per gallon for cars, SUVs and minivans, we could shave an annual 1.7 billion of those barrels off our total over a 20 year phase-out of aging vehicles. The United States can't even move toward more efficient vehicles, yet Sweden's going to be oil-free by 2020. How can a country described as "the world's only remaining super-power" get faced by a small nation of nine million people? It's comparable to the Soviets throwing down a moon-shot challenge and the United States trying to bounce higher on pogo sticks. How can the supposed "leader of the free world" completely fail to compete in what will likely be the greatest revitalization of human energy technology since residential coal rooms were emptied? From Sweden's Wikipedia entry... this may have something to do with it: "Sweden was one of the poorest countries in Europe in the 19th century, shaped by heavy alcohol consumption, until improved transportation and communication allowed it to utilize natural assets from different parts of the country, most notably timber and iron ore, which allowed the creation of a welfare state in the early 20th century. Today, the country is defined by liberal tendencies and a strong national quest for equality, and usually ranks among the top nations in the UN Human Development Index." In Sweden, people are seen as people, not just consumers. Sweden works for the good of her people, because Sweden is her people. Isn't this what America was meant to be? What's The Color Of Money? 2/10/06 23:49 - permalink - email - category: Exorcism Some Christians in the United States are waking up on global warming. Some other "Christians" are working very hard to keep them from acting on their newfound awareness. The National Association of Evangelicals (NAE), a group some 30 million strong, has been positioning themselves to challenge the Religious Right's money cult over the care of God's creation. For over a year, the NAE has been talking up its plans to pressure the Bush Administration into honest environmental action. Again, money talks. All it takes is a letter from the purse holders of the Religious Right to turn "the greening of the evangelicals" a more familiar shade of bullshit brown. One letter, along with probably countless off-the-record phone calls, and the NAE folded. The Interfaith Stewardship Alliance (ISA), a front organization pretending to be environmentally conscious but simply promoting traditional consumption in drag, gave the NAE a nicely worded declaration of war if they followed a greener path. Signed by such luminaries of hate as Charles Colson, James Dobson, Richard Roberts, Louis Sheldon, Donald Wildmon and fifteen more of their ilk, the letter is a veritable black book of those who financially profit from the twisting of Christian beliefs to capitalist ends. Here's a choice excerpt: "Evangelicals are to be first and foremost messengers of the good news of the gospel to a lost and dying world. We are to promote those things that please God and oppose those things in the world that clearly violate His righteous standard of conduct. We respectfully ask that the NAE carefully consider all policy issues in which it might engage in the light of promoting unity among the Christian community and glory to God." This is the mindset of those who vet Bush's picks for Supreme Court Justices? Does it sound reasonable that God would be displeased by humans doing whatever they can to avert environmental catastrophe in His creation? Even if global warming is a fantasy, I think God would be pleased to see us all taking it so seriously, just in case it might be true. If Christ were walking the planet right now, wouldn't "His righteous standard of conduct" include environmental responsibility? If this is truly "a lost and dying world," and the responsibility of Evangelicals is "to be first and foremost messengers of the good news of the gospel," then why do the high-roller preachers of the ISA even bother with their front organization for "Dominion, Stewardship and Conservation?" Because green is not the color of their money. I urge all members of the National Association of Evangelicals to split off from these people. If you pull your support from these phony Christians, their bank accounts will begin to dry up, rendering them impotent. Then we can all get down to the serious work of undoing the damage already done. Piccinini's Genetic Future 2/9/06 21:00 - permalink - email - category: Look
I've been following Patricia Piccinini's art for several years. The February 2006 issue of Juxtapoz has a short article and photo spread on her latest exhibit, Nature's Little Helpers, which was on display in New York's Robert Miller Gallery at the tail end of 2005. I'm thrilled to see her art and message popular and spreading, and am waiting for an SFMOMA showing. In her latest show, Piccinini posits a near future where human gene-tech gives us the ability to create new animals, special purpose chimaeras designed to aid and protect currently endangered species. One look at her unnerving creations is enough to know these beings have large percentages of human DNA. Small knowledge of the state of current genetic science is enough to know her vision is not only possible, but possible soon, if not already here. Piccinini's pieces incorporate many materials in all types of media, and she works with other skilled artists to manifest her visions. This is one of the facets of her work I find most inspiring and intriguing. Building upon group knowledge, the resulting artifact is sometimes changed by the various inputs, differing from her original design. This is similar to the process of technology, the scientific method and the quest for truth itself. Piccinini does not claim a viewpoint for her work. Like all good art, it is designed to ask questions, to open the viewer's mind to various angles of a scenario. She's not cheerleading for a brave new world through biotech. She's asking "What will we get? Will it be what we expect? If it isn't, is that good or bad or both?" Her pieces provoke you into thinking for yourself. Interviewer: "What does art mean to you?" Patricia Piccinini: "What's the meaning of life? I think art is a reflection of the culture that we live in, and that art and artists are crucial for our society to go forward. " PaPeRo 2/6/06 23:46 - permalink - email - category: Technology
Research googling "domestic robots" turned up PaPeRo, an interesting little droid from NEC last year. An abbreviation of "Partner-type Personal Robot," the PaPeRo 2005 has a short but intriguing list of powers: Voice recognition via eight embedded mics NEC is developing these robots as personal assistants and roving home security, and they do remind me of a base version of the Pintsize AnthroPC from Jeph Jacques' Questionable Content. A closer look at the specs reveals they're basically mobile, semi-autonomous laptops: 1.8GHz Pentium-M processor, 512MB RAM, 40GB drive, USB 2.0 and what looks like standard video out on the back panel. Given the consumer level hardware, it's obvious we're very close to an explosion of these types of devices. I'd like to acquire a gaggle of these, load each with some custom Max patches designed to rank and evolve behavioral programming in relation to others in the flock, and turn them loose. Each PaPeRo would communicate with the others as well as a central server on the network. The server would store the state of the shared cultures and individual minds which would undoubtedly arise, and also act as a human interface to the flock's deep behavior. Evolutionary programming in Max would make for unique and changing individuals and a continually growing tribe. I'd love to watch as personalities and relational complications emerge. Explaining Myself 2/5/06 22:30 - permalink - email - category: 2Secondfuse When I participated in the Four Things meme worming its way across the Net, I did so because it seemed to fill an empty information space. I often over-analyze my own actions, but in this case, I think I'm on the money. The background is important. While the revelation slice of Four Things is minimal, I learned some interesting information by inference about the bloggers who filled in the quiz. Knowing something about the life behind the posts breathes greater dimension into their words. It's not pigeon-holing, it's my mind fleshing out their stories. I'll be adding a few more sections to this site, adding links to the bar beneath the header image. One of them is an About page. Four Things made me realize I need an informative About page, one which collects both basic facts and ongoing data to form a more three-dimensional image of the person writing this weblog. Concession to ego is tempting. I could simply tell readers exactly what I want them to know and how I want them to perceive me. No doubt, there will be some of this. It's unavoidable when writing about yourself. The structure I build to hang the ego on is the actual identity. It will collapse if not composed of solid facts: "I like to travel" must be backed up with a list of realms I've visited. I'm imagining an About page in territory similar to the PIP presented by Mark Bernstein and the Lens concept currently in beta over at Squidoo, minus the relentless commercialism. Something dynamic and alive in the same way I am, because it represents a continually updated distillation of my ongoing activity. It will be simple, basic information long-time readers of this weblog may already know about me. For those just clicking in, it provides a primer on just who this writer is, my focus, and why I write: the books which have most inspired and informed, past and upcoming travel destinations, an up-to-date .plan, a list of all open projects. It could go deeper, but I think concision is important in this case. Brief and information rich makes for a quick download of who I am. Through 2Second(fuse), I guide and refine myself. An About page of the variety I'm envisioning may provide something of a control panel for my actions: a hot-wired, bird's eye view of my life. In The House Of The Nonist 2/4/06 22:22 - permalink - email - category: 2Secondfuse I've been anointed by The Nonist, a beautiful weblog of marvelous eclectica, amazing eccentrica and wondrously reborn ephemera. Thanks jmorrison... I will endeavor to make you proud in 2006. Reproduced below is my fine check mark in the 2005 Bloggers Choice Awards (Nonist Edition):
My tied compatriot in the category is Wordshadows: The Imaginary Home Of Keith Ecklund. I've been reading Keith for months. He's thought provoking and always fun, even when the content is deep. I'm honored to share a Nonist award with him. Dresden Dolls - Yes, Virginia 2/3/06 21:49 - permalink - email - category: Listen
The Dresden Dolls vie for top place as my favorite new act of the last five years. I caught them on their first run through San Francisco in 02004 and was hooked. Amanda Palmer's twisted intelligence and pure gritty sex appeal transmit through the ivories, and Brian Viglione is a truly monstrous live drummer. Wrap it all up in a fine, Goreyesque sheen of neo-Victorian mechanism, smoke, sonic mirrors, and they're irresistible. Yes, Virginia picks up where their eponymous label debut left off, and swings more directly into rock song territory. More mature song-writing, the thirteen tracks span a widened range of vibes, but all still bear The Dresden Dolls' signature: simultaneously light and dark, dramatic and sardonic. While the entire CD has been on repeat, I find myself skipping back for double listens to Sex Changes, My Alcoholic Friends, Delilah, Modern Moonlight, and the long-awaited official recordings of songs I've only heard live or on bootlegs. Yes, several tracks on Yes, Virginia are studio versions of older songs which have been in live rotation for some time. The beautiful bounce of Backstabber (which I sang in my head all the way home after that first show), the minimally luscious First Orgasm and the syncopated gem Shores Of California finally are committed to digital and sound spectacular. In fact, the entire album sounds spectacular. This is a tighter, more focused Dresden Dolls, from Amanda's playing, lyrics, vocal expression and control, to Brian's whip-crack rhythms, to the very production values of the recording. Yes, Virginia is scheduled for release in April. It's worth the wait. Voice, piano and drums have never sounded so good. Christian Alliance For Progress 2/2/06 17:22 - permalink - email - category: Exorcism Reading this quote on the home page of the Christian Alliance For Progress, I knew something I've been awaiting had come into existence: I feel embarrassed and angry that Christianity has been used to divide our country and to promote bigotry and war. I joined this movement to stand up for compassion and justice. Surely, I have rationalized, the efforts of the Bush administration to harness and popularize the irrational hate from the worst of Christian fundamentalism in the United States would eventually awaken the liberal, progressive, honest Christians among us. For years I have watched for some action, some sign of their united presence... and finally I have seen it. The Christian Alliance For Progress: The Movement To Reclaim Christianity And Transform American Politics began, fittingly, in Jacksonville, Florida. Their website could be any of the numerous Christian fundamentalist homes on the web: an earnest face, American flags waving in the background, a basically professional appearance. Exhortations to take action, share your story, tell a friend, donate, join the movement... There the similarities end. Six main contemporary issues are listed as foci: Pursuing Economic Justice Responsible Environmental Stewardship for Today Equality for Gays and Lesbians Effective Prevention vs. Criminalizing Abortion Seeking Peace, Not War Health Care for All Americans When was the last time you heard a Christian in America calling for action on these fronts? I came across the Christian Alliance For Progress while reading about The Clergy Letter Project, a statement of the belief evolution and religion may comfortably coexist signed by over 10,000 clergy members. The Clergy Letter Project is partnering with the Christian Alliance for Progress to advertise in national newspapers. From the Christian Alliance For Progress' 2005 Jacksonville Declaration, an open letter to the political and church leaders of the Religious Right: We must tell you now that you do not speak for us, or for our politics. We say "No" to the ways you are using the name and language of Christianity to advance what we see as extremist political goals. We do not support your agenda to erode the separation of church and state, to blur the vital distinction between your interpretation of Christianity and our shared democratic institutions. Moreover, we do not accept what seems to be your understanding of Christian values. We reject a Christianity co-opted by any government and used as a tool to ostracize, to subjugate, or to condone bigotry, greed and injustice. If your politics flow from your faith, then we do not know the Jesus you claim to follow. Ultimately, if progress and peace are to win the day and the future, all those of progressive and peaceful nature must join together to rein in our violent kin. It doesn't matter to me what beliefs a person uses to organize their inner life and ethical conclusions, so long as they do no harm to others and care for our home. I'm joining the Christian Alliance For Progress. If you read their site, I think you will find it difficult not to join with me. Branded 2/1/06 23:15 - permalink - email - category: Atmos Glancing at the heads-up overlay on the drop-down LCD, I could see him streaking up behind us: $80,000, pucker red Mercedes SUV sliding dangerously between lanes, forcing other drivers to brake and swerve to avoid collision. "We've got a live one," I said to Jake, in the passenger seat. "About one click back, five o'clock currently... but he's all over the place." Jake thumbed open the glove box, then hit a small button blended to look like part of the inner wall. With a light whir the box dropped back into the dash a few inches and a second display tongued out, faced by a small alphanumeric keyboard and mini-joystick. The joystick was capped with a tiny red button. Jake and I had concocted this vigilante weapon last summer, on a house hunting trip Ania and I had taken to Toronto. The programming was fairly simple, though we'd underestimated the computational power necessary for continuous yet highly accurate trajectory calculation at freeway speeds. We got it right on the second attempt, and there was currently more computational power in this car than in most university labs. The entire project was finished in less than a month, and offered an excuse to purchase welding gear. The modifications to the car's chassis and power systems were cake... the hardest part was actually making the string of connections required to lay hands on an industrial cutting mini-laser anonymously. The heads up display was blinking at me. "Estimated pass-by in 15 seconds." Jake reeled out a string of commands on the keyboard, and the laser dropped into place beneath us and rolled on its mounting tracks to the left side of the car's underbody. A satisfying thunk indicated it had auto-mounted into firing position. "What do you think? 'I'm A Jackass?' 'Fuckwit On Board?'" He wiggled the joystick, biting his lower lip in concentration. He had the fun job tonight. As the SUV roared up on us, I could see the rosary swinging from its rearview. "Use what we hit the Jesusfish guy with last week!" The heads up locked and began beeping off seconds until maximal proximity. Jake inched the joystick with slow deliberation, tapping in the command string with his free hand. "4, 3..." "I've got him." "1!" Jake lightly pressed the joystick's red button and the laser sprang to life. The SUV's driver side panels flamed and smoked in a swift flash of burning car paint and melting metal. It was all over in slightly less than two seconds. "Perfect!" The command console slid back into its hidden spot in the dash. We felt the laser return to its hiding box beneath our feet. We paced the guy for a moment, just long enough to admire our handiwork: "Jesus Doesn't Drive Like You" deeply charred into the side of his vehicle, in a crisp, biblical, stone tablet font. |
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