Search results for wine deb
47,
03:00,
2008-04-21 18:38:11 Description: Title says it all.. Well almost.. This is the third video I made, converted from the MJPEG movie format created on my camera (Olympus SP-510UZ), transfered to Ubuntu (Ubuntu like Windows XP will (More) Title says it all.. Well almost.. This is the third video I made, converted from the MJPEG movie format created on my camera (Olympus SP-510UZ), transfered to Ubuntu (Ubuntu like Windows XP will recognize a device the minute it is connected and ask you if you want files transferred to it). MJPEG file converted to OGG Theora/Vorbis. Theora BTW, is a video format that is a basic part of OGG, Vorbis is the Audio format used within OGG. Since OGG is a container format, it's possible, I guess, that other codecs for other video and audio formats could be contained in OGG.. Anyhow, this video I uploaded here, was uploaded in OGG format to youtube. Remember if you put your content into a open source, open format, like OGG, it can't be made obsolete no matter what Microsoft and Apple decide to do.. You may think that you will have quicktimes and WMV files forever, but these formats are made to only be used on Windows and MacOS.. But OGG will run on anything that has OGG's software compiled on it. That means pretty much any and everything.. I don't know what format the HD content I was showing is in, but it's cool!! And I obtained the player and Ubuntu, for free.. Nothing you are seeing in this video cost me anything, except for the hardware.. My machine configuration: Dell Dimension 9150, Using Motherboard Sound Chip (I have a Creative X-Fi, but Linux device drivers will not be available until the Creative development team gets done making the Vista drivers), 2.8Ghz Pentium D, NVidia 6800 XT (I saw in Tiger Direct a Nvidia 8600 GSX? Selling for about 130 dollars). In Beryl (Linux's answering to Vista's unique windowing environment) I get 100Fps frame rate, in a dual-head environment, with rain, particle effects, transparent windows atop a 3D cube and environment map.. Anyhow, I also have Windows XP, I can still boot into.. 2.5 GB of ram, but for Ubuntu I can barely get it to use 700 Megs.. Although if I wanted to I could fire up blender-3D and shoot out a awesome fluid simulation or a massive ray-tracingm and use up all that RAM. In this video I was around 500 megs.. The HD was full frame-rate, 16-bit sound, I mean impressive video.. And the neither the video nor the DVD burning process skipped or coughed.. BTW, I used OggConvert to convert from a Quicktime MJPEG format to OGG.. It was so easy all I had to do was find the input file, I dragged it atop OggConvert on the area where the input file goes, then I adjusted two sliders, and hit a button that says "Convert".. That's it, I kid you not, it was just that easy.. To install OggConvert, just involved me going to the OggConvert website and clicking on the "http://..OggConvert...deb" line and Ubuntu asks "open with GNU Package Manager?" , yes, it installs, no reboot, nothing.. I can instantly start using it.. That's so cooll!! PS- I'm hyping a little, it took me sifting through about 20 applications to find a video converter.. There is supposedly a way to convert any video file to any other video with "ffmpeg" but it involved working on a command console.. This OggConvert is so much easier, and considering it is more widely supported that Quicktime or Windows Media (and it is getting even wider), it made more sense to just go with OGG than to convert it to WMV or Quicktime which don't offer me anything special, since I'm going to YouTube with this.. BTW, My Samsung Yp-T9 supposedly supports OGG format.. I'm aching to see if I can get video content on it without using Samsung Media Studio, if so, you Macintosh and Linux users will have a way to use the T9 without need for Media Studio, which only runs on Windows. To upgrade the T9, you don't need Windows, you just have to unzip some files into the top level directory of the T9, and the last several firmware upgrades included added support for OGG. But I don't know if that just means OGG Vorbis (Audio) or if it also means OGG Theora (video). I know the T9 uses a flavor of XVID (hint: DIVX spelled backwards), XVID was a off-shoot of the DIVX sources before it became a commercial codec for Windows.. XVID is open source like OGG, and I think OGG probably has a special place for XVID in the format, but I don't know.. Anyhow, enjoy the demonstration.. (Less)
Channel: youtube Rate it: Rate:
16,
03:00,
2007-08-02 02:49:16 Description: Title says it all.. Well almost..
This is the third video I made, converted from the MJPEG movie format created on my camera (Olympus SP-510UZ), transfered to Ubuntu (Ubuntu like Windows XP will (More) Title says it all.. Well almost..
This is the third video I made, converted from the MJPEG movie format created on my camera (Olympus SP-510UZ), transfered to Ubuntu (Ubuntu like Windows XP will recognize a device the minute it is connected and ask you if you want files transferred to it).
MJPEG file converted to OGG Theora/Vorbis.
Theora BTW, is a video format that is a basic part of OGG, Vorbis is the Audio format used within OGG. Since OGG is a container format, it's possible, I guess, that other codecs for other video and audio formats could be contained in OGG..
Anyhow, this video I uploaded here, was uploaded in OGG format to youtube.
Remember if you put your content into a open source, open format, like OGG, it can't be made obsolete no matter what Microsoft and Apple decide to do.. You may think that you will have quicktimes and WMV files forever, but these formats are made to only be used on Windows and MacOS.. But OGG will run on anything that has OGG's software compiled on it. That means pretty much any and everything..
I don't know what format the HD content I was showing is in, but it's cool!! And I obtained the player and Ubuntu, for free.. Nothing you are seeing in this video cost me anything, except for the hardware..
My machine configuration:
Dell Dimension 9150, Using Motherboard Sound Chip (I have a Creative X-Fi, but Linux device drivers will not be available until the Creative development team gets done making the Vista drivers), 2.8Ghz Pentium D, NVidia 6800 XT (I saw in Tiger Direct a Nvidia 8600 GSX? Selling for about 130 dollars). In Beryl (Linux's answering to Vista's unique windowing environment) I get 100Fps frame rate, in a dual-head environment, with rain, particle effects, transparent windows atop a 3D cube and environment map..
Anyhow, I also have Windows XP, I can still boot into.. 2.5 GB of ram, but for Ubuntu I can barely get it to use 700 Megs.. Although if I wanted to I could fire up blender-3D and shoot out a awesome fluid simulation or a massive ray-tracingm and use up all that RAM. In this video I was around 500 megs.. The HD was full frame-rate, 16-bit sound, I mean impressive video.. And the neither the video nor the DVD burning process skipped or coughed..
BTW, I used OggConvert to convert from a Quicktime MJPEG format to OGG.. It was so easy all I had to do was find the input file, I dragged it atop OggConvert on the area where the input file goes, then I adjusted two sliders, and hit a button that says "Convert".. That's it, I kid you not, it was just that easy..
To install OggConvert, just involved me going to the OggConvert website and clicking on the "http://..OggConvert...deb" line and Ubuntu asks "open with GNU Package Manager?" , yes, it installs, no reboot, nothing.. I can instantly start using it..
That's so cooll!!
PS- I'm hyping a little, it took me sifting through about 20 applications to find a video converter.. There is supposedly a way to convert any video file to any other video with "ffmpeg" but it involved working on a command console.. This OggConvert is so much easier, and considering it is more widely supported that Quicktime or Windows Media (and it is getting even wider), it made more sense to just go with OGG than to convert it to WMV or Quicktime which don't offer me anything special, since I'm going to YouTube with this..
BTW, My Samsung Yp-T9 supposedly supports OGG format.. I'm aching to see if I can get video content on it without using Samsung Media Studio, if so, you Macintosh and Linux users will have a way to use the T9 without need for Media Studio, which only runs on Windows. To upgrade the T9, you don't need Windows, you just have to unzip some files into the top level directory of the T9, and the last several firmware upgrades included added support for OGG. But I don't know if that just means OGG Vorbis (Audio) or if it also means OGG Theora (video). I know the T9 uses a flavor of XVID (hint: DIVX spelled backwards), XVID was a off-shoot of the DIVX sources before it became a commercial codec for Windows.. XVID is open source like OGG, and I think OGG probably has a special place for XVID in the format, but I don't know..
Anyhow, enjoy the demonstration.. (Less)
Channel: youtube Rate it: Rate:
2,
02:01,
2009-02-10 20:41:37 Description: Hosted by Deb Schreiner, todays webcast includes information on a Maple Grove Subway store robbery, an Osseo City Council update, school news and a weather update.
Watch daily at 3 p.m. for daily (More) Hosted by Deb Schreiner, todays webcast includes information on a Maple Grove Subway store robbery, an Osseo City Council update, school news and a weather update.
Watch daily at 3 p.m. for daily news updates for the Osseo-Maple Grove area. For more Osseo-Maple Grove News visit the Sun Press Newspapers website at: www.pressnews.com. (Less)
Channel: youtubeTags: "Lilly's "Maple "Osseo "Osseo-Maple Bar" City Council" Grove Grove" Minnesota News" Press" School Wine
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9,
20:32,
2009-09-07 12:51:57 Description: "Days of Wine and D'oh'ses" is the eighteenth episode of the eleventh season of The Simpsons, which originally aired on April 9, 2000. It is the first of four episodes written by (More) "Days of Wine and D'oh'ses" is the eighteenth episode of the eleventh season of The Simpsons, which originally aired on April 9, 2000. It is the first of four episodes written by voice actor Dan Castellaneta and his wife Deb Lacusta.++++++++++++++++++++Plot After watching a video of his birthday party, Barney sees he is a hideous drunk, and he promises to get sober. At first, he finds sustaining sobriety tough, but he finds his way to an AA meeting with Homer's help. Meanwhile, to get their picture on the cover of the new phone book, Bart and Lisa decide to enter an amateur photo contest. In the closet, they find an old camera and start to take snapshots. Barney makes plans to change his life now that he is clean and sober. The Springfield Flight School is his first stop, where he takes helicopter-flying lessons. Barney gives Homer a ride in the helicopter a few lessons later. While in the air, they get into a big disagreement which troubles their relationship. Bart and Lisa are taking pictures atop Mt. Springfield when Bart starts a forest fire by carelessly discarding a hot flashbulb. The children are in imminent danger, and Barney and Homer must band together to save them. They hop into the helicopter, but land in the middle of a bridge. Barney is so nervous, he does not think he can do it sober. When a Duff beer truck comes to a sudden stop, spilling its contents in front of a weakening Barney, Homer refuses to let him give up on sobriety and drinks an entire six-pack in his place. Together, Barney and a drunken Homer save the kids. The next day, at the Simpson house, Marge tells the kids that the new phone books are here, and they have Bart and Lisa's picture on the front cover. Bart and Lisa come down, only to realise that the picture on one of the phone books is not the one of the fire on Mt. Springfield; it is actually a photo of baby Bart and Lisa on the toilet, causing them to scream in embarrassment. Marge says that the shot was actually in the film on the camera, and that since she had taken it, she won the prize for them. Bart and Lisa, after knowing that they will be the laughingstock of the entire town, happily hug their mother. Meanwhile, Barney's confidence and his relationship with Homer are restored, and he looks forward to an alcohol-free future, although he is now addicted to double-tall mocha latts, supplied by Moe Szyslak himself. (Less)
Channel: 123videoTags: Simpsons
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100,
06:05,
2007-08-02 04:01:31 Description: For the Ubuntu and Linux tribes that can over-shoot my experience by several magnitudes, you guys know what you know.. I'm making this video for the rest of us people who have never been able to (More) For the Ubuntu and Linux tribes that can over-shoot my experience by several magnitudes, you guys know what you know.. I'm making this video for the rest of us people who have never been able to get Linux work successfully on our machines, and for those who can't afford to keep shelling out money for Microsoft applications and operating systems.. UBUNTU IS THE ANSWER PEOPLE..
Okay this little video, is an attempt to show you that I really do have HD quality content running on this Monitor.. The monitor is a IBM 22" CRT, I purchased from Tiger Direct a ways back, on rebate, for 150 dollars (cost 75 dollars to ship).. That's on the right.. And it has a maximum resolution of something like 1960x1600 or so, thats something like the maximum HDTV resolution..
On the left is my ViewSonic 17" (I think it is a 19", I forget).. It's your basic flatpanel LCD..
I'm using a 150 dollar high-speed NVidia card, a 6800XT to run both of them.. Used a digital camera with basic video support to videotape this demonstration.
Video was converted from MJPEG, a common video format that is literally JPEG images concatenated together, to OGG video format (using a Linux program called "OggConvert"). To install OggConvert required no effort at all in Ubuntu.. I just went to the "OggConvert" website, went to download and downloaded the line with ".deb" on the end, which is what debian packages are named. Ubuntu is based on Debian, so it was easy, just download and go.. Installations on Ubuntu are much less oainful than windows.. For instance, when you install a package that requires other programs to be installed, rather than having to install each program seperately, Ubuntu's package managers orchestrate the installation of all the packages required.. Windows does this for some things, but it doesn't do it so well..
And to uninstall a package is pretty easy too.. I just go into the package manager (what you'd call the "add/remove programs" tool in windows) and just select "installed apps", then put in a keyword to narrow down to the application you want to uninstall, then check of the application and click "Apply".. In windows its about as simple, but sometimes the applications will no uninstall.. In windows you would then need to open up regedit, and drive down into the registry keys to delete all remnants of the application you are trying to deinstall, then to remove the application from c:\program_files\ .. Yuck..
In Ubuntu, pretty straightforward.. I've installed and deinstalled packages in ubuntu tens of times.. Since I'm new to Ubuntu, I have locate tools that approximate my environment on Windows..
What makes it easier for me, is I was using open source applications on Windows before I made the transition to Ubuntu.. All the open source applications will be available on Ubuntu, because clue, they are open source, they are not closed-source applications like Windows is in it's entirety.. Closed-source applications are closed because people make money off of them.. Open source applications are forever here and available.. How do they get built? A number of ways..
Open Office for example.. How did that Microsoft Office replacement get built? Volunteers, Companies that used to waste lots of moolah paying for Office and figured they could hire their own programming staff to write something similar to Office.. Note, Open Office was created by Sun, this was the idea, they figured they had better software developers in-house, they asked the question "why pay Microsoft, a competitor of ours, money to get what we could code up in no time at all?" Well it took longer than no time at all, but ten years later, a mature Office like environment with word processor, spreadsheet, drawing tool and presentation system.. Note, Open Office is based partially on Java, and is fairly portable to any computer..
I'm using an application called KWord, which is like several other word processors available on Linux.. What it does that Open Office's word processor doesn't do for me, it lets me thumb through 6000 fonts, I'm looking to make a logo for my site http://www.chann3lz.com/ which is a youtube mashup (check it out).
Anyhow, I used Kword, to try out several postscript and truetype fonts.. Ubuntu, BTW, can support True-type fonts natively.. So if you are sad that you can't get your MSWord documents to loook and print the way they are on windows, just get a copy of the TTF fonts from Windows, or something like them, put them into the "/usr/share/fonts/truetype" directory in Ubuntu, and you are good to go.. The Trutype fonts will be visible in any Ubuntu application you use..
If that doesn't work, try installing fft2pt1, it's a trutype to postscript 1 font converter..
Anyhow, Linux is not really a desert of unsupported applications.. It's not void of any life. It's got tons of stuff, some applications that are unique to it even..
Oh, and other open source applications that you can get on Ubuntu:
Firefox (of course, and every extension you can get for Windows Firefox you can get on Ubuntu).. Adobe Flash will install too from Ubuntu's Firefox.. Thunderbird (the open source mail application that replaces the bug-ridden Outlook and Eudora).. If you really need Eudora BTW, get Wine and Wine-Doors you can install Eudora in Wine.. I haven't I got Opera and Firefox for Windows running though..
Filezilla (which a replacement for WS-FTP, and similar FTP tools in Windows).
GVIM (I'm a vi user, GVIM is natively supported in Ubuntu). For those looking for a good text editor for web work or programming that is smart enough to colorize parts of syntax, GVIM supports over 80 different languages including PHP, Perl, C, CSS, HTML, etc..
Apache/PHP/MySQL (the most common web development environment in the world, it's best on a linux machine).
Democracy TV/Player (its like iTunes podcast area but more laid back).
PDF viewers.. Open Office, bunches of stuff.. Okay I'm in a hurry to get to bed.. (Less)
Channel: youtube Rate it: Rate:
75,
06:05,
2008-04-22 09:44:07 Description: For the Ubuntu and Linux tribes that can over-shoot my experience by several magnitudes, you guys know what you know.. I'm making this video for the rest of us people who have never been able to (More) For the Ubuntu and Linux tribes that can over-shoot my experience by several magnitudes, you guys know what you know.. I'm making this video for the rest of us people who have never been able to get Linux work successfully on our machines, and for those who can't afford to keep shelling out money for Microsoft applications and operating systems.. UBUNTU IS THE ANSWER PEOPLE.. Okay this little video, is an attempt to show you that I really do have HD quality content running on this Monitor.. The monitor is a IBM 22" CRT, I purchased from Tiger Direct a ways back, on rebate, for 150 dollars (cost 75 dollars to ship).. That's on the right.. And it has a maximum resolution of something like 1960x1600 or so, thats something like the maximum HDTV resolution.. On the left is my ViewSonic 17" (I think it is a 19", I forget).. It's your basic flatpanel LCD.. I'm using a 150 dollar high-speed NVidia card, a 6800XT to run both of them.. Used a digital camera with basic video support to videotape this demonstration. Video was converted from MJPEG, a common video format that is literally JPEG images concatenated together, to OGG video format (using a Linux program called "OggConvert"). To install OggConvert required no effort at all in Ubuntu.. I just went to the "OggConvert" website, went to download and downloaded the line with ".deb" on the end, which is what debian packages are named. Ubuntu is based on Debian, so it was easy, just download and go.. Installations on Ubuntu are much less oainful than windows.. For instance, when you install a package that requires other programs to be installed, rather than having to install each program seperately, Ubuntu's package managers orchestrate the installation of all the packages required.. Windows does this for some things, but it doesn't do it so well.. And to uninstall a package is pretty easy too.. I just go into the package manager (what you'd call the "add/remove programs" tool in windows) and just select "installed apps", then put in a keyword to narrow down to the application you want to uninstall, then check of the application and click "Apply".. In windows its about as simple, but sometimes the applications will no uninstall.. In windows you would then need to open up regedit, and drive down into the registry keys to delete all remnants of the application you are trying to deinstall, then to remove the application from c:program_files .. Yuck.. In Ubuntu, pretty straightforward.. I've installed and deinstalled packages in ubuntu tens of times.. Since I'm new to Ubuntu, I have locate tools that approximate my environment on Windows.. What makes it easier for me, is I was using open source applications on Windows before I made the transition to Ubuntu.. All the open source applications will be available on Ubuntu, because clue, they are open source, they are not closed-source applications like Windows is in it's entirety.. Closed-source applications are closed because people make money off of them.. Open source applications are forever here and available.. How do they get built? A number of ways.. Open Office for example.. How did that Microsoft Office replacement get built? Volunteers, Companies that used to waste lots of moolah paying for Office and figured they could hire their own programming staff to write something similar to Office.. Note, Open Office was created by Sun, this was the idea, they figured they had better software developers in-house, they asked the question "why pay Microsoft, a competitor of ours, money to get what we could code up in no time at all?" Well it took longer than no time at all, but ten years later, a mature Office like environment with word processor, spreadsheet, drawing tool and presentation system.. Note, Open Office is based partially on Java, and is fairly portable to any computer.. I'm using an application called KWord, which is like several other word processors available on Linux.. What it does that Open Office's word processor doesn't do for me, it lets me thumb through 6000 fonts, I'm looking to make a logo for my site http://www.chann3lz.com/ which is a youtube mashup (check it out). Anyhow, I used Kword, to try out several postscript and truetype fonts.. Ubuntu, BTW, can support True-type fonts natively.. So if you are sad that you can't get your MSWord documents to loook and print the way they are on windows, just get a copy of the TTF fonts from Windows, or something like them, put them into the "/usr/share/fonts/truetype" directory in Ubuntu, and you are good to go.. The Trutype fonts will be visible in any Ubuntu application you use.. If that doesn't work, try installing fft2pt1, it's a trutype to postscript 1 font converter.. Anyhow, Linux is not really a desert of unsupported applications.. It's not void of any life. It's got tons of stuff, some applications that are unique to it even.. Oh, and other open source applications that you can get on Ubuntu: Firefox (of course, and every extension you can get for Windows Firefox you can get on Ubuntu).. Adobe Flash will install too from Ubuntu's Firefox.. Thunderbird (the open source mail application that replaces the bug-ridden Outlook and Eudora).. If you really need Eudora BTW, get Wine and Wine-Doors you can install Eudora in Wine.. I haven't I got Opera and Firefox for Windows running though.. Filezilla (which a replacement for WS-FTP, and similar FTP tools in Windows). GVIM (I'm a vi user, GVIM is natively supported in Ubuntu). For those looking for a good text editor for web work or programming that is smart enough to colorize parts of syntax, GVIM supports over 80 different languages including PHP, Perl, C, CSS, HTML, etc.. Apache/PHP/MySQL (the most common web development environment in the world, it's best on a linux machine). Democracy TV/Player (its like iTunes podcast area but more laid back). PDF viewers.. Open Office, bunches of stuff.. Okay I'm in a hurry to get to bed.. (Less)
Channel: youtube Rate it: Rate:
25,
25:27,
2008-05-04 20:47:22 Description: I talk a little bit, about what I'm doing today..
Decided to spend my sunday learning to compile kernels.. Wasn't as hard as I thought, as with most stuff on Ubuntu, there is a tutorial (More) I talk a little bit, about what I'm doing today..
Decided to spend my sunday learning to compile kernels.. Wasn't as hard as I thought, as with most stuff on Ubuntu, there is a tutorial that shows simply everything you need to do as concisely as possible.
So I'm compiling a kernel.. But not just any kind of kernel, I'm compiling the Linux kernel used with 7.10 for 64-bit processors. Turns out my Pentium D processor is a 64 bit processor, so for the heck of it I installed the 64-bit version of 7.10 on my machine last night.. Why 7.10 and not 8.04 ??
I installed 8.04 (Hardy Heron) and it had several bugs on my machine, so I had to deinstall it and reinstall 7.10.. But that was before I learned that my CPU is 64-bit, so I installed it again.. In all I've done three installs since the last video I posted.
Not a big deal, my "/home" directory was harmed in no way, so I kept my installs of Orange Box.. I've installed ETQW two times, hopefully it will work atop a 64-bit processor, if not, I may have to go back to the 32-bit version.. But I did try out the 64-bit version of blender from Blender.org website, so I know it's in 64-bit mode.. Wow, I haev a 64-bit processor finally!!
Okay that aside, this video is of me trying to add some significance to what compiling a kerenel gets me, and what it is, and why it's important.. And some tidbits that I learned while doing it, what tutorial I used, and so forth..
One major piece of information:
Most Linux's are monolithic kernels.. Ubuntu uses a modular linux kernel.. I've heard Windows is Monolithic too..
Anyhow, I'm flying by the seat of my pants, and talking through my hat, speculating about what getting a small kernel means, which may be all wrong.. But I just trying to recount some of the ideas based upon the little I learned in college..
Someone I had a discussion with, the one I've banned because he was annoying to talk to because he would not respect my point of view and cuss at me.. He said to me that Linux is for people that want to compile stuff, and that it's not something I want to use, that I should be using windows, and etc..
I told him "I don't have to compile a damn thing".. Well I was wrong on this account, but Ubuntu users don't have to do any of that complex stuff that I guess other linux users must do, if the kernel is designed to permit one to enable or disable modules without a recompile. But, this is the first compiling I've done of anything..
Hopefully I get a kernel out of this (fingers crossed) and will be able to pair down a kernel that gives me superior performance in ETQW and Wine..
Or maybe it crashes, or maybe it doesn't optimize anything that much, but in any case I think I'll be satisfied knowing I've finally compiled a kernel (or have attempted to).
To tell you the truth I thought I'd lose interest half-way into the process, but given the nice menuing interface (versus reading source code files and setting flags in make files) it was a piece of cake..
The tutorial even covered constructing a deb install file so the kernel could be distributed (to friends?). The invaluable thing, if you don't get anything out of this, is the location of the GRUB file that determines what options are available on the bootloader, the timeout on the bootloader and how to set the default selection (for instance Windows, if you use Ubuntu once in a blue moon):
/boot/grub/menu.lst is the file..
The tutorial I used was this one, but warning, this one was a bitch to connect to, for some reason their machine is getting really hit or they are using a really bad content management system (like Coldfusion on a 486):
http://beginlinux.com/index.php/desktop_training/ubuntu/ubfile_m/ub_compile
I recommend looking into the google cache for the page, it may be faster.. (Less)
Channel: youtubeTags: 2.6 95 an compile Core How Kernel Linux MS of Operating part Priority Ques System Task The to Ubuntu Wacom Windows XP
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