TidBITS#564/22-Jan-01
=====================

  Macworld Expo coverage continues in force this week, with Jeff
  Carlson's look at the new Power Mac G4s and three short articles
  about trends we noticed. Plus, reader Jim Carr encourages
  California users participating in SETI@home to sit it out for a
  while. In the news, we look at Apple's first quarter financial
  results, report on your opinions of Apple's digital lifestyle
  thrust, and note the passing of Hewlett-Packard co-founder William
  Hewlett.

Topics:
    MailBITS/22-Jan-01
    SETI Sucks Power
    New Power Mac G4s Debut with SuperDrive
    Macworld SF 2001 Trend: User Groups Hold On
    Macworld SF 2001 Trend: Cool Utilities
    Macworld SF 2001 Trend: Personal Firewalls

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-564.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2001/TidBITS#564_22-Jan-01.etx>

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MailBITS/22-Jan-01
------------------

**Apple Announces Less of a Loss** -- Apple released its financial
  results covering the company's first fiscal quarter of 2001,
  posting a better-than-expected net loss of $195 million. This is
  Apple's first quarterly loss in three years. As expected, the
  company gained $49 million by dipping into the seemingly
  bottomless barrel of ARM Holdings, plc. shares, selling 3.8
  million, and by selling 1 million shares of Akamai Technologies
  stock. Excluding the investment gains and adjustments made to
  Apple's bottom line through accounting moves, the net loss would
  have been $247 million, in line with the company's earnings pre-
  announcement in December. The company shipped 659,000 Macs during
  the quarter, a significant drop compared to the 1.12 million units
  sold in the previous quarter and nearly 1.4 million systems sold
  in the first quarter of 2000. On a positive note, CEO Steve Jobs
  and CFO Fred Anderson reiterated Apple's strong cash position of
  more than $4 billion and reported that channel inventories have
  been improved to about five and a half weeks. Anderson also said
  that Apple expects revenues for 2001 to be about $6 billion, in
  line with 1999's $6.1 billion, but well below 2000's $7.98
  billion. [JLC]

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2001/jan/17q1results.html>
<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2000/dec/05q1results.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06154>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05777>


**The Other Garage** -- Although the Macintosh industry reveres
  the Silicon Valley garage in which Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak
  built the first Apple I computers, it was the other Palo Alto
  garage duo, William Hewlett and David Packard, who are credited
  with much of the modern computing revolution. In 1939, the two
  founded Hewlett-Packard in a one-car garage in Palo Alto, making
  the foundation of Apple possible for the Steves nearly four
  decades later. In fact, Hewlett-Packard's role in the creation of
  Apple was more specific than just helping in the evolution of
  modern computing. After all, Steve Wozniak was employed at HP when
  he created the prototype of the Apple I in his spare time, and HP
  explicitly passed on the opportunity he gave them to develop the
  Apple I before giving him a release letter. Fast-forwarding to the
  present, on 12-Jan-01, as tens of thousands of Macintosh fans
  gathered for the final day of the Macworld Expo, William Hewlett
  died at home in his sleep. He was 87 years old. (David Packard
  died in 1996.) [MHA]

<http://www.hp.com/hpinfo/abouthp/hist_30s.htm>
<http://www.hp.com/hpinfo/newsroom/hewlett/index2.htm>


**Poll Results: Embracing the Digital Lifestyle?** Following Steve
  Jobs's Macworld Expo keynote outlining Apple's vision of the
  "digital lifestyle," we wanted to hear from readers who may not
  have been in the glow of Jobs's patented reality distortion field.
  Do you think Apple is on target with their new emphasis on making
  the Macintosh the "digital hub" for a "digital lifestyle?" Of the
  500-plus respondents, 72 percent believe the strategy makes sense,
  echoing our thoughts that Apple is putting its spin on what's
  already happening in the real world. However, 21 percent think
  it's too early to say whether Apple is on target - the enthusiasm
  of early adopters can sometimes be misleading over the long run.
  Six percent of respondents think Apple is clueless and chasing a
  phantom market. Only the fullness of time will reveal the
  brilliance or cluelessness of Apple's current vision, so keep
  watching this space for our impressions of how it all unfolds and
  pass on your thoughts in the TidBITS Talk discussion. [JLC]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbpoll=70>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1272>


**German Translators Needed** -- Some turnover among the energetic
  translators of TidBITS into German has revealed a need for a few
  more people to help out. If you can spend a little time each week
  translating a small portion of TidBITS from English to German or
  helping put together and distribute the finished product (for
  those who are fluent German editors but aren't as comfortable with
  translation), the German-speaking Macintosh community will thank
  you. For more information, see the page below. Thanks for helping
  out! [ACE]

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/lang/de/trans.html>


SETI Sucks Power
----------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  The entire point of the SETI@home project is to exploit the
  massive computing power of millions of unused personal computers,
  and the project has broken new ground in processing radio signals
  from outer space. But as much as the SETI@home project is
  attempting to advance human knowledge in a low-impact,
  collaborative, cost-effective manner, there is a side-effect that
  some people may not consider - the electrical power consumption
  necessary to run the computers participating in the SETI@home
  project.

<http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/>

  In many parts of the world, people have made the individual
  choices that they in essence wish to subsidize SETI@home by paying
  their power bill, but given the significant electrical problems
  faced by the State of California right now, decisions to use power
  for non-essential activities like SETI@home have become more
  complex. There are many reasons - both good and bad - people don't
  turn off devices which consume electricity, and I'd like to
  encourage everyone to step back for a moment and remember that
  unrestrained use of electricity can have negative consequences.
  Perhaps California's woes can help us all take the extra few
  moments to revaluate our power usage habits and reduce them when
  appropriate.

  Recent Power Mac G3s and G4s consume between 200 and 250 watts
  (that's without a monitor), while a typical 27-inch television
  consumes less than 150 watts. So, in general terms, running a
  computer 24 hours a day can consume between 33 and 66 percent more
  power than leaving a television on all day long - something few
  people would do in a power crisis. (Current iMacs consume 150
  watts, but earlier models used as little as 80 watts.) Of course,
  judicious use of Apple's Energy Saver control panel or St. Clair
  Software's Sleeper control panel can significantly reduce power
  consumption without the delay of waiting for the Mac to boot from
  scratch.

<http://www.stclairsoft.com/Sleeper/>

  Thanks to Jim Carr <jim_carr@compuserve.com> for raising this
  issue, and kudos to the SETI@home project for explicitly asking
  California users to shut down their computers to conserve power.
  Jim wrote:

  "I am currently 24th on TidBITS team for the SETI@home project
  with over 2 years of CPU time and 1319 work units completed. Alas,
  my unit production will be drastically curtailed for a while.

<http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/cgi?cmd=team_lookup&name=TidBITS>

  I live in a part of Southern California that receives power from
  Edison, which is having financial problems and is unable to pay
  its bills for more power. Other California utilities are in same
  situation, and there is just not enough reasonably priced power
  available to the state grid to meet demand. Rolling blackouts have
  already begun in California.

  I achieved my SETI@home totals by leaving a computer (along with a
  second one for the last few months) running 24 hours a day, every
  day, and 90 percent of that time is spent calculating SETI@home
  work units. I feel that it is no longer socially responsible to do
  that anymore when the public is being asked to conserve as much
  power as it can.

  I want to urge all users out there who are in a region affected by
  power shortages to shut down equipment when you aren't actively
  using it. I remain a supporter of the SETI@home program and have
  also supported it via membership in the Planetary Society. I look
  forward to the day when the power mess is resolved in this state
  and I can run those computers without feeling guilty."


New Power Mac G4s Debut with SuperDrive
---------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>

  Although the PowerBook G4 Titanium stole the show at this year's
  January Macworld Expo (see "PowerBook G4 Titanium Burns Bright" in
  TidBITS-563_), Apple also tantalized the crowds with improvements
  to the professional Power Mac G4 line, adding faster processors
  and the capability to create custom CDs and DVDs.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06269>

  The new machines feature PowerPC G4 chips running at speeds of
  466, 533, 667, and 733 MHz, but include only single processor
  configurations by default. A dual-processor build-to-order option
  is available for the 533 MHz system for those who use one of the
  few pre-Mac OS X applications that can take advantage of multiple
  CPUs. Dual-processor options aren't currently available for the
  faster processors due to their limited availability. The new
  machines also feature a 133 MHz system bus, a faster PCI
  architecture, and, in a nod to the audio and video professionals
  desiring more expansion options, four open PCI slots. A fifth
  slot, a 4x AGP (Advanced Graphics Port) graphics slot, is occupied
  by either an ATI RAGE 128 graphics card with 16 MB of memory (the
  466 MHz configuration) or an NVIDIA GeForce2 MX graphics card with
  32 MB of memory. An optional ATI RADEON card with 32 MB of Double
  Data Rate memory is also available as a build-to-order option. All
  units include gigabit Ethernet, USB and FireWire ports, optional
  AirPort wireless networking, and a 10 watt digital amplifier
  (which can be hooked up to Apple's $60 Pro Speakers).

<http://www.apple.com/powermac/specs.html>
<http://www.apple.com/speakers/>


**Catching the Boat** -- As the current workhorse of the Macintosh
  line, the Power Mac G4 is the likeliest candidate to act as the
  hub of Steve Jobs's "digital lifestyle" (see "Jobs Aims Apple for
  the Digital Lifestyle" in TidBITS-563_). Macs currently connect to
  devices like Palm handhelds and portable MP3 players, but Apple is
  now improving its position in the digital music revolution by
  including CD-RW (rewritable compact disc) drives in every
  configuration except the high-end 733 MHz model. Jobs acknowledged
  that Apple "missed the boat" on CD-RW, which has been standard-
  issue technology in the Windows world for some time. (To be fair,
  Apple bet on video and that DVD standards would coalesce sooner
  than they did, which gave CD-RW an opening it wouldn't otherwise
  have had.) Using the included iTunes, users can easily burn their
  own MP3 tracks to audio CDs. Since the Power Macs run Mac OS 9.1
  with Disc Burner built in, users can also burn any data file to a
  single-session CD simply by dragging and dropping it on the CD in
  the Finder, and then choosing Burn CD from the Special menu.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06268>
<http://asu.info.apple.com/swupdates.nsf/artnum/n11901>

  It's rare to hear Jobs admit that Apple isn't at the forefront of
  innovation, so it's no surprise that the company is adding a
  wrinkle to burning discs beyond even integrating it into the
  Finder. The top-of-the-line 733 MHz Power Mac G4 includes a
  SuperDrive: no, not the 1.4 MB floppy drive of the same name which
  originally appeared on the Mac IIx back in 1988, but rather a
  Pioneer device that reads _and_ writes CDs and DVDs. More
  importantly, the SuperDrive can write data in the DVD-Video
  format, which means anyone can use Apple's bundled iDVD software
  to burn digital movies and still images onto the disc and play
  them in most consumer DVD players. With the SuperDrive, for
  example, graphics or video professionals could easily create
  DVD-based demo reels and self-promotion materials. In the case of
  still images, iDVD automatically creates a slide show, so friends
  and relatives can use their DVD remote control to scan through
  your photos. Apple will also begin selling "Apple authorized"
  blank DVD discs for approximately $10 each, well below the
  standard $30 to $40 price for such discs.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=03902>


**Time to Burn** -- As with any new hardware announcement from
  Apple, the big question becomes: when can I get one? The 466 and
  533 MHz models are available now for $1,700 and $2,200; the 667
  and 733 MHz models, which use a newer version of the PowerPC G4
  chip, are expected to arrive in limited quantities starting in
  February priced at $2,800 and $3,500. Availability is limited in
  part by the CPUs, but the SuperDrives reportedly aren't available
  in significant quantities yet either. Compaq also has a machine
  that includes the Pioneer mechanism; between Apple and Compaq,
  supply is likely to be tight for the next six months. Similar
  mechanisms from other manufacturers will likely appear soon as
  well, so those with earlier Power Mac G4s (other Macs would work
  for most tasks, of course, but for DVD-Video, the MPEG encoding is
  done in software and probably relies heavily on the PowerPC G4's
  Velocity Engine) should be able to hop on the bandwagon then.

  The SuperDrive repositions Apple at the head of the computing
  pack, but it's going to be something of a tough sell at first when
  machines are in short supply. Bundling the SuperDrive into Apple's
  $3,500 machine is remarkable considering that similar stand-alone
  DVD-writing drives by themselves cost several thousand dollars.
  But the high end of the Power Mac line excludes most consumer
  buyers, the audience Apple seems to be targeting with the
  SuperDrive. When Apple manages to shoehorn SuperDrives into the
  iMac line and its consumer price tag, DVD burning will truly have
  a chance at becoming part of the digital lifestyle.


Macworld SF 2001 Trend: User Groups Hold On
-------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Traditionally, TidBITS publishes a "superlatives" article covering
  things at Macworld Expo that we find compelling or, at the very
  least, amusing. Although we can't resist offering a few
  superlatives (see next week's issue), we found our impressions
  from this show centering more on existing and emerging trends in
  the Macintosh ecosystem than on specific products. Read on for
  more trends in this issue and the next.

  One of the first trends worth mentioning involves Macintosh user
  groups, the Mac community at the grass roots level (or would that
  be the "massively parallel organic processing" level?). I was
  fascinated to see that despite the challenges presented by the
  Internet as an information source, a number of user groups have
  survived and continue to thrive to the point where they even had
  booths at Macworld Expo. Most user groups are of course focused on
  a specific geographical area, but that's not true of the
  International HyperCard Users Group (iHUG), who were showing off a
  few HyperCard-built applications (including one that mimicked much
  of the Mac OS X dock's functionality). Apple certainly hasn't done
  anything to support HyperCard in ages, though the HyperCard Web
  page at Apple is still up and it recently re-appeared in the Apple
  Store.

<http://homepage.mac.com/iHUG/>
<http://www.apple.com/hypercard/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05155>

  Also, on the first night of the show, Bob LeVitus and I helped
  hand out awards at the 2001 User Group Soiree awards ceremony
  (pictures on the page below). Representatives of numerous groups
  were present, many of whom Bob and I have met over the years while
  doing presentations to their groups. A dinner conversation
  afterwards with Dan Sailers, Executive Director of the User Group
  Academy, revealed an interesting agenda: he's trying to help user
  groups focus their efforts outward rather than inward. It makes
  sense - Macs have become sufficiently common, inexpensive, and
  supported that those of us who own them are no longer the people
  who can most benefit from Macintosh-based assistance.

<http://www.ugacademy.org/soiree/>

  To help refocus the power of user groups, the User Group Academy
  has made several $5,000 grants to groups that submitted proposals
  for public school outreach projects (check out last year's winning
  projects at the link below). This approach would undoubtedly
  involve a major change for many user groups, but given that many
  of the original reasons for user groups to exist have become less
  relevant over the years, it could be a great way to put that
  tremendous volunteer energy to work improving society - and to do
  so with Macintosh flair. I'd encourage representatives from all
  user groups to have a chat with Dan, Fred Showker, and the other
  User Group Academy folks about the User Group Academy Grant
  program.

<http://www.ugacademy.org/Grants/Winners.html>


Macworld SF 2001 Trend: Cool Utilities
--------------------------------------
  by Adam Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  No utility made the kind of big splash that, for example,
  Connectix's RAM Doubler made when it was introduced back in 1994.
  However, there were a number of worthy entries that made this
  Macworld Expo a showcase for innovative utilities rather than
  high-end applications.


**Aladdin Transporter** -- Aladdin Systems was showing the $150
  Aladdin Transporter, an interesting program that falls somewhere
  between a macro utility and a scripting language. Transporter
  provides 26 actions that you can link together in a simple drag &
  drop interface, including things like compressing, binhexing,
  copying, FTP uploading, sending email, and more (the Run
  AppleScript action provides additional flexibility not present in
  the interface). Once you've put together your steps, you create a
  "transporter" - a drop-box application that you can send to
  anyone. For instance, I plan to make a submission transporter for
  Info-Mac, so shareware authors can just drop a folder on the
  Info-Mac transporter to have their submission stuffed, binhexed,
  uploaded via FTP, and registered with the archivists via an email
  form. Anyone who regularly needs to perform repetitive actions
  with files should take a look at the demo.

<http://www.aladdinsys.com/transporter/>


**Rewind** -- Power On Software's $90 Rewind may seem like part of
  booth presenter Joel Bauer's magic act, but it's really a
  collection of techniques for tracking what you do on your Mac and
  making it possible to revert to previous incarnations of files or
  the entire system. I don't want people to think Rewind should
  stand in for a real backup strategy, but if it helps reduce the
  down time when you delete or overwrite a file accidentally, or
  when you install new software that prevents your Mac from starting
  up properly, it's worth it. As with all seemingly magical software
  that operates at a low level, it's worth watching for Rewind
  updates whenever Apple updates the Mac OS (such as the just-
  released Rewind 1.1, which supports Mac OS 9.1 and is available
  from Power On's updates page). Also make sure you have plenty of
  disk space free, since Rewind uses free disk space to store the
  information it uses to take you back to a previous time.

<http://www.poweronsoftware.com/products/rewind/default.asp>
<http://www.poweronsoftware.com/download/#Rewind>
<http://www.infotainer.com/>


**DoubleTalk** -- Connectix presented a new utility that will be
  just the ticket for some people forced to live in a Windows-
  centric network. Like Thursby Systems' DAVE, Connectix's $100
  DoubleTalk enables a Macintosh on an Ethernet network with PCs to
  access shared folders and printers just like any other PC. Unlike
  DAVE, DoubleTalk does not let your Mac share its own files and
  printers, but Connectix hopes that DoubleTalk's interface will
  make up for that difference. Where DAVE offers its own interface,
  DoubleTalk closely mimics the AppleTalk and TCP/IP control panels
  and wiggles its way into the standard AppleShare and LaserWriter
  Chooser interfaces (though it doesn't work with the Network
  Browser at the moment), so there's essentially nothing new to
  learn. Plus, you can even see the print queue on shared PC
  printers via Macintosh desktop printers; sadly, Connectix's
  engineers resisted the temptation to make all Macintosh print jobs
  go to the top of the queue automatically or let Mac users
  manipulate the queue to get their jobs out sooner ("Yeah, Macs
  just print faster. Bummer, isn't it?"). For fun, turn on Caps Lock
  and try opening the DoubleTalk control panel while holding down
  Control-P-L, Control-J-M, and Control-L-S.

<http://www.connectix.com/products/dt.html>
<http://www.thursby.com/products/dave.html>


**DiskWarrior 2.1** -- Alsoft was showing DiskWarrior 2.1, which
  is not so much new as improved. I've had good luck with
  DiskWarrior's approach to rebuilding directories to eliminate
  corruption, and in version 2.1, Alsoft added a report listing out
  the differences between your original directory and the rebuilt
  one to ease checking. Since I have over 50,000 files on my hard
  disk, that's a huge help, otherwise I never know what to look for.
  Also in 2.1 is the capability to bless the System Folder, rebuild
  Mac OS X disks, and check for damage in the System and Finder
  files. DiskWarrior costs $70 (but see the Mac Care Unit deal
  below), and is a $30 upgrade (plus $5-$8 shipping) for existing
  owners unless you purchased after 01-Dec-00, at which point you
  just pay shipping. For a review of DiskWarrior, see "Fighting
  Corruption with Alsoft's DiskWarrior" in TidBITS-486_.

<http://www.alsoft.com/DiskWarrior/support.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05443>


**Mac Care Unit** -- Last, but certainly not least, Casady &
  Greene has put together a bundle of utilities to compete with the
  recently released Norton SystemWorks and Norton Internet Security
  bundles. Mac Care Unit costs only $130, and includes Casady &
  Greene's Conflict Catcher 8 extension manager, Alsoft's
  DiskWarrior and PlusOptimizer disk utility and defragmenting
  software, Connectix's CopyAgent copy utility, Intego's NetBarrier
  and VirusBarrier personal firewall and anti-virus programs, and
  Radialogic's Chaos Master, which helps clean up unnecessary files
  and download updates. All are the latest versions except for
  NetBarrier, which is version 1.1. The price for the Mac Care Unit
  bundle is stunning - Conflict Catcher and DiskWarrior alone would
  cost more, and they're both worth owning (see "Nice Catch,
  Conflict Catcher" in TidBITS-446_ for more on Conflict Catcher).

<http://www.maccareunit.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06256>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05086>


Macworld SF 2001 Trend: Personal Firewalls
------------------------------------------
  by Adam Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  The rise in permanent Internet connections via cable modems and
  DSL has raised fears of crackers breaking into individual
  computers and wreaking havoc. For Windows users, those fears are
  real, since most of the automated attacks look specifically for
  security holes in Windows network services. Macs are significantly
  less vulnerable to such problems, especially if Personal Web
  Sharing and Personal File Sharing via TCP/IP are turned off or
  properly secured, but a number of companies are now producing
  personal firewall products for Mac users who want additional peace
  of mind or who want to know precisely what's happening. Intego's
  NetBarrier and Open Door Networks' DoorStop (now the foundation of
  Norton Personal Firewall) were first on the scene, and they've
  just been joined by IPNetSentry from Sustainable Softworks, the
  network wizards who brought us IPNetRouter.


**IPNetSentry** -- The $35 IPNetSentry tries to differentiate
  itself from the others by using a "trigger" approach rather than a
  "firewall" approach. In short, rather than building a wall and
  punching holes in it for specific services by default, as with
  traditional firewalls, IPNetSentry watches for typical sorts of
  suspicious activity, and when it notices such activities, blocks
  the attack. Sustainable Softworks explains this approach by noting
  that firewalls make sense for installations with multiple users,
  where an administrator is better able than individual users to
  decide what the firewall should allow or block. But where there's
  a single machine, that approach is overkill and may cause more
  work than is necessary. Peter Sichel of Sustainable Softworks also
  passed on an interesting side effect of running IPNetSentry or
  IPNetRouter. Since those programs look at every packet coming in,
  they can (and do) throw away malformed packets, and it turns out
  that approach actually eliminates a few seemingly random crashes
  when something on the Mac fails to deal with a malformed packet
  correctly.

<http://www.sustworks.com/site/prod_ipns_overview.html>


**Who's There** -- Also new at the show was the $40 Who's There
  from Open Door Networks. Building on the expertise gained in
  writing the DoorStop product that's now at the heart of Norton
  Personal Firewall, Open Door created an application that works in
  conjunction with DoorStop or Norton Personal Firewall to watch
  your Internet connection, log all access attempts, and help you
  understand what's actually going on. My main worry is that Who's
  There and similar utilities may cause some people to obsess
  unreasonably about possible problems, much as fictional characters
  who suddenly find themselves with the ability to read the thoughts
  of others struggle to deal with the previously unknowable
  information. Put another way, would you really want to know every
  time someone had an idle thought about your car?

<http://www2.opendoor.com/whosthere/>
<http://www.symantec.com/sabu/nis/npf_mac/>


**NetBarrier 2.0** -- Even though its huge inflatable castle booth
  at Macworld Expo didn't sprout a moat, Intego has updated the $60
  NetBarrier to version 2.0, adding the capability to control
  cookies, block banner ads, and filter spam on your POP server.
  NetBarrier 2.0 can also filter outgoing information to avoid
  sending identifying information about your computer and browser,
  plus filter personal information sent via forms. Intego is clearly
  trying to address a wide variety of security issues with
  NetBarrier, and although I haven't had a chance to evaluate the
  new version, I worry a little about letting a program filter mail
  before I even download it, since no spam filter is 100 percent
  accurate.

<http://www.intego.com/netbarrier/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06064>



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