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Posts Tagged ‘Broken’

These copper-plated Leica cameras manage to make even broken rangefinders expensive

13 Aug

Leica specialist store, Meister Camera, has found a way to make non-working Leica cameras into expensive one-of-a-kind pieces of art by copper-plating the camera, lens and all.

Meister Camera currently has eight of these one-off pieces for sale on its website. According to the product descriptions, the shop partners with a third party to copper-plate the cameras using what it calls a ‘galvanic process.’ The precise details of how the entire camera is effectively embalmed in a coat of copper, including the glass lens and non-metal components, remains unknown, but the end result speaks for itself.

Most of the copper-plated cameras are various versions of the Leica I, II and III cameras, but Meister Camera also has a copper-plated M3 up for sale. Prices start at 995€ (~$ 1,170) for the Leica IIf and go up to 1,450€ (~$ 1,705) for the Leica M3. You can see more information for each of the cameras on Meister Cameras’ online shop.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Film Fridays: Requiem for all my broken 35mm cameras

24 Jul

Film Fridays: Requiem for all my broken 35mm cameras

Another one of my film cameras has died, and now my drawer of working ones is looking bare, while my junked camera drawer is crammed full. Loss seems to be an inevitable part of the experience of collecting, using and appreciating old analog gems. So what can we learn from this?

For starters, it teaches us to accept the fact that most film cameras, especially those with plastic components, will eventually break beyond repair with frequent use. And so we must avoid paying sky-high prices for something that won’t last (looking at you, Olympus mju-ii). But we can also prepare for inevitable loss: If you own a film camera you love (and the price has yet to inflate too much), snag a couple minty ones and set them aside for posterity. Even if you never use them, they will almost certainly appreciate in value. Likewise, hang on to broken models to harvest for parts.

But perhaps the most important lesson shooting with old analog relics teaches us is to enjoy our time with the cameras we love! Baby them if you must, but not to the point of leaving them at home or in your bag. With that said, what follows is a requiem of sorts for some of my favorite film cameras lost in the line of duty. Some of these served me well, while others didn’t even make it through their first roll. But all of them brought me joy and / or taught me lessons. None were babied.

Above: My sad collection of busted film cameras. The XA (lower left) died this past weekend.

Ricoh GR1

Cause of death: beer festival ‘mishap.’ Maybe still works (info LCD fried)

The year was 2012, I was in my early 20’s and had just moved to New York City and was ready to dream big. At the time I naively thought that by searching long and hard I could track down a bargain on a fully functional Ricoh GR1, the hottest little film compact camera I’d ever laid eyes upon (despite knowing that most have faulty LCDs). These cameras were already fetching too-high an asking price at the time, but I was determined.

Eventually I hunted down a sweet deal on eBay and pulled the trigger on the one you see above. The top LCD worked for the first two weeks then fried out. The seller refunded me some of the cash, and I kept on using it, that is, until one revelrous evening with some friends in Philadelphia, and we’ll leave it at that.

Sweet Ricoh GR1, you taught me to be realistic in my quest for film cameras, to avoid too-good-to-be-true deals and to be wary of overpriced, trending models, especially ones with known faults.

Yashica Electro-35

Cause of death: manual focus jammed shortly after purchasing

Shortly after the GR1 fiasco I became fascinated with rangefinder cameras after spending a little time with a Leica M Monochrome for work. I loved the ability to see subjects before they entered the frame. So I set out to find a budget Leica-like model and ultimately settled on the Yashica Electro-35.

The first two copies I picked up both ended up being duds with various issues. One had completely fried electronics despite the sellers’ insistence it was ‘fully functional.’ I should’ve taken those experiences as a sign that perhaps this wasn’t the model for me and given up, but I was stubborn.

The third Electro-35 appeared fully functional upon its unboxing. I loaded it up with film and shot maybe three frames. On the fourth frame the manual focus locked up completely, never to budge again, despite various lubrication attempts. It’s now a big, lovely looking paperweight.

Dearest Yashica Electro-35, I barely knew you but taught me the valuable lesson to trust my instincts and give up on cameras with too many quality issues.

Leica CL

Cause of death: slipped in rain, smashed to ground, film advance broken

Several years after the Yashica debacle, the urge to once again shoot with a film rangefinder became too much to bare. I spent considerable time doing my research this time around and settled on the Leica CL (Leitz Minolta CL).

I quickly found a solid deal on one that included a mint camera and a Rokkor 40mm F2 for just under $ 500 (circa 2015-ish). I can only guess that the lack of ‘Leica’ branding on the camera helped save me a few bucks. I gobbled the deal up quickly and proceeded to shoot with the combo for several years. Eventually, though, one dips one’s toes in the Leica tide and is swept out to Leica sea: And the time came for me to upgrade my CL to a Leica M6.

But one fall evening I was feeling nostalgic and decided to toss the 40mm back on the CL and take it for a spin. A little later that evening I slipped on wet leaves while walking up a steep incline (damn Seattle hills) and the camera hit the pavement hard, busting the film advance mechanism. Fortunately, the 40mm Rokkor escaped unscathed (they now go for nearly $ 500 on their own in mint condition).

Sweet Leica CL, you taught me to look for camera models listed / sold under their less-obvious names. You also lead me to my Leica M6 and Rokkor 40mm combo, thank you.

Ricoh R1

Cause of death: flash bulb died (I may yet try to fix this one)

Many years after first getting my hands on a Ricoh GR1 I once again became intrigued by Ricoh point-and-shoots while testing one of their modern GR’s for DPReview. After some heavy research I learned the GR1 lineage began with the Ricoh R1, which has a 30mm F3.5 lens and fewer features.

I was able to find one for around $ 100 and was blown away by its sleek design and outstanding results, even if the body felt like it would crack if you pressed the shutter release too hard. I love this style of camera for low light photography, but when the flash died one day, so too did my interest in shooting with it.

Beloved Ricoh R1, you were a real pleasure and maybe someday I will fix you.

Olympus mju-II (Stylus Epic)

Cause of death: Shutter stopped firing ‘out of the blue’ after a hard life

Oh Olympus mju-ii, how can I count the ways I love thee? Once my R1 died I decided it was time to find a film point-and-shoot with a better reputation for reliability. After much reading, the Olympus mju-ii (Stylus Epic) seemed to be the camera for me, with its weather-resistant body and sliding lens cover. I picked up two for a little over $ 100 a piece (haha).

This was in 2015 and the price of these cameras has skyrocketed since. The one shown above died only a few weeks prior to my most recent camera loss. But I will say, in the 5 years I had it, I easily sent 60 rolls through the camera, many of which from the pit of rowdy concerts (not the most gentle conditions). So I think I got my money’s worth with this one.

My cherished mju-ii, you are probably my favorite film point-and-shoot I’ve ever owned. I’m glad I was able to get past your hideous 1990’s-era design to find true love. And I’m even more glad I hard the foresight to tuck away a third minty one before the price got insane.

Olympus XA

Cause of death: Film no longer advances, gear slipping.

Last but not least is my dear Olympus XA, which just died a few days prior to publication while out on a kayak trip. I was photographing some crazy teenagers jumping off a bridge into Lake Washington (if your friends jumped, would you?) when the film advance suddenly locked up and then slipped. I rescued the roll, but the camera will advance film no more.

This loss is still a little too recent and I do not have words for my loved Olympus XA at this time. Please check back later.

The wrap

Losing a camera sucks and it’s easy to get caught up on a particular model, but the world is filled with a seemingly endless buffet of used film cameras, just waiting to be uncovered. And nothing beats stumbling upon one you’ve never heard of and being delighted by its quirks. So the next time one of your cameras goes to the big Yodobashi Camera Store in the sky, I implore you not to replace it with a carbon copy: Use it as an opportunity to try something new.

When my aforementioned Olympus XA died, I used it as a chance to get my hands on a half-frame camera, something I’ve long wanted to try. Now I’m shooting with a Canon demi EE17 and couldn’t be more excited (though I still purchased a minty XA to save for some time far in the future). Ultimately, life is full of fleeting moments. Good times come and go, as do good film cameras. Enjoy them while they’re here and be excited for what’s to come!

Do you have a favorite film camera that died a noble death? We’d love to hear about it, share your story in the comments below.

Above: My latest acquisition, a Canon demi EE17, procured for about $ 100.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Elderly camera store owner suffers broken arm during violent robbery

24 May

K&R Photographics, located in Crescent Springs, Kentucky, is the latest camera shop to report the theft of expensive camera equipment. According to store co-owner Rob Kumler, who spoke with Cincinnati ABC affiliate WCPO, his 70-year-old wife and shop co-owner Wilma was attacked by masked, armed men who broke into the store on the afternoon of Wednesday, May 22.

According to Kumler, Wilma was thrown to the ground roughly and suffered a broken arm as a result. ‘Tens of thousands of dollars’ in high-end camera equipment was stolen. In addition to harming Wilma and stealing the hardware, the robbers accidentally dropped and destroyed a $ 12,000 camera.

The masked thieves were reportedly armed with a gun and a hammer; they are said to have immediately moved toward the most expensive equipment in the store, indicating that at least one had likely been in the store prior to the robbery. Four security cameras were live in the store at the time of the assault and theft.

Kumler points out that due to the expensive, high-end nature of the stolen equipment, the thieves will likely struggle to find buyers who both need the gear and are willing to purchase it without asking questions about its origins. ‘High-end cameras,’ Kumler said, ‘that’s a small market.’

The store maintains a Facebook Page, but hasn’t yet posted about the robbery; it’s unclear whether police or Kumler plan to publish a list of the stolen equipment’s serial numbers. The public is encouraged to contact Villa Hills law enforcement with any information related to the violent robbery.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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GoPro’s updated Plus subscription will now replace two broken cameras per year

01 Feb

GoPro has announced an expansion to its Plus subscription service, now offering subscribers “no questions asked” camera replacements in the event their own camera breaks. The new benefit started on January 31st, and is available to both existing and new Plus customers. The camera replacement offer is in addition to Plus’s other various perks, including mobile backups and priority customer support.

For now, GoPro’s $ 5/month “enhanced” Plus plan is only available to US customers, though expansions into other markets are expected to start later on in 2018. The camera replacement perk is available for customers who have a Hero5 or newer, though it is not a free replacement. GoPro charges the following “exchange fees” for the four replaceable GoPro camera products:

  • HERO5 Session: $ 39
  • HERO5 Black: $ 59
  • HERO6 Black: $ 79
  • Fusion: $ 139

Per GoPro’s FAQ, Plus customers must return their old camera to get the replacement—which is done using a return shipping label the company provides—so the replacement program doesn’t cover cameras that are lost. Additionally, subscribers are limited to two camera replacements per 12 billing cycles, though the exchanges can happen any time during those 12 months.

In addition to device replacement, Plus subscribers will soon also have access to mobile cloud backups for photos and videos—unlimited image backup and up to 35 hours of video backup. Apple customers get the backup feature first via its February 20th iOS availability, while Android users will get the same backup benefit on an unspecified date this Spring.

Finally, GoPro Plus includes front-of-the-line customer support priority status and a 20% discount on accessories on the GoPro.com website.

A free 30-day trial is available now for new customers. To learn more, visit the GoPro website.

Press Release

GoPro Rolls Out Enhanced Subscription Service: Plus

New Benefits. No Additional Cost. Damage Replacement, Mobile Cloud Backup and Unlimited Photo Storage Added to $ 4.99 Monthly Service

SAN MATEO, Calif., Jan. 31, 2018 /PRNewswire/ – GoPro, Inc. (NASDAQ: GPRO) is building on the success of its Plus subscription service with the introduction of new benefits that deliver significant value to GoPro customers at no additional cost.

Today, the company announced details of the expanded Plus monthly service:

  • Camera replacement – If you break your GoPro we’ll replace it, no questions asked
  • Mobile cloud backup – The GoPro App now automatically backs up your photos and videos, eliminating the need to connect to a computer or buy new SD cards
  • Unlimited photo storage
  • 35 hours of video storage
  • 20% off accessories at gopro.com
  • Front-of-the-line priority phone and chat support

Mobile cloud backup will be available on iOS February 20 and on Android in the spring.

“Plus streamlines the GoPro experience and delivers outsized value for our customers,” said GoPro Founder and CEO Nicholas Woodman. “Our subscription business, Plus, has proven popular with consumers and the roll out of our enhanced service marks the first of several subscription initiatives we will introduce this year.”

The new GoPro Plus is now available in the US for $ 4.99 a month with a 30-day free trial and will expand to global markets later this year. Visit The Inside Line for more details on all the benefits of becoming a subscriber and the GoPro Plus page to sign up.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Lensrentals and the continuing saga of the broken Sony FE 70-200mm F2.8 GM

04 Mar

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Last week we took a look at Lensrentals’ six hour initial disassembly of a broken Sony FE 70-200 F2.8 GM lens (would hate to be the person who dropped it!). In part two, the guys from LR continue to take apart the lens, to see if it can be saved or sent to the scrapyard.

Read LensRentals’ Sony FE 70-200mm F2.8 GM Teardown (Part 2)

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Handle with Care: 10 Years of Fragile Glass Boxes Broken by FedEx

10 Feb

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

fedex-box-arts

Packing and shipping artwork is a delicate and costly process, unless your intention is to create new pieces by allowing them to break along the way. Starting in 2005, artist Walead Beshty began a decade-long project, sending works of art to galleries around the world with an important twist: the key element of their creation happened in transit.

fedex-cubic-assembly

Beshty would construct glass boxes to fit inside the cardboard shipping containers, matching their interior dimensions (no padding or other protection). Curators then unpacked the finished works, usually cracked but not totally destroyed (being constructed from shatter-proof glass).

fedex-express-tube-art

Each piece was given a descriptive name including the date of shipment, tracking number and box dimensions, then put on display (resulting in titles like: FedEx® Large Box ©2005 FEDEX 139751 REV 10/05 SSCC, Priority Overnight, Los Angeles-New York trk#795506878000, November 27-28, 2007). In some cases, the glass contents are reshipped, changing form again and again as they move between exhibitions.

fedex-pedestals

The net result is a work that tells the story of its own travels, particularly a period between leaving the hands of the artist and being received by a museum or collector. The displays vary, but in some cases the battered boxes become pedestals for the finished sculptural displays.

not-borken

But beyond this fixation with the story behind the art, there is another element that drove Beshty: the “perversity of a corporation owning a shape” – as it turns out, FedEx has managed to copyright the dimensions of their box designs.

fedex-glass-cube

“They are basically a unit of space owned by a corporation in which to ship objects,” explains the artist. This idea of a company being able to “own” an empty volume of air designed to transport goods seemed surreal, and was another factor motivating this unusual mobile art project.

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Invisible Repairs: Artist Fixes Broken Wood Furniture Using Clear Infill

24 Dec

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

wooden-chair-replacement-art

Wooden furniture remnants stand out clearly against their subtle replacement parts in this series of artistic chair and bed repairs. Translucent acrylic fills in the gaps of these pieces, parts of My New Old Chair and Dear Bed collections by artist Tatiane Freitas. Mirroring the construction methods used for the two materials, the missing lathe-spun wooden parts are replaced by simplified acrylic geometries.

wood-chair-lines

chair-repair

The approach follows a certain vein of old-versus-new expressionism also found in fields of design and architecture — added elements are clearly distinguished from existing ones in order to make the time period differences legible at a glance.

wood-acrylic-art-chairs

wood-chair-intervention

As with repair-oriented designers, there is a functional component here as well: the old chairs are able to be useful again thanks to these careful interventions.

bed-headstand-repair

wood-chair-plastic-infill

More about the artist: “In her day to day before graduating from Fashion school Tati Freitas was already looking into ways to create objects which could be both confortable and admired. Craft wood is her most common material, and that which gives her objects its forms, but she’s also been developing with more brute substances, like cement, and the sensible acrilic.”

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Art of Camouflage: Flying Bird Silhouettes Blend into Broken Window Voids

09 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

cracked-glass-frame-art

A boy aiming his slingshot into the sky seems to aim both at the broken windows of an abandoned building but also a series of birds that seem to appear in the gaps of cracked glass, transfixed in various stages of flight.

broken-glass-bird-art

Artist Pejac is well known for his negative-space interventions, from pealing back paint chips to carefully reveal brick beneath to other contextual installations. Much of the art is in the craft: a meticulous removal (or breaking) of materials to slowly reveal some new whole, much like a sculptor chips away at a marble edifice.

bird-window-boy-shooting

This latest piece was produced during his residency with the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Rijeka, Croatia, where he spent multiple weeks crafting site-specific works.

bird-windows-power-plant

Camouflage (Tribute to René Magritte) is set in the huge windows of an old paper factory power plant, depicting a flock of birds that might be hard to spot were it not for the outline of a boy taking aim below them. His figure calls attention to the larger work, signalling a passer by the existence of something both large and subtle going on in the frame.

boy-taking-aim

painted-boy

The implied story is one about hunting and survival, the birds disguising themselves against a backdrop of broken window panes, making them harder for the child to spot. The boy, too complex a figure to render through even the most craftily broken glass, is painted over a series of panes (images by Sasha Bogojev).

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Broken Ground: Poignant Earthquake Memorial at Epicenter in China

03 Aug

[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

disaster landscape

A visceral memorial to the nearly 100,000 victims of China’s 2008 earthquake, this weathered-steal monument and museum conjures images of cracked Earth left in the wake of a quake.

earthquake ruptured museum china

The Wenchuan Earthquake Memorial Museum was conceived of as an architectural landscape and situated in Wenchuan County, the epicenter of the earthquake in the Sichuan Province.

green roof quake path

angled rusted steel walls

Green roofs look unassuming in the landscape while rusted steal provides a ground-hued contrast in the cracks winding their way through the ruptured site. The effect is powerful, giving visitors the sense that they are walking in the actual voids left by the disaster.

weathered steel green

cracked earth aerial view

The quake was responsible for an estimated 70,000 deaths and left tens of thousands missing. The museum complex was created by the faculty of Tonji University at the request of the Chinese government.

ruptured benches contemplation

The sheer magnitude of such an event is impossible to capture in physical form, but this design aims to at least give a sense of the devastation and places for remembrance and quiet contemplation.

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Cable TV is So Broken, Can Apple and Google Save Us All?

31 Jul

Comcast CEO Brian Roberts, Allen & Company, 2015
Billionaire Comcast CEO Brian Roberts

Last night I spent a frustrating hour trying to cancel Showtime with Comcast, my current cable TV provider. I could not find (nor is there) any way to cancel any Comcast service online and their customer service department was closed.

Finally I was able to get chatty with one of those chatbots online who confirmed to me that there is simply no way to cancel Showtime on Comcast without speaking with a human representative. Even though the chatbot convinced me they were a human, they were not allowed to cancel it for me and I would need to try again tomorrow on the phone only. Interestingly enough I had no problem signing up for Showtime online originally, it’s just when you want to cancel that Comcast gives you such a hard time.

This morning after navigating the Comcast phone voice response menu I was finally able to talk to a human being, who tried to talk me out of cancelling my Showtime. I was committed though and I did finally get it cancelled.

I actually love Showtime and don’t mind paying for it. Masters of Sex and Ray Donovan are two of my favorite shows on right now. I also like the series Homeland. I had several reasons for cancelling it with *Comcast* though.

1. Why am I paying Comcast $ 19.99/month for Showtime when I can just buy it direct from Showtime on my AppleTV for a free 30 day trial and then $ 10.99/month after that?

2. Watching Showtime using the AppleTV app through Comcast is a royal pain in the ass. I’ve had to re-authenticate and prove I’m a paying cable customer at least 20 times with the app.

I go to watch one of my shows and am interrupted with a message and code on the AppleTV telling me that I have to go to Showtime online on my phone or computer and authenticate. Next I have to log into my Comcast account enter in the code from my television set and then after that I finally get my access.

I wouldn’t mind it if I did this one time, the first time I signed up for the app, but having to re-authenticate over and over and over again, especially late at night when I’m in bed and just want to watch my favorite show is a drag.

3. Last night I wanted to watch episode 2 of the current season of Master’s of Sex on the app but it wasn’t available. I could only watch episode 3. I have no idea why Comcast customers were not allowed to watch episode 1 or 2, but I didn’t want to watch episode 3, before episode 2, so I just gave up and didn’t get to watch a show that I’m paying $ 20/month for. No wonder so many people just say screw it and go to bitTorrent.

4. I hate the way Comcast abuses the AppleTV ecosystem. If I pay for CNN with Comcast, why do they not allow me to watch it on my AppleTV. Comcast’s decisions here feel entirely arbitrary. They will let me watch CNBC if I subscribe, but not CNN. I can watch HBO (although I have the same re-authentication problem there over and over again) but when my wife wants to watch Lifetime she has to figure out some weird hack to try to authenticate the app through some hard to find link in a forum on the internet.

It is clear to me that Comcast is purposely trying to make your AppleTV experience an ugly and difficult one and so any chance I can get to bypass Comcast and purchase premium content elsewhere, I’d rather do that — by contrast Netflix has always been an absolute breeze to use with my AppleTV.

According to Buzzfeed today, Apple is rolling out a new version of AppleTV in September which will be setting AppleTV up to offer their own subscription service in 2016. This is such welcome news. I love my AppleTVs and if I could get my content directly through Apple I’d love to cancel my Comcast cable TV subscription entirely.

I’m much more optimistic about an AppleTV service working on my AppleTV than Comcast’s current service. Also with AppleTV I can just buy a device one time and don’t need to have a cable box for every single TV in my house at a price of $ 10/month each. Will Apple finally be the one that saves us from Comcast?

My other beef with Comcast is their highspeed internet service. At present I’m paying for the maximum speeds I’m allowed which give me 120MBps down and 10MBps up. Frankly, in today’s world these just feel too slow to me — especially the 10MBps upload speeds. I use the internet a lot for uploading high res photos and I wish I could get faster upload speeds.

I was excited about Comcast’s new residential gigabit service announcement the other day until I saw the pricing for it: $ 1,000 to set it up and $ 320/month with a two year commitment. PC World lists the service at $ 300/month, but when I called to ask about it they told me that there would also be a $ 20/month equipment rental fee on top of that fee. That’s just too expensive for high speed internet.

By contrast Google sells their gigabit internet service for $ 70/month with no installation fee — which is even less than I’m paying Comcast today for my crappy 10MB/second upload speeds — for less money Google Fiber users can upload 100x faster than I can.

I was reluctantly willing to pay Comcast’s highway robbery fees for gigabit internet and was hopeful when a Comcast rep told me I could get it. They told me though that they would need to do a survey of my house in person to confirm and would call me for an appointment. I never heard back from them on this appointment so after a week I called them back only to be told that they did in fact do the survey and that I did not qualify at present.

Unfortunately AppleTV’s subscription television is not here…. yet. Unfortunately Google Fiber is not here… yet. Hopefully both of these services will eventually get to my neighborhood though. It would be so nice to just be able to cut Comcast out of my life entirely.

While I realize I could just go ahead and cut the cord right now, with a family of six, the rest of my household is just not ready to cut the cord yet and I’d have a mutiny on my hands if I cancelled our Comcast — so for now I continue to pay my $ 233/month. However, I’m looking optimistically towards the future, to a day when Apple and Google will let me cut Comcast out of my life for good.


Thomas Hawk Digital Connection

 
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