Walter Tautz wrote
> any other recommendations, especially stuff to avoid.
>
> walter
I've got a Casio QV-R40 It's USB connectable, looks like a USB drive.
Also, it uses SD memory cards, so if you've got a card reader you can get
the pictures that way also.
--
Mike We
ng modules.
Finally figured out the config file to skip the module in question.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV
m running Debian unstable on an Athlon, but I'm vaguely recalling that
this problem is not architecture specific. Something about PHP's IMAP and
Apache not getting along.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great underst
brian moore wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 25, 2000 at 01:55:44AM -0400, Mike Werner wrote:
> > brian moore wrote:
> >
> > > My solution is simply to refuse all mail from
> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] with postfix:
> > >
> > > Sep 23 16:58:25 bifur postfix
ge
go to the intended victim ... er, receipient?
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV | beginning of all unwisdom.
pgpbkWA3u6LI8.pgp
Description: PGP signature
ux in a Nutshell - it now does covers apt-get, dpkg, dselect, and a few
others. Soon as my paycheck comes through I'll be picking up a copy.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E
corruption problem. Haven't had a problem since switching.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV | beginning o
at way
for a while.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV | beginning of all unwisdom.
pgpgltASPPBSd.pgp
Description: PGP signature
efault being not to verify.
If, on the other hand, you are wanting to just reduce the amount of output
that gpg spits out, you might have a read-through of gpg's man page and then
try tweaking the options passed to gpg via your .muttrc In particular, I
believe gpg has a --quiet option that is
ice. So unless you've recompiled your kernel you should be good on
that point.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV
QBA wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm looking for a program (fast and reliable with recursive grabbing)
> that will mirror any URL with all files and links. Something like
> teleport pro for windows.
> Any suggestions?
wget
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow
s message:
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Cc:
> Sent Date:2000/9/15 AM 10:37:41
> Subject: Re: corruption during power loss
- End forwarded message -
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to bel
c/inittab There's probably a lot
more detail to it than that, but that's the basics. There's some more
information in the man page for inittab.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS50
7;d say stay with potato as much as
possible. If a home workstation, I'd say go with whichever strikes your
fancy.
I've been running woody for a few months now with very few problems. Every
now and then a package will get a bit bollixed, but usually gets straightened
ould have answers for you.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV | beginning of all unwisdom.
ll on both machines.
But what it all comes down to, really, is what works best for *you*. That's
one of the things that I *really* like about Linux - you've got the choices
out there.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV | beginning of all unwisdom.
is not too long ago.
The 'net install does *not* support installing the base packages via PPP.
However, having said that - once I got the base installed everything else
went smoothly.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything
nel.
>
> Anyone have any ideas why a data cd comes up fine but an audio cd balks?
Probably because there's no filesystem on an audio CD. They're just not
meant to be mounted.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything
#x27;t everything. I'd
> like to get kde for example, and that isn't on there. Gaim too. Thanks
http://www.internatif.org/bortzmeyer/debian/apt-sources/
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
kmself@ix.netcom.com wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 22, 2000 at 09:37:05PM -0400, Mike Werner wrote:
> > Brent Harding wrote:
> > > How would cron do something such as, emailing a file once and awhile,
> > > make
> > > the file empty, and wait until the nex
;echo "" > /path/to/file" but I'm
not sure. I'm sure there are better ways to do it.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV | beginning of all unwisdom.
a user that I can specify in cron that will work without
> being logged in (in case power goes out and I don't wake up and log back
> in)?
You do not have to be logged in to have a cron job run. The crontab I
inserted above works just fine if I'm not logged onto my box.
--
Mike Wer
own.
Perhaps that'll get you pointed in the right direction ...
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV | beginning of all unwisdom.
a slightly modified version of the exact rule I was using. The
deliver line is what actually sends it on the the abuse address, and the next
line (seen finish) says to *not* do any further handling of that message.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
John Anderson wrote:
> This sounds stupid, but when I installed Debian I selected EST vs. EDT. I
> have tried using the date command with no success. Any suggestions?
Try tzconfig
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of
From: line is used.
Seems I misunderstood exactly what you meant.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV | beginning of all unwisdom.
ot a client
> for Linux which keeps accounts separate while allowing people to access
> multiple accounts at once. Absurd.
Wrong. mutt can do that just fine.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understandin
.
For more detail than most folks would want, check the file
/Documentation/kbuild/commands.txt
In that file is a rather complete looking explanation of just what it is
that goes on when you issue the various make commands for the kernel source.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believ
z' in 'bzImage' stands for 'big zImage', not for 'bzip'!
> I don't remember if lilo can actually load larger bz images than z images,
> but I've never had a bz image that was too large.
As it says above, yes. The bzimage allows for a larger kernel
from there. Does anyone know what would cause this error?
This is another common one to run into. The package you need to install is
the bin86 package. as86 is the assembler used on the x86 platform. It's
not a required package, as not everyone uses the kernel on an x
file that he copied.
Ah, there it is. According to the Kernel-HOWTO ...
7.11. `Not a compressed kernel Image file''
Don't use the vmlinux file created in /usr/src/linux as your boot
image; [..]/arch/i386/boot/bzImage is the right one.
I'd guess it was the vmlinux file
Krzys Majewski wrote:
> debconf: failed to initialize frontend: Slang
> debconf: falling back to frontend: Dialog
>
> I get this when apt-get installing stuff. 'Sup yall? I've got slang1:
If I remember correctly, you need to install libterm-stool-perl
--
Mike Werner KA8Y
n my graphics card, with the
> mach64 server. returning a meaningless-to-me error-message about the value of
> "Q", or something like that. )
You can get debs of XF4 from:
www.debian.org/~branden
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
I'd think that they would reinforce the fact that the software in question
is indeed coming from outside of the "official Debian" distro.
But if not, well, those packages can always still be installed the
"old-fashioned way".
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is sl
ging
a supposedly non-free package and using an installation package.
> Look. There is Windoze OS. Many people make software for Windows. Does
> it mean it is part of Windows?
Microsoft would sure like it to be, but no.
> If you go to Microsoft site, you can get there a lot of software
n our FTP
> archive for this [non-free] software. The software in these
> directories is not part of the Debian system, although it has been
> configured for use with Debian. ...
And as I said in that same other post, why not take the packages of
Marko Cehaja wrote:
> Dear friend,
>
> On Thu, Aug 10, 2000 at 02:56:03PM -0400, Mike Werner wrote:
> > > > format, but written by someone else. So now I'm curious as to just
> > > > what it
> > > > takes to be considered to exist as part of Deb
Marko Cehaja wrote:
> Dear
>
> sorry, I wanted to post it to the list. So previous email went to you
> privately.
>
> On Thu, Aug 10, 2000 at 01:56:18PM -0400, Mike Werner wrote:
> > >
> > > You are wrong. apt-get is: package handling utility. It is not
>
Marko Cehaja wrote:
> By the way, Netscape doesn't exist in Debian.
Huh?!? apt-get install netscape *will* install Netscape 4.73 just fine.
That's how I got Netscape onto my system. Sure looks like it exists to me.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe
> - Is there any way that I can use my ATI Rage LT Pro AGP 2X video card with
> the acelerated servers in X Window?
This is the same chip that's in my laptop. The Mach64 server is the proper
one for that chipset.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
Andrew McRobert wrote:
> hi
>
> Does anyone know the syntax to use 'alien' to convert from rpm to .tar.gz.
> The man page says this can be done, but doesn't say how ... the closest
> thing listed is "alien -t [file]" which produces [file].tgz ...
.tgz =
either:
Hit F3 to view a listing of the files contained in the archive
or
Hit Enter to browse the archive as if it were a directory
Altogether a most usefull little program.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understand
cam wrote:
> I have a Lexmark 5700 inkjet printer. I was wondering if this printer
> works under Linux (woody version) and if it works...how might I get it
> working? any help would be appreciated.
http://www.linuxprinting.org/show_printer.cgi?recnum=62016
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | H
you. There are numerous
other things mc can do that I find invaluable, but that's for another
thread.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false princ
Arcady Genkin wrote:
> What alternatives to fdisk are there? I remember I used one once, but
> shoot me if I remember the name. ;^)
cfdisk comes to mind ... it's what I use when possible.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| every
already have installed?
dpkg -l
It's likely to be a long list, so you might want to either pipe it through a
pager - I use "dpkg -l | less" - or you could redirect it into a file.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| ever
s. ::shrug:: I'm
not real sure about it all, but it works.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV | beginning of all unwisdom.
e
via apt-get ... worked just fine. And when I've done the apt-get update
here on my systems the files from tdyc.com comes down just fine.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E
r, in the process of recompiling
the kernel I redid some of the other peripherals to get them working better,
or in the case of the sound card to get it working at all.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great under
My Helix
Gnome installation has been faithfully kept up-to-date by a daily apt-get
update; apt-get dist-upgrade just fine.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one fal
portion from my sources.list:
deb-src http://http.us.debian.org/debian unstable main contrib non-free
deb-src http://non-us.debian.org/debian-non-US unstable/non-US main contrib
non-free
If you want to use ftp instead of http, just change the instances of http to
ftp and you should be good to go.
-
;release versions" of these browsers?
Again, I really don't know what you mean by this.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV | beginning of all unwisdom.
t it?
Appropriately, the package name is libc5
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | He that is slow to believe anything and
| everything is of great understanding,
'91 GS500E| for belief in one false principle is the
Morgantown WV | beginning of all unwisdom.
to get me started in
> configuring my Hewlett-Packard Deskjet 820C to print on my stand-alone
> computer. Or, if there's good documentation that comes with the
> Debian 2.1 Slink installation that I haven't been able to locate,
> please point me there.
Start w
hat package
depends on the task-helix-core package. The end effect is the same either
way.
Also, I believe the original poster said he was using his system
command-line only - the task-helix-core package also depends on the core
XWindows package, and the task-helix-core package will bring in the
Saw
elnet available" I take that means that SSH is not
available at the computer you have access to at work? If so, then perhaps
you should look into finding an SSH client tat you can out onto the computer
at work if at all possible.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD
ages you might want to go back through and thin out a
few of 'em. I'm slowly in the process of doing just that, though I'm in no
rush at all.
As for what dselect was doing, ya got me. Me and dselect have never gotten
along, so I ignore it completely in favor of apt-get.
-
Johann Spies wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 13, 2000 at 05:12:00PM -0400, Mike Werner wrote:
> > Which version of Word Perfect? I've got WP8 here, and it runs just fine.
> > I'm currently running woody, but I know I had WP at least with potato - not
> > sure if I had WP w
rely I can't remember) under Windoze. The MAC address is the Ethernet
card's hardware address.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Redmond as possible!"
'91 GS500E|
Morgantown WV | Only dead fish go with the flow.
y, but I know I had WP at least with potato - not
sure if I had WP with slink or not, but I think I did.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Redmond as possible!"
'91 GS500E|
t you connected to,
not the one you connect from. If you're not going to do anything too
terribly fancy, the man page will suffice to get you going.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Redmond as p
t's probably Tycho Brahe you're thinking of.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Redmond as possible!"
'91 GS500E|
Morgantown WV | Only dead fish go with the flow.
sure if this would work, but perhaps changing:
ca:12345:ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -t1 -a -r now
to
ca:12345:ctrlaltdel:/bin/false
or something like that? Or perhaps replace /bin/false with the path to a
shell script that put saomething like:
Permission denied! Go away!
onto stdout.
--
Mike Werne
nd of
the row above the letters won't work. You *must* use the + and - that are
on the numeric keypad. It *does* make a difference.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Red
Mike Werner wrote:
> Rogerio Brito wrote:
> > On Jul 08 2000, Mike Werner wrote:
> > Try it and let us know.
>
> If I can ever get the package downloaded I will - I'm currently getting
> *really* low throughput.
It's now installed. I ran the combo t
Rogerio Brito wrote:
> On Jul 08 2000, Mike Werner wrote:
> > Looks like that's it, alright. I just popped my case to
> > double-check, and I am indeed using an S3 Virge/DX vid card with the
> > SVGA server. ::sigh::
>
> Is there any reason why you d
r a while. Till then, I'll just try
and put up with my current card. Who knows - perhaps the SVGA server in
XFree86 4.0 will work better with this chip.
Thanks for the speedy reply.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
a where. And since I've no idea where to look next I'm not sure
what to do next.
I'm running woody up-to-date as of 5 minutes ago, kernel 2.2.16, PII 300MHz,
64 megs RAM, Helix Gnome / Sawfish.
Anyone out there ever seen anything like this?
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD |
while others are close to being
empty. As soon as I can afford a CD burner I'm going to archive everything
off and either turn it back into one large partition or *maybe* 2 or 3
larger partitions. I don't know yet.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you w
aving any of thes files so i wounder whis packages they are in
> so i can instal them.
For future reference, there is a search engine at:
http://www.debian.org/distrib/packages
where you can search by filename to find what package they belong to.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD
er you will be asked to confirm moving read messages from
your spool mailbox to your `mbox'' mailbox, or as a result of a
`mbox-hook'' command.
Check your ~/.muttrc and see what those options are set to.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go t
re information is needed.
What have you done so far?
What, if any, error messages are you seeing?
What are the exact commands you have tried?
What release of Debian are you using?
What kernel?
What version of the pcmcia drivers are you using?
What make and model of PCMCIA card do you have?
--
Mike
I manage.
So I'd say go ahead and give exim a whirl. I found it quite easy to
configure, and use its built-in filtering capability to sort my email into
seperate directories. Quite easy to deal with, and I found the syntax of
the filter easier to understand than procmail&
ve
not enabled more VT's than what comes stock). Having said that, is there a
particular reason you don't just use an xterm (or rxvt or eterm or ...)?
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As fa
Markus Fischer wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 06, 2000 at 02:53:18PM -0400, Mike Werner wrote :
> > Now, from any of those labs when you logon, you basically get
> > connected automatically to naur. All of the account info is (I presume)
> > stored on naur as well.
>
>
ing that the Windoze machine has an entry in the /etc/hosts
file on the Linux box. Otherwise, the Windoze machine's hostname can be
replaced by its numeric IP.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As f
ust the name of this system,
that'd be a huge help - at least I'd know what to search on. ::grin::
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Redmond as possible!"
'91 GS500E|
Morgantown WV | Only dead fish go with the flow.
it lasted all of about an hour before I got rid of it and went back to
Debian. I find the package management under Debian - using apt - to be
*much* easier than dealing with rpm's. apt also has far better dependancy
handling than what I saw with RedHat.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD |
did my last dist-upgrade, so I know quite how you feel.
::grin:: Here's hoping they do come soon.
> Excuse me whilst I pop out and shoot myself.
Oh, I don't think anything quite *that* drastic is called for. How about,
oh, say, 10 lashes with a piece of spaghetti (al dente, of co
Corey Popelier wrote:
> I see this is now debbed in woody, anyone done the upgrade from 3.3.6
> yet? Any problems?
Where did you see this? I just did an apt-get update, and the X versions
are still at 3.3.6
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want
#x27;s site via apt-get - I had
gone to 4.73 but had problems with it so went back to 4.72.
Just to be sure of myself, I just fired up Netscape. Got it grabbing the
weather radar loop now. XMMS is also playing - Mason William's "Classical
Gas" - without a hitch. Looks li
sitting here. The quality is
quite good, it's *way* faster than the inkjet downstairs, and I read that
it's just about *the* cheapest printer to run per sheet out there. I'm
using lprng and magicfilter for printing, and setting up the LJIII was a
snap.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD
27;ve done it with slink, potato, and now woody. In the process I've
gone through a few different mother board / CPU combos. It would seem that
whatever the problems with gpm and X cooperating are, they are most
certainly not consistent.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you w
email. After
editing your message, when you get the mutt screen where you would press y
to send the message press a instead. You'll be prompted for the filename to
attach. As usual, hit ? for the directory browser.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?&q
.6-7
got X back up and running here. I think I'll be holding onto a copy of that
particular version for a little while. It's about 420k or so - if you need
a copy I can email it to you or something.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
Antonio Rodriguez wrote:
> What's the corresponding command in Linux to "tracert" from DOS to trace
> a rout? What package contains it?
The command is traceroute, in the package traceroute. Another utility of
that same type is called mtr, in the package mtr.
--
Petr [Dingo] Dvorak wrote:
> On Sat, 17 Jun 2000, Mike Werner wrote:
>
> ->Petr [Dingo] Dvorak wrote:
> ->> hi,
> ->>
> ->> well, this is the deal, all the mailing lists what i'm on have
> X-Mailing-List
> ->> field in the mess
sembly \
wvuarc debian-laptop
# - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
I'm not too sure what the exact difference between email lists that are
listed under the lists entry, and the email lists that are listed under the
subscribe entry. So I put &
end of my exim.conf - I'm not sure if it's
important where in the file that line is, but that's where the original file
had something similar.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Redmond as possible!"
'91 GS500E|
Morgantown WV | Only dead fish go with the flow.
ssion to the
> end of the session.
tcpdump might be usable for that. The package name is, appropriately
enough, tcpdump
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Redmond as possible!"
'91 GS500E
Everything
seems to work just fine here, so I've not been worried.
Oh yeah - I'm running woody.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Redmond as possible!"
'91 GS500E|
Morgantown WV | Only dead fish go with the flow.
Mike Werner wrote:
> Jim Breton wrote:
> > On Sat, Jun 10, 2000 at 10:54:32PM -0400, Mike Werner wrote:
> > > What I couldn't find was *any* mention of was how to *use* stdin from
> > > within a shell script. Anyone here ever done anything like this?
> >
&g
Jim Breton wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 10, 2000 at 10:54:32PM -0400, Mike Werner wrote:
> > What I couldn't find was *any* mention of was how to *use* stdin from
> > within a shell script. Anyone here ever done anything like this?
>
>
> Yes, but this may or may not be
to *use* stdin from
within a shell script. Anyone here ever done anything like this?
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Redmond as possible!"
'91 GS500E|
Morgantown WV | Only dead fish go with the flow.
John McBride wrote:
> Mike Werner wrote:
> >
> > John McBride wrote:
> >
> > > Actually, I strongly prefer startx, but don't see how to disable gdm
> > > without breaking helix-gnome -- it seems to require gdm. You can't
> > > simply ed
n the /etc/rc.x directories, while
leaving the gdm start script in the /etc/init.d directory. Also, the gdm
package stays installed. It just doesn't get used unless you explicitly
call it yourself.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
he latest version of bind on potato.
HAL9000:~$ dpkg -S nslookup
dnsutils: /usr/share/man/man1/nslookup.1.gz
dnsutils: /usr/lib/nslookup.help
dnsutils: /usr/bin/nslookup
nslookup is off in another package - dnsutils
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go t
e memory. As far as I know, all the filter does is
some translation from whatever you are trying to print into whatever language
the printer speaks.
> Thanks for your help.
You're quite welcome.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
th an LJII, but it works
very nicely here with an LJIII. Should be at least worth trying.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Redmond as possible!"
'91 GS500E|
Morgantown WV | Only dead fish go with the flow.
check:
http://www.debian.org/distrib/packages
as to which version of those packages is in which release of Debian.
--
Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?"
| "As far from Redmond as possible!"
'91 GS500E|
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