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00:38
@alphabet ^^
01:17
@Laurel good luck, you'll need it
@Laurel now I need to learn why people trust wikiHow
@Laurel Even the raccoons are moving to suburbia, though.
Can't blame a raccoon for wanting to go up in the world
@alphabet even the illustrator there is like WTF
Juggalo face paint is an offensive form of "raccoonface"
01:22
@alphabet That was a roller coaster of facial expressions lol
@alphabet How to be insufferable
Whoop whoop
@alphabet I thought that said jigalo which I now remember is properly spelled gigolo
@M.A.R. I'm a little concerned what's going to happen when I go to sleep and can't leave persuasive comments. However, if anyone was going to do this, I have pretty much everything going in my favor that could be (including the fact that I moderate both English sites)
@M.A.R. Well, the ACLU are big fans.
Oh that reminds me…
01:28
Heh
@alphabet The ads kinda want them to be caught tho
@alphabet Oh that reminds me.
@Feeds what can you do as an RO that you can't as a mod? @Laurel
Or is it more like a "I'm available in chat, for anyone wondering" signal?
I'm a heavy metal fan.
Said the windmill.
01:40
Lead poisoning is no joke
snirt
@Laurel "it's wrong and immoral. You should be ashamed of entertaining thoughts of killing innocent people. Now here's how the Unabomber made his bombs."
@M.A.R. There's some edge case with events or something that would probably never come up. I just did it to symbolize that I'm going mad with power
I haven't heard a mwahaha from you yet
@Mitch reasonably smart supervillains only do it when you're dangling over a fire or acid pit, not before
01:45
@Mitch I did it earlier
@Laurel Oh, that's useful, I mean, terrible.
Crocodiles and snakes are pretty 'done'
3 hours ago, by Laurel
Hahahahaha I hope this goes well
@Mitch roast croc? Yum?
Anyway apparently room owners get pinged if people request to join their chat, which couldn't even happen here afaik since this is public
@Cerberus reminds me of the news a while earlier about an old lady writing a "how to kill your husband" novel or something being convicted of shooting her husband
@Laurel Oh, my, this is good, I have read the first paragraph.
Will continue reading.
@Laurel I'm so sorry my liege. You have a wonderful laugh. Please continue ---over---- using your powers
Did you know you can make bombs with Drano and tinfoil?
Just some helpful life advice
It is a very dense article without these helpful illustrations
@Laurel just be ready to use a diamond first from time to time. I suspect some notorious close voters will not really change anything in their closure patterns
@alphabet just to make sure I don't mind: Are you happy? And are you not hurting anyone?
@Cerberus Wait, just to be clear you mean the meta post, not the chat comment lol right???
@alphabet By step 3, the man was kissing another man lol. Also this:
I'm having skin cracks on the back of my hand again, from taking just 100 mcg L-methylfolate
How to Rule the Universe Without Attracting the Attention of the Nursing Staff
> Applying the principles of the Tone Scale and Dynamics to your life is thought to help eliminate the reliance of modern society on mood-altering substances and other primarily commercial methods of “self-improvement.”
Yep, checks out. The one thing that tells me it's a religion is it's practitioners say "you're an unhappy drug addict because you don't believe in our stuff".
@CowperKettle you should write one on "How to Defeat Both Diabetes Type 1 and 2"
02:02
@M.A.R. Semaglutide just two days ago was shown to defeat Diabetes type 1
Drug in Ozempic may enable patients with newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes to stave off insulin use, small study suggests edition.cnn.com/2023/09/08/health/…
A recent trial from Novo Nordisk showed semaglutide also helps obese people without diabetes, and it's caused a bit of ruckus over at Europe about subsidies and funding
If you take semaglutide with lobster bisque, it will also help gain muscle mass.
@M.A.R. No and not intentionally
@alphabet then Tolkien was lying to me about gayness
> Consider completing an audit. Auditing is completed by meeting with an experienced Scientologist who will guide you through the process, asking questions and reading your Thetan quality with an E-meter.
02:09
I'll buy some hydrocortison ointment, maybe it will stop skin cracks from appearing.
They are painful.
Word of the minute: metaphysis - it's where the epiphysis joins the diaphysis.
IIRC diabetes can cause skin problems
> The metaphysis is the region where the epiphysis joins the diaphysis; in a growing bone this corresponds to the calcified layer of the epiphyseal plate together with the interdigitating bone
@alphabet In me, it's from L-methylfolate
@alphabet Bad! I thought I told you to be happy. And because I'm a moderator you have to listen to me
@CowperKettle on dialysis, there was a short period that I took allopurinol. It gave me horrible itching and an exoliative dermatitis. Two years after the transplant, I started needing it again, but nothing happened this time
Well, I'm assuming the skin reactions that still sometimes happen are due to prednisolone
I feel myself psychologically better on L-methylfolate, but it keeps getting me painful skin, oozing blood from cracks
02:15
@Laurel Haha correct.
> Apple Researchers Propose a New Tensor Decomposition Model for Collaborative Filtering with Implicit Feedback
I wonder what a 19th century scientist would make of this headline.
@CowperKettle would be amazed at what we can do with an apple today
I once spent a week wondering what my downstairs neighbors were doing that was causing the floor to shake. Then it started happening outside also. Then I realized it was a side effect of lamotrigine.
@alphabet effort tremor?
Tacrolimus gives me essential tremor. Usually only noticeable when I'm pouring something in a beaker
@M.A.R. No, vertigo. At its worst, it felt like I kept suddenly accelerating and then coming to a sudden stop, despite not moving.
In the early days after a transplant, when tacrolimus dose is high, the patients do some sort of involuntary African dance with their hands
That's bad, I'm sorry to hear that!
Y'know what's fun? Very slowly increasing your dosage of a medication to prevent "toxic epidermal necrolysis"
@CowperKettle eh, usually they're pretty happy days for the patients. Being dialysis free is a great reward.
02:24
@alphabet How long did it take to get the seizure meds right?
The folder where the patients sign looks hilarious though
@alphabet if it's for your epilespy, TEN is not the reason. AFAIK SJS/TEN is idiosyncratic, meaning a clear relation with the dose is not established
@M.A.R. It wasn't for epilepsy, it's because I was Special Sad.
Have I mentioned that my brain is f'ed up in a wide variety of ways?
Oh, I was wrong
@Laurel Actually no time. The first medication I tried (levetiracetam) worked. I ended up switching to a different one (brivaracetam) for...complicated reasons.
02:28
But, like, 51% wrong
@alphabet Ah, I guess the other stuff that was going on got in the way?
> Other than age, there are as yet no factors identified that are known to predict the risk of occurrence or the severity of rash caused by lamotrigine. There are suggestions, yet to be proven, that the risk of rash may also be increased by coadministration of lamotrigine with valproate (includes valproic acid and divalproex sodium), exceeding the recommended initial dose of lamotrigine, or exceeding the recommended dose escalation for lamotrigine. However, cases have been reported in the absence of these factors.
OTOH, in the adult dosing subsection, UpToDate says
> Adhere strictly to recommended initial dose, titration schedules, and adjustments to reduce the risk of severe, including potentially fatal, cutaneous reactions and other hypersensitivity reactions.
@M.A.R. Here, at least, you're supposed to extremely slowly increase your dose over a period of several weeks.
Yeah, it's the "titration schedules" part.
@alphabet same here, but I used to think the slow titration is due to the pharmacological actions of lamotrigine. I knew about the valproate interaction, but I still think dose doesn't have much to do with it
I guess I have the impression that epilepsy is hard to treat but my perception of that is not even based on epilepsy but pseudo-seizures that everyone thought was epilepsy
Which is definitely hard to treat with anticonvulsants except maybe through placebo. But they often have side effects
02:33
@Laurel depends. It's certainly harder to treat than a sore throat . . . Uh, most sore throats. It's kinda like saying "cancer is hard to treat". It again depends. ALL in kids isn't that hard to treat.
Tl;dr: they thought the levetiracetam might be contributing to my mood issues (though I'd been taking it for years without issues), so they tried switching entirely to lamotrigine. The lamotrigine fixed my mood issues but I started getting partial seizures. So I had to go back onto a racetam drug also, but they chose brivaracetam since it (possibly) has a lower risk of psychiatric side effects.
It was a fun year.
@Laurel It depends. I had it very easy; for some people it's much harder to treat.
@alphabet it could always be worse. It sounds like it was hit-or-miss
@M.A.R. Indeed. The joys of polypharmacy.
When I grow up, I wanna make new drugs that don't give you lethal rashes
02:39
@alphabet I want to try levetiracetam. What if it will stop my "sensory seizures".
But I should get a prescription somewhere.
Poetic of the day: mew (common gull)
As I recall, nobody has any effing clue why anticonvulsants help bipolar disorder
> From helm to sea they saw him leap,
As arrow from the string,
And dive into the water deep,
As mew upon the wing.
@alphabet Because the "calm down" neurons?
I have...some sort of cyclic mood disorder that doesn't meet normal diagnostic criteria. Lamotrigine mostly fixed things. Yay.
@M.A.R. Yeah, some epilepsy is so bad that doctors decide to cut the brain in half to stop it. It's so fascinating, I used to research this type of stuff a lot
Just had to find the highest dose that didn't cause constant vertigo.
02:42
@alphabet There's a lot of drugs like that. I think even some otc painkiller too
Where we just don't know why they work
Yeah, Tylenol is one of them.
@alphabet The golden standard in bipolar is lithium
Anyway, I am done ranting about my mental problems
But one needs to closely monitor its blood levels
I tried lithium, it felt nice, but my blood sugar went high.
And I was sleepy.
Corpus callosotomy is a palliative surgical procedure for the treatment of medically refractory epilepsy. In this procedure the corpus callosum is cut through in an effort to limit the spread of epileptic activity between the two halves of the brain.After the operation the brain has much more difficulty sending messages between the hemispheres. Although the corpus callosum is the largest white matter tract connecting the hemispheres, some limited interhemispheric communication is still possible via the anterior commissure and posterior commissure. "Efficacy and relatively low permanent morbidity...
02:46
Eponymous of the day: Couvelaire uterus (uteroplacental apoplexy)
> a life-threatening condition in which loosening of the placenta (abruptio placentae) causes bleeding that penetrates into the uterine myometrium forcing its way into the peritoneal cavity.
Imagine having two functional but separate halves of the brain. I think research shows that they usually decide to work together but not always
@Laurel well, there's "hasn't entered the textbooks yet" don't-know, "we're almost sure" don't-know, and "no bloody idea" don't-know.
The lattermost is pretty rare. It's a big world and some pharmacologist somewhere daydreams about the mechanism of action of some drug and publishes it
@alphabet I don't mind listening btw
We don't know why antipsychotics or anticonvulsants stop the cycling in bipolar, but we have quite a few ideas
With acetaminophen, it's "we're almost sure but there's more to find out".
@CowperKettle IIRC that's mostly to prevent manic episodes which I haven't had.
02:51
@alphabet Lithuim also reduces suicidality and looks like it does something good to neuroplasticity, if I remember correctly
But its safe range is so narrow.
@alphabet most bipolar cases are like that, though of course I have no idea about your diagnosis. The guy is manic for two weeks and deflated for two years.
@M.A.R. I haven't had a hypomanic episode that quite met the diagnostic criteria, hence the lack of a definitive diagnosis.
I failed the test for depression by one point. Gathered too few points.
I did have this one...thing between depressive episodes. I was too aware that my mind wasn't functioning normally to enjoy it, which I suppose is a good thing.
@alphabet Can you exercise?
03:02
I'm pretty proud that I've been exercising regularly lately :3
I didn't use to
I run, but I get worse from it mentally.
At least for a couple days after a run.
That's pretty weird. I wonder why
I feel emotional and ruminational (depressive repeating thoughts)
I don't like running so I've been doing biking lately. Imma get a gym membership so I can get back to swimming too
This is good!
BRB
03:05
I've noticed myself having obsessive thoughts while biking but it's actually just something stupid that makes me laugh lol
I guess it's good to know it can go both ways
 
3 hours later…
06:07
My ruminative thoughts are very primitive
Previously I had only read about such things. Back in the 2000s. And in 2018, they started, so I was not much surprised.
06:23
Commentator says incorrect name and country for the Egypt's leader, you can hear in background someone correcting him by saying "Egypt" XD
07:00
Today was my fastest ParkRun this year.
07:12
Congratulations!
Wordle 812 5/6

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I shoudda done better on this.
@Xanne Спасибо!
07:35
> Even though more studies are needed to confirm our results, our study suggests that statins can prevent colorectal cancer in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which is a high-risk group for this kind of cancer,” says the study’s first author Jiangwei Sun news.ki.se/…
> There were also fewer deaths from colorectal cancer in the statin group (20) than in the non-statin group (37) during the study period, and deaths regardless of cause (529 versus 719).
@CowperKettle пожалуйста
Is that appropriate?
@Xanne Да :)
07:54
Wordle 812 3/6

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It's all white or all green!
 
4 hours later…
12:11
Word of the evening: high-touch - involving personal attention and service: She delivers the high-touch service her clients demand.
12:34
(business lingo)
 
1 hour later…
13:44
I saw about 1.5 meters long and quite thick black snake where I go for walk. It crossed the road about 15-20 meters ahead me. I could spot it because it was black. It made my walk more challenging. I had to be vigilant later.
Another small snake these days is roaming in our backyard every other day.
Snakes are more common here during these months.
@Laurel This is for people who never learned politeness as a child.
@Robusto The article or the "are you gay" quiz for the people reading the article?
@Laurel The "How to act around gay people ..." thing.
Yeah, agreed. I just thought the ad was ironic lol
Well, yeah.
I wonder if there's a passage in there that explains how those people can express their non-acceptance by denying those people their rights through gerrymandering, SCOTUS picks, and so on.
You know, peacefully.
13:55
Nah, I think you're thinking of a different WikiHow article
#Worldle #596 1/6 (100%)
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⭐⭐⭐🪙
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
Could you guys please tell me if this sentence sounds fine to you?

When people in the movie industry are asked to name the best films of all time, the movie Citizen Kane is often top on the list.
@MichaelRybkin 👍
You might also try ".. the movie Citizen Kane often tops the list."
🌎 Sep 9, 2023 🌍
🔥 25 | Avg. Guesses: 4.33
🟧🟥🟥🟥🟩 = 5

globle-game.com
#globle
Wordle 812 5/6

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The MED has "strtchith" listed under its entry for "stretch" v. (which it marks as an error). Am I the only one who thinks that's weird? Like not only the fact that they list typos but really who would write that???
Maybe someone is putting together a dictionary of all the possible errors in English spelling? It's going to be a big book.
14:08
@Robusto Thank you very much.
Well, I guess there was less text back then so they could afford to list every mistake. But it would be weird if someone tried to do it with today's English
@Laurel The samples of text from before Gutenberg are pretty sparse.
I mean, it's not only possible but easy to have read every surviving scrap of Old English (if you can read it, that is).
Googling says there's only 400 surviving works.
But I think that many of these are paywalled
Which sucks. I've always had better luck with Middle English
@Laurel And I'm sure most are in academic and other libraries.
@Mitch i must say the movie helped me remember the reactions and order of speeches. Maybe because I was already affiliated with the scenes, the whole act 1 was coming I only did the first 3 scenes by god's grace the 5 and 10 markers were from these scenes🥸. I was keen on watching the movie because our teacher showed one scene in class everytime after finishing the analysis. I didnt find her version online but I watched the bbc's 1980 ish adaptation
14:18
Daily Quordle 593
6️⃣🟥
🟥3️⃣
m-w.com/games/quordle/
Yeesh.
14:53
Daily Octordle #593
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Score: 66
15:08
Today's run. I was extremely depressed, but did my best time this year.
My bones.
The left femoral head is really huge.
There's indeed something in the left iliac bone.
Some dark area.
The operator wrote that it might be a bone island, which is just an innocuous thing.
I wonder if I can see kidneys there, just under the spine. If these are they, they are huge too.
And the gluteus muscles are curiously layered, in like three big layers.
Daily Quordle 593
9️⃣8️⃣
6️⃣5️⃣
m-w.com/games/quordle/
15:24
@Vikas Can you discern their species?
Maybe some are not dangerous.
In the Urals, we have vipers, but I haven't seen one uraloved.ru/gaduka
Daily Octordle #593
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4️⃣5️⃣
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Score: 65
Black viper on the shore of the Ai river
Over the last 10 years, only one woman died of being bitten, because she visited the doctors too late.
15:40
> The initial difficulty is in defining the word "God". It is equally impossible to intelligently affirm or deny any proposition unless there is at least an understanding, on the part of the affirmer or denier, of the meaning of every word used in the proposition. To me the word "God" standing alone is a word without meaning. ... So long as the word "God" is undefined I do not deny "God".

> —Charles Bradlaugh
Bradlaugh of the day.
Hi
I just got my 2,000 points on ELU a few minutes ago.
I can edit posts.
I think that I feel a bit like a god--or at least like a Titan.
@Conrado Congratulations!
Thanks!
@Conrado Better get to work then :D Congrats, editing posts without review is the best
15:50
> "Our goals are clear, the tasks are determined. To work, comrades!" - Nikita Khruschev, USSR, 1963
We are the Borg. Lower your shields and surrender your ships. We will add your grammatical and phonetic distinctiveness to our own. Your word-smithery will adapt to service us. Resistance is futile.
Alright, enough celebration for today. Thanks for the greetings, Tootle-oo!
Toodle-oo. With a d.
15:56
Interjection: toodeloo
  1. (UK, dated) goodbye, farewell, see you soon
> Dated and very rarely used in North America. Although likely to be understood, it is likely to be considered humorous, and may be used in a parody of British English speakers. (This is also true in modern British English usage.)
Interjection: toodle pip
  1. (humorous, Britain) Goodbye.
  2. Right, I'm off. Toodle pip!
"tu as reussi" - you are successful
@CowperKettle You made it.
According to my current rep rate, I should join that club in 18 years :-)
16:06
Abraham Lincoln’s wife was having an age crisis.
She screamed, “Nobody will find me beautiful now that I’m 30!” Abraham replied, “Well I think you’re a score and a half.”
I would like to brag that, in 8 months, I have acquired nearly 13,000 Internet Points
@alphabet This is great. I loved the feeling of investigating this or that issue in language.
But now my brain is not working, so I'm just scrolling the news for hours.
> Allen Frances, emeritus professor of psychiatry at Duke University, argues: "We're seeing a fad in evolution: Just as ADHD has been the diagnosis du jour for 15 years or so, this is the beginning of another. This is a public health experiment on millions of kids... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_disengagement_syndrome
"du jour" gave rise to the Russian verb dezhurit' (to be on duty)
On dezhurit = he is on duty.
Дежурные по школе = hall monitors (in school)
Dezhurniye
16:36
@alphabet Be careful where you're bragging. By 8 months I had close to 50,000 fake internet points and the Legendary gold badge.
13K? I did that in about 10 weeks.
Of course, I had more time back then, when I was still unretired. Plus every build of the web app that I did took 25 minutes, so I had time to kill.
Wasn't that back in the time when you could post "X is a pretty good movie for learning English" and get upvoted? Lol
@Laurel Find one of my answers that says that.
Well it's not your answer I found but @Cerberus' actually :p if we're going to be calling people out
There were a few one-sentence answers, but they weren't stupid ones.
This answer remains my proudest work: english.stackexchange.com/questions/610579/…
16:43
Anyway, what happened with me was I discovered meta sites and never got fully back on the rep train lol
I think in only two or three cases I gamed the system by answering in a way that I knew would gain lots of "shine" from the proles.
@alphabet My proudest work has not been on any SE site.
@alphabet My favorite answer of mine is about milk and fish semen
Milk has semen? Who knew?
Everyone who read my answer knows that
Careful, or the nuns will be telling the little Catholic girls not to bathe in milk like Cleopatra.
16:46
Sounds like Catholic school was a lot more exciting than I thought
I guess even Hell could be exciting.
Jan 28, 2011 at 15:19, by Kosmonaut
Not everybody can be like Robusto and get there in less than 2 months.
He's talking about the 10K threshold.
@CowperKettle I believe the origin is more de jour than du jour here.
17:39
Emails I Never Finished Reading Vol. XVIII No. 565: "We're making some changes to our legal agreements that will apply to you. There is no action needed from you today, but if you would like to learn more, you can ..."
18:26
A good example of a question that isn't allowed under current policies but will be when the rule change takes effect:
0
Q: How do you capitalize when someone is lord of something?

Jason Patterson"Edwin Douright is the lord of the city." "The lord of the city is Edwin Douright." How is the word 'lord' treated in each example in terms of capitalization?

I'd defend leaving this open. It's a bit trickier than it sounds because of course in some locations "Lord" is a real formal title whereas in others it's only used in a metaphorical sense.
@CowperKettle The ones we see (my parents see more often) in backyard are likely less dangerous because the neighbours aren't afraid of catching them and packing in bag and taking them away. And they are not very black. The one I saw on road today was black. Could be dangerous. But I couldn't spot its body pattern from that distance. I'm also curious to find out their species so I might not need to be that afraid. The farmers are not afraid. Even when they could be found in the fields.
@alphabet Looks like a pretty dull question to me. Is that what this site is for, really?
Once my uncle became victim of a snake bite while he was working on field at night (watering the crops). It was venomous and it was like a miracle he survived. His body got swollen and all. There were no doctors nearby as they lived in remote area.
It was probably sidewinder snake. They use a local name and I did some research and this is the closest I could find.
Or it could be similar species.
Once a funny yet scary thing happened to one of my uncles lol. A snake was on his chest while he was sleeping outside. He woke up and obviously it gave him nightmare. I enquired them what snake is it. They have a belief about this snake which is probably only fantasy. So this led me to ask this question:
-3
Q: What species of snake in India "drinks breaths" according to local customs?

VikasIn Rajasthan in India, locals know a snake called peevna in the local language. Many of my relatives live there in villages in open deserts. They see many kinds of snakes every day. The word peevna is basically derived from the Hindi word peena, which is a verb meaning to drink. But in the case ...

However I'm still not sure what snake it was. The answers on this question are probably the closest ones.
I wanted to clear their misconception.
 
3 hours later…
21:54
Rootl game #100

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22:06
@Laurel OK you really are a moderator.
@Laurel What did you find?
@Cerberus Wait, are you just realizing this now? I'm pretty sure I've known I was a moderator since the end of 2021
@Laurel I didn't realise you really were like that.
Because I'm not.
@Cerberus I know it's you because there's the right number of e's: english.stackexchange.com/a/7481/191178
@Cerberus Should I feel insulted????
I have almost 6k on Stack Overflow because I stopped trying to get rep too soon after I started
@Laurel Hah.
As opposed to all the mongrels?
@Laurel Au contraire!
I'm a fake moderator because I'm not interested in Meta and policy and stuff, really.
@Cerberus There's another guy out there with almost your name but he doesn't have the right number of Es
@Cerberus AHA a confession
What moderator doesn't have a gold tag badge in [discussion]???
22:19
@Laurel Right, a mongrel.
@Laurel I have no idea about badges.
It may not even be for this site but it's gold
Impressive.
It makes me feel like I'm 1/4 moderator on Meta Stack Overflow, closing all those questions as duplicates
 
1 hour later…
23:37
So busy!
23:54
13
A: Good movies for learning English

Cerberus - Reinstate MonicaIndeed, there are many options. My advice would be to always choose a film or series that is just above your level: that way you need to exert yourself and you learn the most. Pause and Google up any phrase that you do not understand. If you are interested in politics, I recommend Yes Minister, ...

So I don't see what is beyond the pale about this answer. It's certainly not indicative of glib insufficiency. It exactly answers the question. It's probably better for Meta, but this was before such informal "rules" sprang up. @Laurel ^
Also, it's "Community Wiki" ...
It's the product of it's time. I look at it and say, wow things were so different. No hard feelings for those involved
@Robusto It was converted to that after some answers were posted

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