OnePlus 5 Telephoto Lens Doesn’t Have 2x Optical Zoom


It has only been a couple of days since OnePlus formally unveiled the OnePlus 5. The company has already said that it has proven to be its best-selling flagship smartphone to date. The OnePlus 5 is certainly one of the most feature-packed smartphones from this company and its CEO has taken to Twitter in order to clear up some confusion regarding one of the handset’s biggest features.

The OnePlus 5 happens to be the first smartphone from OnePlus to feature a dual camera system at the back. The system is made up of a 16 megapixel f/1.7 aperture wide-angle lens coupled with a 20 megapixel f/2.6 aperture telephoto lens.

OnePlus’s claims of 2x zoom offered by the new camera system have been reported without context, it seems, as many online blogs have run with the story that the handset offers 2x optical zoom. That’s not the case.

OnePlus CEO Carl Pei has confirmed via Twitter that the company is actually claiming that its new flagship device has 2x lossless zoom, not optical. He further explained that the OnePlus 5 doesn’t promise 2x optical zoom, but 2x lossless zoom. The handset’s optical zoom is at 1.6x while the remaining 0.4x “is realized through SmartCapture multiframe technology,” he said.

What this means is that the OnePlus 5 utilizes a combination of optical and digital technologies to achieve the desired result. OnePlus will be available for purchase on June 27 with prices starting at $479.

OnePlus 5 Telephoto Lens Doesn’t Have 2x Optical Zoom , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

New Asus Vivobook S Brings Updated Design And More Power


If you’ve been a fan of Asus notebooks, you’re probably going to like what the company has announced today. The company has launched the all new Vivobook S510 today. The notebook comes with a slightly updated design and more powerful internals. It offers a combination of respectable performance coupled with a look and feel that can hold its own against the competition.

Asus first unveiled its Vivobook S lineup at Computex this year. While it doesn’t have qualities that enable it to knock the competition out of the park, it offers a good experience for the price that Asus is selling it for.

The new VivoBook S, the S510 to be precise, features a 15.6 inch Full HD 1920×1280 pixel resolution display. It can be configured with an Intel Core i7-7500U or i7-7200U processor with 8GB of RAM and up to 1TB of storage.

Additional specifications include an integrated SD card reader, USB Type-C, USB Type-A, USB 2.0, and HDMI ports. It also features a standard 3.5mm headphone jack. The notebook is powered by Windows 10 Home.

Those who are interested in purchasing this notebook can pick one up starting today. Prices start at $699 for the configuration with the Core i7-7500U processor and only goes up from there. The new Vivobook S is available for purchase via the company’s online store as well as from retailers like B&H, Newegg, ABT, and Computer Upgrade King.

New Asus Vivobook S Brings Updated Design And More Power , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

A Simple Guide To The GOP Health Care Bills

Senate Republicans released their draft health care bill Thursday, unveiling a proposed rollback of Medicaid expansion and funding while ensuring hefty tax cuts for the wealthy and health care companies. Among other things, the bill reduces the number of middle-income people eligible to get tax credits for private health insurance, eliminates the individual and employer mandates, and bans Planned Parenthood receiving any federal funding for one year.

The Senate’s bill is similar to the one the House passed last month. The Senate bill would cut Medicaid more than the House measure, allow insurers to charge older people higher rates and permit states to waive rules guaranteeing insurance covers a basic set of benefits. The Senate bill does not include some of the particularly harsh aspects of the House legislation, including a provision that would let states end protections for people with pre-existing conditions.

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A Heroin Addict’s Appeal To President Trump

I didn’t vote for you. You see, I was born with a brain injury. Doctors at Children’s Hospital in Boston told my parents I would never be able to walk normally.

Young children are mean. As a young boy, insults, and laughs became a daily ritual. When I walked into a classroom, a restaurant, or down a street, people didn’t look into my eyes. They always looked down as I limped awkwardly along.

But I overcame and became a varsity athlete at a prep school outside of Boston. As a teenager, I grew strong, and anybody that made fun of my limp or my awkward gate became irrelevant.

Frankly, Mr. President, the day you mocked a disabled reporter should have been the end of your presidential candidacy.

That said, I for one am all for giving you a chance to “Make America Great Again.” Mr. President, I implore you to focus more of your efforts on the heroin epidemic that is crushing the American dream in every state in the Union.

I understand that the stigma and moral issues of heroin addiction run deep. Today’s heroin epidemic parallels the AIDS epidemic of the 1980s. The old school philosophy back then was, “Men having sex with men. It’s not natural. That’s God’s punishment.”

Although the diction has changed, the sentiment remains constant today. “I didn’t force them to stick a needle of heroin into their arm. Why should I be forced to pay for their rehabilitation?”

But you see, we are not just junkies, Mr. President. I am three decades clean, have won the prestigious du-Pont-Columbia as a journalist, written a Bestseller, became a WGA screenwriter and worked on The Fighter, a feature film that won two Academy Awards.

I have spoken to organizations and recovery centers all across America. And what amazed me the most were the rooms were filled with middle-class kids whose fathers were chief’s of police, firefighters, teachers, lawyers, and doctors.

Heroin addiction is insidious: in several states across this country, young women are selling themselves as sex-slaves to maintain their daily heroin habit.

Just recently, NPR did a radio program about heroin addicts that are purposely committing crimes, so they’ll be arrested and locked up to get the treatment they need.

Treatment is just not available on the streets because there aren’t any beds available in recovery centers. The medical community could never have prepared for the onslaught of heroin in their neighborhoods.

Mr. President, this epidemic was given birth by Purdue Pharma and their owners, the Sackler family. In fact, the Sacklers became known as the Godfathers of OxyContin and rang in at number 19 on last year’s Forbes annual list of America’s richest families.

Through Purdue Pharma, the Sackler family acquired a fortune with the blood of young Americans. Although, a judge convicted Purdue Pharma’s top executives in Federal Court of knowingly and willfully misleading consumers, unfortunately, your old friend Rudy Giuliani’s law firm got them off with a sweetheart deal.

As President of the United States, you have an opportunity to save countless lives. Please consider creating a “sin tax” similar to the cigarette and alcohol tax levied by several states. If big Pharma wants to do business on the backs of the American consumers suffering from chronic pain, force them to pay a “recovery tax.”

Please consider creating a work program for heroin addicts that want help. A simple, we’ll pay for your thirty-day recovery hospital and continued care, and you’ll work cleaning up roads or run down areas of your community to pay for it.

Finally, why not designate a line on the IRS tax forms for people to donate a dollar or more to help put an end to the suffering brought on by the countless deaths of promising young men and woman.

Mr. President, you have a daunting task in front of you. But you can’t “Make America Great Again” by sitting back and watching 4,380 Americans die every month from an accidental overdose of heroin. That’s right, 144 people a day die from an accidental overdose of opioids.

I have an 11-year-old son that is on the brink of growing up in a society that will be the most dangerous environment in America’s history. You see, Mr. Trump, not since your predecessor, Lyndon Johnson, has the youth of America been more in jeopardy.

Think about it; not since the Vietnam War has a generation been at greater risk to die between the ages of 18 to 25. Please help them. An entire generation is on the verge of being wiped out.

Ritchie Farrell is the author of I AM A HEROIN ADDICT.

Follow Ritchie Farrell on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ritchiefarrell1

Need help with substance abuse or mental health issues? In the U.S., call 800-662-HELP (4357) for the SAMHSA National Helpline.

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Boys Wear Skirts To Protest School's Anti-Shorts Policy Amid Heat Wave

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Dozens of boys in southwest England have defiantly swapped their pants out for pleated skirts after being forbidden from wearing shorts to school, despite a heat wave.

The students at Isca Academy in Exeter said they borrowed the skirts from sisters and female friends to protest the school’s dress code policy, which requires boys to wear the leg-covering garments while girls have the option of pants or skirts.

“We’re not allowed to wear shorts, and I’m not sitting in trousers all day, it’s a bit hot,” one of the boys told the BBC on Thursday.

The boys’ protest ended up going viral, with a photo of them lined up in skirts scoring more than 71,000 likes on Twitter as of Thursday afternoon.

Some of the boys’ mothers have sided with their sons.

“The girls are allowed to wear skirts all year round so I think it’s completely unfair that the boys can’t wear shorts,” Claire Reeves told Devon Live. “Boys just don’t have the option, and I am just really concerned about how the heat is going to affect him.”

As Reeves noted, the protest came as the country battles scorching temperatures that have reached the 90s.

Despite that potential health threat, Reeves complained that the school threatened to place her son in isolation all day if he showed up wearing shorts. If she kept him home, it’d be considered an unauthorized absence, she told Devon Live.

Students credited a teacher with suggesting they wear skirts instead of pants, though it’s believed that it was suggested in jest. After that, several boys showed up wearing the breathable garments, then dozens more followed.

When at least one of them said they were told that they couldn’t wear the skirts with hairy legs, they fetched razors and shaved them, the boys told Devon Live and The Guardian.

Fellow mom Claire Lambeth said she’s proud of her 15-year-old son, Ryan, who she said was one of the first to wear one.

“Ryan came up with the idea of wearing a skirt so that evening we borrowed one. He wore it the next day – as did five other boys. This morning there were about 50-60 of them in skirts,” she told The Guardian. “I didn’t expect it to take off like that. The school is being silly really – this is exceptional weather. I was very proud of Ryan. I think it was a great idea.”

Headteacher, Aimee Mitchell, wrote in a letter posted on the school’s website this week, that she would be “happy to consider a change” in the school’s dress code in the coming weeks, but not without consulting both students and their families.

In the meantime, students are allowed to remove their ties and undo the top buttons of their shirts, her letter said.

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Exploring NYC From Coney To Harlem: Fresh Art on The Streets This Summer

5 Neighborhoods That Are Popping With Murals and Street Art Right Now

Summer brings people out onto the streets. New Yorkers especially love to congregate on corners, stoops, public parks and plazas, sidewalks and on the streets to soak in the sun and the excitement of summer after its long winter season. With that in mind we want to point you to what’s new on the streets of the city when it comes to Street Art and Graffiti, scenes that are constantly reinventing themselves and moving.

Here are five destinations with fresh new murals and Street Art painted this year that you can track down and enjoy on your own in an afternoon. Take a break by sitting on a stoop or a bench and enjoy the sounds and energy of each neighborhood and have a hot dog or a slice of watermelon, a slice of pizza – maybe an Italian ice!

The Bushwick Collective in Brooklyn.

This 6 year old project spearheaded by Bushwick native Joe Ficalora continues to host international artists on walls spread on five blocks in this gentrifying neighborhood of Brooklyn. With more than a dozen freshly painted murals that were completed for this months annual block party, the cheek-to-jowl collection of murals feels like a treasure hunt of global styles all here to show off their best. While we still have the L train you can take it Jefferson et voilà!

Coney Art Walls in Coney Island, Brooklyn.

In its third year, Coney Art Walls is an initiative of Thor Equities and in a curatorial collaboration with art maven Jeffrey Deitch….This year’s edition of Coney Art Walls brings ten freshly painted murals by American and international artists to add to the collection of 30 or so murals painted during the past two editions. Here you will see an eclectic mix of 1970s era train writers to some of today’s multi-conceptualists take on the broader theme of Coney Island, its characters, its rides, its foot long hot dogs. A plethora of trains will take you there and be prepared to enjoy native graffiti in the “wild”on walls throughout the roughly 45 minutes train ride as your view rises on the elevated tracks. Take the N, Q, F, and D trains to Coney Island.

Welling Court Mural Project in Queens, NY.

The most community oriented among all of the festivals taking place in NYC, Welling Court just completed its 8th edition this month a part of Queens that feels ignored, yet now strangely is getting some high-end real estate?  With a less-structured program and a philosophy of inclusiveness the project attracts a diverse group of local, national and international artists seeking to participate and interact with these neighbors, some of them New Yorks’ newest members, in a weekend-long genuine summer block party. Located in Welling Court in Long Island City in the borough of Queens the walls spread over five blocks or so and can be accessed via the N train to 30th Ave. Take a bus to Welling Court or walk for about 15 minutes on 30th Ave towards the East River.

The L.I.S.A. Project NYC in Little Italy and The Lower East Side.

This Mural Program is the brainchild of Wayne Rada and Ray Rosa, who host artists from all over the world to come and beautify the old neighborhoods of Little Italy and parts of the Lower East Side both in Manhattan. Because its Manhattan and space and turf are contested, you’ll find the works scattered and surprisingly integrated into spots – evoking the element of “discovery” that organic Street Art and graffiti produces.

Not necessarily located on a specific set of blocks the murals are more spread out on several streets in and around Little Italy and can be reached taking a number of subways lines. We’ll advise you take the B or the D trains to Grand Street Station and make your way to Mulberry Street where you’ll enjoy large murals by Ron English and Tristan Eaton and a number of smaller pieces. As you wander, walk, stroll, or crawl through Little Italy you’re bound to discover big and small pieces that run a spectrum of Shepard Fairey, JPO, BKFoxx, KanoKid, The Drif, and Buff Monster.

Monument Art in El Barrio, Harlem.

Monument Art really concentrates on large high quality murals for El Barrio in NYC. Beginning in 2015 a dozen international artists were invited to paint for two weeks including massive murals by ROA, El Mac, Celso, Ever Siempre, Faith 47 and others others. This year German artist Case Maclaim was invited to paint one highly realistic mural on a school wall located at 310 East 113th Street. Take the 6 train to 110 Street and walk north on Lexington ave towards 113th street.

As you make your way north you’ll see some of the murals painted in 2015.

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Goop Deletes Yet Another Strange Health Claim After Getting Fact-Checked By NASA

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At this point, we’re not surprised when Goop’s health and wellness claims turn out to be shady. But this latest case is out-of-this-world strange. 

Gwyneth Paltrow’s lifestyle site pulled a claim about “energy-balancing” body stickers after Gizmodo spoke with a NASA expert who pointed out the claim was untrue. Goop initially promoted the pricey Body Vibes stickers ($60 for a 10-packby claiming they “rebalance the energy frequency in our bodies” and even treat certain ailments thanks in part to being made with the “same conductive carbon material NASA uses to line space suits so they can monitor an astronaut’s vitals during wear.”

But Gizmodo’s Rae Paoletta published a piece Thursday in which a NASA expert pointed out the agency’s spacesuits don’t contain conductive carbon material at all, not to mention he found the supposed science behind the product to be “a load of BS.” Goop subsequently pulled the spacesuit claim, though not the piece promoting the stickers.  

Meanwhile, Body Vibes’ website still claims its stickers “use an exclusive material originally developed for NASA” that “can hold specific frequency charges that naturally stimulate the human body’s receptors.” 

Suuure they do.

A post shared by Body Vibes (@mybodyvibes) on May 21, 2017 at 12:09pm PDT

Goop is no stranger to sticky health claims: This year alone, the brand caught fire for plugging needless products like leaf-scented perfume and pricey “anti-mold” shower heads. Then there’s the potentially dangerous health advice, like its suggestions to use vaginal eggs and consider iodine supplements, which can actually harm some healthy people. 

Through it all, Paltrow stands by her brand. She recently announced she’s taking a break from acting to focus on being a female business leader, a role “that people are not comfortable with,” she said this week at the Cannes Lions Festival. She also joked to Jimmy Kimmel about her site’s wacky recommendations earlier this month, saying, “I don’t know what the fuck we talk about!” 

After this latest go-round, we definitely don’t either. Meanwhile, Goop is looking into NASA’s comments, according to a statement sent to HuffPost: 

As we have always explained, advice and recommendations included on goop are not formal endorsements and the opinions expressed by the experts and companies we profile do not necessarily represent the views of goop. Our content is meant to highlight unique products and offerings, find open-minded alternatives, and encourage conversation. We constantly strive to improve our site for our readers, and are continuing to improve our processes for evaluating the products and companies featured. Based on the statement from NASA, we’ve gone back to the company to inquire about the claim and removed the claim from our site until we get additional verification.

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All That Stands Between Democrats And A Massive Freakout Is This Man

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Having lost a series of tantalizingly close congressional elections, the Democratic Party has now placed the fate of its collective psyche in the hands of an unassuming, soft-spoken pediatric neurologist.

Virginia Lt. Gov. Ralph Northam says he feels no enhanced pressure to win his gubernatorial race this fall, even though his will be most high-profile contest since Democrats lost the much-watched special election in Georgia’s 6th District.

“You always feel pressure,” he told HuffPost in an interview. “If you’re not feeling pressure then you’re not out there to win. And we plan to win in November.”

But while Northam may be playing it cool, he’s not being complacent. His campaign has plans to canvass the state, from the wealthy northern suburbs to coal country in the southwest. And they’re bringing along the big guns, too. Former President Barack Obama is expected to make his return to electoral politics this fall to join him on the trail, both Northam and Obama’s office confirmed.   

Northam, on the surface, is an odd type of candidate to be at the vanguard of Democratic resistance politics in the age of the great Donald Trump (New Jersey also holds a gubernatorial election this November, though its Democratic candidate faces a far easier path). He has an easygoing drawl and a seemingly preternaturally calm disposition. He is a doctor who served in the Ramstein Air Force Base as the head of neurology and neurosurgery during the first Gulf War and has a complicated political history. His campaign said he voted for Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996 but he also cast ballots for George W. Bush in 2000 and 2004.

“I knew it was important to vote, which I did. But I was underinformed politically,” he explained. “And, again, knowing what my principles and values are and knowing what Mr. Bush’s were, it was the wrong vote. And I said that to many people.”

Those Bush votes dogged him in the Democratic primary, where he went up against former Rep. Tom Perriello, the Obama alumnus backed by Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). But Northam went on to win that contest comfortably.

It’s easy to ascribe that victory to the support Northam enjoyed from virtually all of the Virginia Democratic establishment. But the insider-outsider framework is probably too simplistic to explain his triumph. Northam, after all, embraced or adopted much of the policy framework of the progressive community. Though he said he is “not there” on a Medicare-for-all approach as an alternative to Obamacare, he has called for a public option for insurance coverage, Medicaid expansion in his state, investments in preventive care and electronic medical records, and tougher approaches to pharmaceutical companies, including when addressing the opioid epidemic.

Occasionally his progressive streak was predetermined by Perriello’s presence in the primary ― such as the decisions to endorse a $15 minimum wage and free community college. But not always. Northam, for example, publicly supports decriminalizing marijuana, both in Virginia and nationally.

“What would happen after that is marijuana would be reclassified and then we can look at medicinal uses,” he explained. “And the point I like to make to people is there are probably around 100 or more medicines we use routinely that come from plants. And so there are many potential uses for marijuana.”

But his most astute political calculation was recognizing the advantages of running aggressively ― even viciously ― against Trump. Northam was defined by a commercial of his in which he called the president a “narcissistic maniac,” a description he began to repeat ad nauseam on the trail.

“I think President Trump is a very dangerous man,” he said of the line. “If one were to look up the criteria for narcissism under the DSM 5 [Diagnostic and Statistic Manual of Mental Disorders] … you will see that you can check every box. So I think it got people’s attention but it is also accurate. So I stand by how I refer to him and I do think he is dangerous.”

Though he’s on to a general election contest with former Republican National Committee Chair Ed Gillespie, Northam says he plans to still campaign against the president. The election, he explains, is at least partially “about Mr. Trump” because of how his agenda would impact Virginia should a more favorably disposed governor be in charge. (Asked if it would be fair for Gillespie to do the inverse, and tie him to House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Northam replied: “I would say she is not a narcissistic maniac.”)

It’s a strategy with some potential risk. Trump’s unpopularity has certainly allowed Democrats to make major inroads in traditionally Republican enclaves. But the party has scored only moral victories so far, and strategists are increasingly worried they’re burying a proactive agenda under layers of anti-Trump vitriol.

Northam doesn’t see the Virginia gubernatorial race as an extension of those special elections.

“That’s in Georgia. It is a red district they’re running in,” he said. “Virginia we know that statewide is blue and we want to make it bluer.”

But he also recognizes that he, and by extension his party, has work to do in winning back the very voters that flocked to the man he now decries as a narcissist.

“There are folks out there in rural Virginia that we have been trying to help. We’ve been trying to help them with workforce development and jobs and access to health care, and I go out there and volunteer at these clinics and these people go out there and line up at midnight,” he said. “It is their one day of the year where they can get access to a dentist and an eye doctor and a doctor. And they keep voting for the people that are doing absolutely nothing for them.”

“So we have got to change that mindset and let them know that yes, the Democratic Party is an all-inclusive party and we are there to help you.”

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Cardi B Covers 'Fader,' Talks About How Being Unapologetic Led To Her Success

Cardi B is the cover star of The Fader’s Summer Music issue.

The “Lick” rapper went deep with the magazine to discuss her journey from stripper to Instagram star to reality TV star to award-nominated artist.

The Bronx native told the publication she’s never been one to hide her big personality. But when she reached half a million followers on Instagram ― mostly due to her empowering and hilariously real videos ― fame wasn’t on her mind. She didn’t even think about following her dreams in music. She was all about handling the business in front of her.

“I was always scared to follow my dreams because if I follow my dreams and I fail, I can’t dream about it anymore,” she told The Fader. “It’s easier to settle for less.”

But a little encouragement from her manager led her to create her breakout single, “Foreva,” derived from one of her most memorable and viral moments on “Love & Hip-Hop: New York.”

Since dominating the reality series (and Instagram timelines), Cardi has dropped two mixtapes, signed a major deal with Atlantic Records and got nominated for two BET Awards. The rapper said though she feels guilty at times about her family struggling with money, she reminds herself of her work ethic.

“I do feel kind of guilty sometimes ’cause, like, I could buy myself a $5,000 dress or a $3,000 dress and I’m buying these things but I’m knowing that my cousin need money for the rent,” she said. “And then I gotta tell myself, ‘Stop feeling guilty. You worked for this.’ When I was a stripper, I used to strip like six nights a week. I used to bust my ass. And I didn’t stop [working]. Until today I work just as hard as I did before.”

Though Cardi is done with the strip club and reality television, she’s sure of her place in life now more than ever before, even with the criticism she may face.

“Am I ever gonna grow thick skin? No. I just gotta focus on making money,” she said. “Cause ain’t no going back. I’m gonna be famous forever.”

Read her entire profile on The Fader.

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This Guy Refused To Let A Wedding Get In The Way Of His Bromance

A good bromance doesn’t end just because one bro gets married. Just ask Mitch Jolliff

Before serving as best man in Kody and Brittney Frysinger’s wedding earlier this month, Mitch made a guest appearance in the couple’s engagement photos. The viral pics ― taken by photographer Lindsey Berger and posted on the Facebook page Love What Matters ― speak a thousand words: 

Poor guy. Mitch also made an appearance in the couple’s wedding pics. The 20-year-old still wasn’t taking news of the nuptials very well:  

In an interview with HuffPost, Mitch said he couldn’t be happier for his best friend, highly public third-wheeling aside. 

“We have been friends for seven years so our families are all friends,” he said. “In my best man speech, I talked about how Kody is an amazing father to his beautiful daughter with Brittney.” 

All three of the friends live in Arlington, Ohio and are marveling at their sudden viral fame, Kody told HuffPost in an email. (The couple are currently on their honeymoon.) 

“We thought it was a big deal when it hit five thousands shares, now it has well over 100 thousand. It’s nuts!” he said. “We were all just goofing around trying to have some fun and now it’s viral.” 

To the singles out there wondering what Mitch’s relationship status is, Brittney has some bad news. 

“We’ve been asked for updates and numerous people have asked if Mitch is single, but he actually has a beautiful girlfriend!” the 22-year-old said.

A beautiful girlfriend and a beautiful bromance? What a lucky man. 

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