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Jailbreak 4.3.2 Untethered iPhone 4/3Gs iPod Touch 4g/3g iPad JailBreak iPad 2 untethered – April 24, 2011 Jailbreak iPad 2 running 4.3 and 4.3.1 _Updated 2011 NeW Preserve iPhone 4 4.3.2 Baseband – Unlock with PwnageTool 4.3.2 … skip to main | skip to sidebar. Jailbreak 4.3.2 Untethered – 4.3.1 – Unlock iPhone 4 4.3.2 · Home · Jailbreak 4.3.2 Untethered (Windows-Mac) · Jailbreak – Unlock 4.3.2 (Windows) · Jailbreak iPad 2 (almost here! … Apple Testing T-Mobile USA iPhone 4 with A5 Chip, Might Be iPhone … skip to main | skip to sidebar. Jailbreak 4.3.2 Untethered – 4.3.1 – Unlock iPhone 4 4.3.2 · Home · Jailbreak 4.3.2 Untethered (Windows-Mac) · Jailbreak – Unlock 4.3.2 (Windows) · Jailbreak iPad 2 (almost here! … Android Style Login Screen With Windows 8 [Video] – GreenPois0n.Us Greenpois0n RC7 To Jailbreak iPad 2 Soon. Many people of us have iPad 2 in pockets but till now we didn’t find real jailbreak for it I know that most of you are waiting for greenpoi… iOS 4.3.1 Untethered Jailbreak is Solid [Confirmed] … How To Jailbreak Your iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS Using PwnageTool (iOS … Posted by iPhoneHacks on April 24, 2011 in Jailbreak iOS 4.3, Jailbreak iOS 4.3.1, Jailbreak iOS 4.3.2, Jailbreak iPad, Jailbreak iPad 2 , Jailbreak iPhone, Jailbreak iPhone 3GS, Jailbreak iPhone 4, Jailbreak iPhone 3G, Jailbreak iPod … PwnageTool 4.3.2 And Ultrasn0w 1.2.2 Released For iOS 4.3.2 … Posted by iPhoneHacks on April 24, 2011 in Jailbreak iOS 4.3, Jailbreak iOS 4.3.1, Jailbreak iOS 4.3.2, Jailbreak iPad, Jailbreak iPad 2 , Jailbreak iPhone, Jailbreak iPhone 3GS, Jailbreak iPhone 4, Jailbreak iPhone 3G, Jailbreak iPod … Patitas74 says: RT @d0nfyxn : JailBreak iPad 2 untethered – April 24, 2011 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pv8Fd_8t0ec

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A brief guide to dictator lit

When not tyrannising their people, it seems despots such as Colonel Gaddafi and Saddam Hussein like to turn their hand to writing books Colonel Gaddafi is a man of eccentricities. There is his bodyguard of “revolutionary nuns”, the heavily armed young women who follow him at all times. There are his flamboyant interviews and dotty gestures, such as last month’s announcement that all Libya’s soldiers and policemen had been simultaneously promoted. Then there are his stories. Yes, when he is not massacring rebels or inspecting women’s uniforms, Gaddafi is a

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Yemen leader says he will stand down

President’s warning he will not give in to ‘coup’ follows reports he agreed to quit within a month in exchange for immunity Yemen’s political crisis has reached a new peak with a defiant President Ali Abdullah Saleh warning that he will not give in to a “coup”, a day after reportedly agreeing to leave office within a month. Opposition activists claimed that Saleh, ready to step down in exchange for immunity from prosecution, was playing for time to avoid the fate of the presidents of Tunisia and Egypt, both overthrown by unprecedented displays of people power that have changed the Middle East and north Africa in the last three months. With Libya engulfed in a bloody civil war and escalating violence in Syria apparently signalling a determination by President Bashar al-Assad to crush mounting protests, the Arab Spring appears to be taking another ominous turn. Reports from the Yemeni capital, Sana’a, described thousands of demonstrators out on the streets demanding Saleh give up power at once and chanting: “No negotiation, no dialogue – resign or flee.” Saleh had on Saturday reportedly accepted a Saudi-led Gulf states initiative under which he would stand down in 30 days in exchange for immunity – evidently fearing the fate of Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak. But he sent a different signal in an interview on Sunday , fuelling suspicions that the move was just another tactical manoeuvre. “I will not accept being overthrown in a coup,” the Yemeni president insisted to BBC Arabic. “To whom shall I hand over power? Those who are trying to make a coup? No. We will do it through ballot boxes and referendums. We’ll invite international observers to monitor – but a coup is not acceptable.” Saleh, like Gaddafi and more recently Assad, warned that in “the storm of recent events” in the Arab world, al-Qaida stands to gain from chaos in his country. He also blamed Arab satellite TV channels and the western media for misrepresenting the situation. “Al-Qaida is moving into army camps,” Saleh said. “It’s a very dangerous situation. Why is the west not looking at this terrorist activity and the dangers it holds for the future?” In Syria, opposition supporters said 120 people had been killed in the weekend’s violence, most of them on Friday. William Hague, the foreign secretary, urged Assad to “respond to the legitimate demands of the Syrian people” and warned that Britons should leave the country as soon as possible. Syrian troops and security forces set up checkpoints across the country on Sunday amid reports of new shootings and mass arrests by the secret police as funerals took place for people killed on Saturday. Calls for Assad’s overthrow were heard at a funeral attended by thousands in the southern town of Nawa, where four protesters and five members of the security forces were reported killed. “It’s starting to look like the West Bank,” warned Radwan Ziadeh, the US-based head of the Damascus Centre for Human Rights, who has contacts across the country. Yemen Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Ian Black guardian.co.uk

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AV legal threat widens damaging coalition rift

The Liberal Democrat’s Chris Huhne, has said that campaigning by senior Conservatives has undermined their credibility A Liberal Democrat cabinet minister has widened an increasingly damaging rift inside the coalition by warning that the prime minister and other senior Conservatives could face legal action over the manner in which they have campaigned for a no vote in next week’s referendum on a change to the voting system. Chris Huhne, the Lib Dem energy secretary, admitted for the first time that the campaign against the alternative vote by senior Conservatives will make the coalition government “more difficult” to manage in the aftermath of the 5 May referendum. Huhne said the claims made by David Cameron, George Osborne and other Tories undermined their credibility. The energy secretary is concerned about two claims made by the Conservatives – that a move to AV will need new counting machines, and so cost as much as £250m, and that it will favour extremist parties. He said: “If they don’t come clean on this I am sure the law courts will. “Australia’s used [AV] for 80 years without ever using voting machines. If they can’t substantiate that, there’s simple legal redress. They had better come clean pretty fast.” Lib Dems have adopted an increasingly vituperative tone as they attempt to correct what they believe to be “untruths” pushed out by Tories and the no Campaign and match the vigour with which the other side is campaigning. The Lib Dems had not expected senior Tories to take so active a role in the campaign, and only latterly decided to do the same for the yes campaign. Some of the strident language will also be an attempt to persuade their voters of their distance from their Conservative coalition partners in the hope of firming up support for a yes vote, as well as encouraging Labour supporters to come out and vote for electoral reform. In the Independent on Sunday Nick Clegg, the Lib Dem leader and deputy prime minister, accused Cameron of “defending the indefensible”, implying he was part of “a rightwing clique who want to keep things the way they are”. The no campaign were putting out “lies, misinformation and deceit”, he said. Huhne also wrote to Osborne, the chancellor, before the weekend, accusing him of lying about the cost of reforming the voting system and asking him to withdraw “untruths” and “falsehoods”. But the threat of legal action would mean coalition relations remain uncomfortable long after the referendum has been decided. Huhne told the BBC: “It is frankly worrying if you have colleagues, who you have respected and who you have worked well with, who are making claims which have no foundation in truth whatsoever. If they don’t come clean on this I am sure the law courts will. “It is going to undermine the credibility of colleague ministers – the prime minister and the chancellor of the exchequer and the foreign secretary [William Hague] – if they use repeatedly allegations that have no foundation in truth whatsoever. “That is not good for the coalition. We have a job to do in the coalition government to clean up the mess we have inherited at the time of the last election. It is going to be a lot more difficult if you don’t have the same respect for colleagues because, frankly, they have departed so far from the foundations of truth in an election campaign.” The Lib Dem deputy leader, Simon Hughes, echoed Huhne’s threat of action, telling the BBC that the Electoral Commission could be asked to investigate the no campaign and to ensure that future elections did not see “untrue statements in official campaigns circulated”. Hague struck a more measured tone, playing down the differences and insisting that the coalition was working well. “We’re used in general election campaigns to accusations flying back and forth and I think a lot of these accusations are directed at the no campaign rather than the Conservative party,” he told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show. “These things do get bandied about in a referendum campaign. Feelings run high, people get excited. I think the important thing for people to know is the coalition is working well together. It continues to work well together. “Yes, we all have strong feelings about it and I very much hope people will vote no, but at the end of it the coalition will be working very well together.” Hague also dismissed the idea that Cameron will have to offer more concessions to Clegg in order to bolster the position of the Lib Dems in the coalition. The foreign secretary said: “What we are doing in government is finding the right way forward together. It doesn’t normally work in the manner of concessions to one side or the other.” Hughes said the Tory party co-chairman Lady Warsi had been “peddling untruths” that the British National party would gain in any move to AV. But Hague said: “I think she’s right, because what do you do in a system where there are third and fourth preferences? “Will the candidates in marginal seats have to think about how they’re going to get the second, third and fourth preferences of people who have voted for the BNP? These things are therefore not disputed facts, they’re matters of opinion about the implication of AV and they should be understood as that.” He also said “there was no doubt” that having a more complicated system would cost more and that it was a legitimate issue to raise in a campaign. Putting the case against AV, Hague said: “You can argue for a decisive system, which we have most of the time in this country, or you can argue for a proportional system as they have in Germany.” Cameron acknowledged last week that the referendum campaign, which lines up most of the Conservative party against the Liberal Democrats, had created a “choppy” period for the coalition. A Guardian/ICM poll published last week suggested the no campaign had gone into a 16-point lead, by 58% to 42%. Alternative vote Chris Huhne Liberal-Conservative coalition Liberal Democrats Conservatives Electoral reform Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk

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Nigeria’s gay church is reborn

House of Rainbow church offers underground prayer and preaching to Christians ostracised by rampant homophobia When Ade’s aunt learned he was gay, the then 16-year-old Nigerian was made to go through an exorcism to expel “the demon of homosexuality”. “The priest came to the house with candles, holy water and anointing oils. I had to kneel down, holding candles in my hands,” recalls Ade, now 25, as he sits in a cafe in Lagos. He does not wish to reveal his full name. “He kept shouting ‘Come out! Come out! Come out!’ in a fevered voice … I was allowed to go back to church after that but I had to pretend to be straight.” In a country where homosexuality is punishable by up to 14 years in prison, it is no surprise that many of Ade’s friends – those who, like him, are both gay and religious – stay away from church altogether for fear of being outed. However, an alternative could soon be at hand. Ade is helping to resurrect a religious refuge for himself and his friends. He is part of the team restarting House of Rainbow, the country’s only gay church, which was forced to close in 2008 after a witch-hunt stirred by exposés in local newspapers. The Rev Rowland Jide Macaulay, the gay minister who founded the church, is leading the comeback even though he remains in self-imposed exile in London. “Religion is a backbone to life in Nigeria, so we all want to go to church,” he says. “But we don’t want to lie to God about who we are.” Macaulay first set up House of Rainbow in 2006, when he openly held Sunday services in a Lagos hotel hall decked out with rainbow flags. A public backlash culminated in members being beaten as they left church. Macaulay fled to the UK after death threats. This year, he has recruited a small team that includes Ade as his local leader in Lagos. In his voluntary role, Ade started holding prayer sessions and Bible study groups at his house at the end of last month. A full church might be set up again if it is considered safe. The project could even spread beyond the borders of Africa’s most populous country. Macaulay has recently recruited a local leader in Accra, the capital of nearby Ghana. He is considering applications from Rwanda and Zimbabwe. Religious groups are central to Nigeria’s culture of homophobia. Pentecostalism, an evangelical school of Christianity thought to have started in America just over a century ago, has blossomed in southern Nigeria and across Africa in recent decades. The “megachurches” in and around Lagos can attract tens of thousands of worshippers to a single service. Pentecostal pastors often see gay desire as the work of demons. “You might start casually but, once you get into it, you will be possessed by the spirit,” says Emmanuel Owoyemi, a pastor in Lagos. Meanwhile, in Nigeria’s mostly Muslim north, 12 states have adopted sharia law over the last decade. Gay sex carries the death penalty under sharia, although no executions have yet taken place. A national anti-gay marriage bill, which pushes for jail sentences for anyone who even assists gay marriage, has been before Nigeria’s parliament since 2009. Being gay is regarded as an offence across much of Africa. Uganda’s parliament continues to debate a proposed law that would introduce the death penalty in some cases. Malawi’s president only pardoned a gay couple last year sentenced to 14 years in jail after an international outcry. Apart from being on the wrong side of the law, many homosexual Nigerians say exclusion from church is one of the hardest parts of being gay. “We are brought up to believe that you should belong to a religion. We feel that, if we don’t go to church, God will not answer our prayers,” says a young gay man in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital. “When I recently told a friend I was having financial difficulties, he said, ‘When did you last go to church?’” In oil-rich Nigeria, where corruption robs many of even basic services, religious groups provide more than spiritual assistance. Muslim movements such as Izala have built schools in the north, while southern pentecostal groups such as the Redeemed Christian Church of God run universities. “[We] lose out on all these services,” says the young man. Some argue that African homophobia is slowly waning. Marc Epprecht, an expert on sexuality in Africa at Queen’s University in Canada, says the continent’s growing number of gay rights groups are challenging negative stereotypes. He adds that despite the bad press it attracts, African homophobia is not markedly stronger than that of poor or patriarchal parts of the Middle East and South America. Macaulay, however, is not taking any chances this time. Prayer sessions are being held in secret locations. No unknown newcomers are being admitted. He continues to preach via YouTube from London – he thinks it would be unwise to return home. “We have learnt our lesson,” he says. “It is a hostile situation.” Nigeria Gay rights Christianity Religion guardian.co.uk

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Microsoft founder lashes out at rivals

Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, says Steve Jobs is ‘monomaniacal’ and describes Google duo’s ‘elbows and claws’ Paul Allen, the billionaire co-founder of Microsoft, has lashed out at internet rivals such as Apple and described Google as “evil”. After his views on his co-founder, Bill Gates, emerged last month w hen extracts from his memoirs were published in the US , Allen is now focusing on his rivals. He describes Steve Jobs, the boss of Apple who is on medical leave, as “monomaniacal”. In an interview with the Sunday Times, Allen criticises Sergey Brin and Larry Page, the co-founders of Google, for their corporate mission statement: “Don’t be evil”. Allen talked about their “elbows and claws” in their pursuit for growth. “I chuckle when I see people pushing the boundaries all the time of what they can do to monetise things, capture things – and then say, we’re not evil, as if their default is not to push the boundaries,” Allen said. “If your default is to push the boundaries, to just go for it, and then see if you get pushed back, then don’t say you’re not evil,” he added. Google was criticised after it emerged that while it was gathering the images for its Street View site, it was also collecting information on email addresses and passwords. In his autobiography, Idea Man, Allen describes how he and Gates were inseparable at school in Seattle but their relationship later soured and he describes Gates as a sarcastic bully who tried to force him out of the company. Allen describes how Gates brought in Steve Ballmer, the current boss, and how after returning from fighting Hodgkin’s lymphoma he heard the pair trying to reduce his influence – and confronted them about their intentions. It sparked Allen’s resignation and he refused an offer to buy him out for $5 a share – a sensible move given the share price is now $25 and his fortune is estimated at $13bn. Microsoft Computing Internet Apple Google Steve Jobs Sergey Brin Larry Page Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk

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Microsoft founder lashes out at rivals

Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, says Steve Jobs is ‘monomaniacal’ and describes Google duo’s ‘elbows and claws’ Paul Allen, the billionaire co-founder of Microsoft, has lashed out at internet rivals such as Apple and described Google as “evil”. After his views on his co-founder, Bill Gates, emerged last month w hen extracts from his memoirs were published in the US , Allen is now focusing on his rivals. He describes Steve Jobs, the boss of Apple who is on medical leave, as “monomaniacal”. In an interview with the Sunday Times, Allen criticises Sergey Brin and Larry Page, the co-founders of Google, for their corporate mission statement: “Don’t be evil”. Allen talked about their “elbows and claws” in their pursuit for growth. “I chuckle when I see people pushing the boundaries all the time of what they can do to monetise things, capture things – and then say, we’re not evil, as if their default is not to push the boundaries,” Allen said. “If your default is to push the boundaries, to just go for it, and then see if you get pushed back, then don’t say you’re not evil,” he added. Google was criticised after it emerged that while it was gathering the images for its Street View site, it was also collecting information on email addresses and passwords. In his autobiography, Idea Man, Allen describes how he and Gates were inseparable at school in Seattle but their relationship later soured and he describes Gates as a sarcastic bully who tried to force him out of the company. Allen describes how Gates brought in Steve Ballmer, the current boss, and how after returning from fighting Hodgkin’s lymphoma he heard the pair trying to reduce his influence – and confronted them about their intentions. It sparked Allen’s resignation and he refused an offer to buy him out for $5 a share – a sensible move given the share price is now $25 and his fortune is estimated at $13bn. Microsoft Computing Internet Apple Google Steve Jobs Sergey Brin Larry Page Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk

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Microsoft founder lashes out at rivals

Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, says Steve Jobs is ‘monomaniacal’ and describes Google duo’s ‘elbows and claws’ Paul Allen, the billionaire co-founder of Microsoft, has lashed out at internet rivals such as Apple and described Google as “evil”. After his views on his co-founder, Bill Gates, emerged last month w hen extracts from his memoirs were published in the US , Allen is now focusing on his rivals. He describes Steve Jobs, the boss of Apple who is on medical leave, as “monomaniacal”. In an interview with the Sunday Times, Allen criticises Sergey Brin and Larry Page, the co-founders of Google, for their corporate mission statement: “Don’t be evil”. Allen talked about their “elbows and claws” in their pursuit for growth. “I chuckle when I see people pushing the boundaries all the time of what they can do to monetise things, capture things – and then say, we’re not evil, as if their default is not to push the boundaries,” Allen said. “If your default is to push the boundaries, to just go for it, and then see if you get pushed back, then don’t say you’re not evil,” he added. Google was criticised after it emerged that while it was gathering the images for its Street View site, it was also collecting information on email addresses and passwords. In his autobiography, Idea Man, Allen describes how he and Gates were inseparable at school in Seattle but their relationship later soured and he describes Gates as a sarcastic bully who tried to force him out of the company. Allen describes how Gates brought in Steve Ballmer, the current boss, and how after returning from fighting Hodgkin’s lymphoma he heard the pair trying to reduce his influence – and confronted them about their intentions. It sparked Allen’s resignation and he refused an offer to buy him out for $5 a share – a sensible move given the share price is now $25 and his fortune is estimated at $13bn. Microsoft Computing Internet Apple Google Steve Jobs Sergey Brin Larry Page Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk

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April set to be warmest on record

More than 100,000 people reported to have made the trip to south coast beaches amid high weekend temperatures The UK basked in its hottest weather of the year so far this weekend, with forecasters predicting that this April could be the warmest on record. The Met Office said Wisley, in Surrey, peaked at 27.8C on Saturday, although the temperatures are expected to cool during the week. Despite the expected retreat towards more normal April temperatures by the time of the royal wedding on Friday, a spokesman for MeteoGroup said it was “quite likely” the month would go down as the warmest April on record. Temperatures on Saturday were the highest since 20 July last year, Rebekah Sherwin, a forecaster at the Met Office, said. “It’s quite unusual for this time of year,” Sherwin said. “Obviously its not unusual to get some warm temperatures in April, but this is a good 10 degrees plus above average for what we’d normally expect around this time of year.” Sherwin said temperatures at the end of April would normally be at a maximum of around 15C in London. On Saturday, St James’s Park recorded temperatures of 27.1C, while on Sunday the temperature in the capital was around 25C. Wisley was the hottest location in the UK over the weekend – much higher than the usual average of 13.3C. More than 100,000 people were reported to have made the trip to south coast beaches over the weekend, with tourism bosses in Bournemouth reporting that 90,000 ice creams were sold. Beaches were also packed as families made the most of the sunshine in Swanage, Dorset, and in Blackpool, Lancashire. Visit England estimated that, over the next 10 days, some 10.3 million Britons are planning to take a break including at least one night’s stay away from home. Paul Knightley, a senior forecaster at Meteogroup, said: “It’s been a remarkable spell of warm weather for this early in the season. The previous warmest April came in 2007, and Knightley said: “It would have to get quite cool during the last few days of the month to pull the average temperature down enough [for it] to not be the warmest April on record.” On Sunday, temperatures were around 25C in London and in the low to mid-20s across much of southern England, Sherwin said, with cooler weather in Scotland and the north of England. In the capital, thousands took to Primrose Hill and Hyde Park to soak up the sun. Many workers are believed to have taken advantage of the so-called “magic three days” by booking Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday off work this week, ensuring a 10-day holiday. But temperatures are expected to drop from Monday, and Sherwin said: “We’re looking at a general downward trend in temperatures. “[Monday] will probably be down at around 21-22C in London – so still very warm really compared to normal temperatures – and it will be mainly sunny again in the south-east. “But beyond that I think we’re generally looking at down towards the high teens by the middle of the week.” Sherwin said an easterly wind would make it feel cooler and provide the prospect of some rain, particularly in the north of England and in Scotland. Neither Sherwin nor Knightley would be drawn on the prospect of April’s sunny weather continuing into the summer, although Knightley had a warning for those getting too used to the sun. “There are at least some indications in the past that warm dry Aprils have been followed by reasonably wet summers,” he said. “In 2007, the summer was awful. We had floods in Sheffield and Hull in June and then, of course, the massive southern England floods in July.” Weather Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk

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Bolton 2-1 Arsenal

Arsenal’s journey towards the title has turned down its final cul-de-sac. Arsène Wenger’s side are nine points adrift with only four games remaining after being undone here by an 90th-minute goal from Tamir Cohen. The Bolton substitute flashed a header beyond Wojciech Szczesny from Matt Taylor’s corner and Wenger turned away in anguish to hurl a water bottle to the ground in frustration. Arsenal had contributed to a game of rich entertainment but here, too, was a telling demonstration of the flaws that have brought them to the brink of a sixth successive year without a trophy. In attack they were beguiling; defensively, they were bewildering. Their football was slick, penetrative and frequently thrilling, culminating in an onslaught on the Bolton goal before Cohen’s goal. Yet there were times, particularly in the first half, when Bolton sliced them open far too easily. Daniel Sturridge opened the scoring in the 38th minute, his seventh goal in nine appearances since joining on loan from Chelsea, and Bolton could also reflect on Szczesny keeping out Kevin Davies’s penalty two minutes into the second half. A minute later Robin van Persie exchanged passes with Cesc Fábregas before driving his shot past Jussi Jaaskelainen for the equaliser. Arsenal were then thwarted by Jaaskelainen’s goalkeeping, some last-ditch defending, their own poor finishing and some over-elaborate buildup. In many ways it was a performance that symbolised Arsenal’s season – and Cohen made them pay with a late, decisive blow. Premier League Bolton Wanderers Arsenal Daniel Taylor guardian.co.uk

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