A Thousand Stars: Episode V, Part 32

Jan. 22nd, 2026 09:43 am
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[personal profile] matril
Another beautiful wide shot of Cloud City, after which we follow a cloud car through the city (thanks to the advancing technology of the special editions) until we finally come to the window where Leia is visible. This rather long establishing moment gives us a sense of the urgency and worry simmering below the surface of the pretty scenery.

Leia is pacing restlessly, and even when Han comes along and tries to reassure her, they remain mostly at a distance or at least distanced from the audience. When we finally end with a closer shot, its potential romance is abrogated by the dialogue -- even if things work out and nothing sinister is lurking below, Han will be leaving. There's nothing more they can say.

Next time, a first full look at the uglier side...
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

Saturday, the day of the open pinball tournament, we got up early enough that had we hustled we might have got to the venue in time for the official calling of the roll, just in case enough people were absent that we could have got in as ``non-dead bodies''. It would transpire that that everyone who expected to play was there; I don't think there was even a need for the official alternates. (This is not to say I wasn't startled when I saw a list of matches and that there were multiple people who had no opponent. This is because I forgot that the 24-person championship gave the top eight seeds a first-round bye.)

But we did also miss the giving out of instructions and the group photo and the start of ceremonies. I blame that it was nice and cozy in a mattress much less worn-out than ours. Also little things like [personal profile] bunnyhugger going off to find coffee and along the way discovering the first dozen living rooms. Also I had my first cup-of-oatmeal instant breakfast in maybe forever and that reminded me that I do like oatmeal. It doesn't just have to be just for pet rabbits who aren't taking their regular food.

We got there in the middle of the first round, and joined the good number of people hanging around the front of the building. The back room had all the pinball games up for tournament play. And, as non-competitors, we did our best not to venture in back except to use the bathroom and hope the bathroom would hold up to the strain under it. It did, which was, pardon me, a relief. The port-a-potty brought in the previous Sunday was still in the parking lot, I assume for insurance.

So I mostly stayed up front. Some of this was working on little goals of my own, like playing Creature From The Black Lagoon well enough to get Super Mode started. I failed at this, although I did get to playing the game much more reliably well than I had before. Also I gave some fresh tries to Led Zeppelin, a modern Stern pinball game that I've never had a good time on. You know what? I still don't have a good time on it. I mentioned to KEG --- formerly of Lansing, now an out-of-stater who would the next day become the first non-Michigan woman to compete in the state women's championship --- how weird it was they made a game with absolutely no fun in it. She agreed, although she did manage to put together an actually good game. Still, it's a lemon of a table.

My other pastime was watching the stream of what was going on in the next room over. If you'd like to see that stream, you can watch all nine hours of it here and if you see me in the video somewhere it's news to me. But it was fun sitting around with other pinball people and talking about the games. One guy mentioned he was surprised to learn that I was funny. Maybe I'm being too reserved in my normal play.

There were people who filled out brackets to see who did their best predicting the championship. I was not among them, although if I had, I'd have put my money on JPJ who did, in fact, go on to be the champion for the fourth time in a row. But there were many matches that I would have called wrong, if I'd been asked. AJH losing in the first round, for example, or TY losing to DLO.

Also something I didn't imagine would happen? The march of JBS all the way to finals. JBS also made history by being I think the first non-Michigander to play in the Michigan state finals. He's from Toledo, apparently, so gets to a lot of southeast Michigan events. I won't say anything against him, though, as I'm not going to rag on anyone who's still masking. JBS goes farther than that, bringing with him some kind of disinfecting light gadget that I'm not sure actually does things, but that he does wave across the buttons of the pinball machine before his every turn.

Anyway, I felt enough that a Michigander should win the state championship that I was hoping someone would knock him out. And it took until meeting JPJ --- who's currently ranked the 10th-best player in the world --- in the finals for someone to do. JPJ knocked out JBS in four straight games, which is even better than I'd imagined. Still, heck of a finish.

We stayed through to the end of the day, of course, and closed the place out. And then had to turn around and come back because FAE had forgotten their laptop. Fortunately AJH was only a minute away and was able to come back to let them in. Could have gone much worse.


Now let's share some more pictures from Cedar Point back on Juneteenth.

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Now here's something we haven't seen on the Frontier Trail before: a map! They've been playing up, some, the history of the park as part of nostalgia marketing and some of it's included this guide to what you can see if you take pictures and put them through that Photoshop filter that turns it into line art. The actual trail does not curve nearly this much.


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And here's the sun coming out, as seen from near Thunder Canyon, the water rapids ride.


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The former location of Snake River Falls, with the track of the shoot-the-chutes now gone.


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The boats across the lake were used for the short-lived revival of the river boat ride, and now they're being props again.


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New this year: they renovated the Happy Friar food stand out of existence and into this new structure. Instead of a walk-up stand you now go in, but they have trays full of the cheese-on-a-stick hot-dog-on-a-stick, and fries ready to pick up and go, which is speedier. I don't dislike it, but I'm sad they reduced the happy friar art from a large three-dimensional cartoon board to a restrained little sign. Maybe it's period-appropriate to the era of we've-heard-of-the-Tudors-but-aren't-going-crazy but it's less fun.


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And look at that, a train running on Top Thrill 2!


Trivia: In the final Congressional debates for what would become the 25th Amendment Senator Robert F Kennedy inquired what the proposed amendment meant by a President's ``inability'' to perform the duties; was it total inability? Physical? Mental? Senator Birch Bayh, speaking for the amendment, offered that it should be taken to be anything which presented an inability to perform the constitutional duties of President, and should not be limited to mental disability: ``It is conceivable that the President might fall into the hands of the enemy, for example''. Source: One Heartbeat Away: Presidential Disability and Succession, Birch Bayh. Kennedy also pressed on the question of how long a disability should be expected to last and Bayh offered that it should not be specified in the Constitution lest it complicate a crisis.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

After getting our stuff settled in at the Gerber Family Guest House we made the long drive to the Clubhouse Arcade. It's maybe a mile or two, a short enough distance we could probably have walked it in case of utterly un-drivable weather. If that were the case, of course, then probably many people would not be able to make the official start time of 11:45 am Sunday. This left us with a bit of fun speculation: what would we do? ... As [personal profile] bunnyhugger understood the rules, any women who had qualified by playing sanctioned tournaments, either open or women's, and who had not already turned down an invitation to play would be eligible, if they happened to be there. So we speculated on the fun of AJH's mother, who would often way back in the old days be roped into playing Special When Lit tournaments to fill out the small grouping some, being pulled back only this time for the state championship.

The other side of that, though, is that the same logic applied to the open tournament. We imagined most players would be staying in or near Fremont, but what if someone had to come from farther away? Had to get through worse weather? Decided the chance to play just wasn't worth driving through all this? ... Well, that's why there's alternates invited, but it's not like alternates are immune to weather and giving up on this nonsense. Would we be wise to get to the open tournament early Saturday morning, just in case some of the already invited players and alternates missed? FAE would be higher-ranked, and would be invited in first, then me, then [personal profile] bunnyhugger (we believe; we didn't check standings), but still, think of the story that would make.

To get ahead of myself, well, first, we did not get up and out and over to the Clubhouse Arcade early enough Saturday to fill in the gap. Nor would it matter. While it was snowing and kind of lousy to deal with, all the regular players made it. I don't know how many alternates made it, but, there wouldn't have been a place for us. Nor would there be one for AJH's mother on Sunday; everyone made it through the lousy weather. Ah well.

Friday, though, that was a day for practice. We got over to the Clubhouse Arcade and [personal profile] bunnyhugger and FAE had nothing to do but practice. Me, I didn't even have to do that; I could just play for fun. While I spent a little time on some of the games scheduled for tournament play I realized, oh, I should take time on other things, and I used it for two silly little goals. One was playing Creature From The Black Lagoon to get to the Super Mode, which you get --- on Pinball Arcade --- by shooting the right ramp twelve times. Turns out on the real machine, at least this instance, you need it seventeen times. I got close some, but never made it, alas.

The other was playing the new table Star Wars: Fall of the Empire, which has been a drain monster for me on location. Here, they had one on free play; I could keep on going until I worked out something. What did I work out? I don't know. I eventually had one okay and one genuinely good game, but I still suspect the table is mostly random movements. Maybe if and when I ever figure out how to bring the ball under control.

So, by the end of the day, [personal profile] bunnyhugger and FAE had notebooks full of observations about where skill shots might be or what tables were looking treacherous or whatnot. Me, I was home with a high score #3 on Spider-Man and the observation that a high score [personal profile] bunnyhugger had put on Congo nearly a year ago was still there. So a day of some accomplishment.


Another half-dozen pictures for you of Cedar Point back on a rainy day in June.

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Baseball lamps in the former Chickie and Pete's, testament to the days when it was a sports bar. Probably they survived the Chickie era by being overlooked, so who knows how long they'll last?


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A toy! So it turns out there's people who leave miniature rubber ducks at amusement parks for other people to discover, which is a fun bit of whimsy until you reflect on how oh, they made something that someday, someone will have to throw out.


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Stage set up in the main midway --- near our ceremonial brick --- where at the right time of day the Peanuts characters come out and do sme fun stuff.


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And now what you're here to see: a roller coaster we couldn't possibly ride! This iis Siren's Curse, with its main gimmick, the spot where the track comes to its horizontal end and then pivots to drop straight down.


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Construction fences around the roller coaster, teasing folks with what would come to be.


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Here's a long line of people lined up in hopes that Millennium Force (background) would be open soon.


Trivia: In Spring 1920 Woodrow Wilson had recovered enough to be taken for occasional rides in the country, but had to sit in the front of the car, because if in the back, Chief White House Usher Ike Hoover claimed, ``he would slide down and topple as the car rolled along''. Source: The Year We Had No President, Richard Hansen.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

This weekend saw a lot of Michigan under winter storm advisories and watches and warnings and an ever-escalating series of concerns. Which would have been fine enough to sit out, except that we had business taking us to the western end of the state. I mean the lower peninsula. In particular, to Fremont, home of the Clubhouse Arcade (formerly Special when Lit), the exact same spot we were at the weekend before. Friday would be the last day of practice time at the venue hosting the Michigan State Pinball Championship Series (Saturday's event) and then the Women's Championship Series (Sunday's). As state women's representative [personal profile] bunnyhugger had to attend Sunday, and as one of the qualifying competitors she had to attend Friday. The least ridiculous to do would be to spend Friday through Sunday there. Especially as it's a two-hour drive in ordinary circumstances and we had the threat of bad weather, basically, from Friday morning through to tomorrow morning.

As another element to things, we had a carpooler. FAE, a non-binary player who the past few months started playing in [personal profile] bunnyhugger's women's tournaments and sweeping them all with unsettling ease, by virtue of those appearances in women's tournaments gained a state women's rating. And their finishes in Lansing Pinball League and in Pinball At The Zoo --- coed events --- gave them a high enough 'open' rating to qualify for one of the eight positions reserved for open-tournament players. ([personal profile] bunnyhugger had her position from women's-only events; she needed a couple better finishes at RLM tournaments, or in Lansing league, to get an invite for her open finishes.) But FAE doesn't drive, whether for lack of a car or lack of learning how to drive, and asked if we could give them a ride and it would be churlish to refuse.

While we set out close to our noon target Friday, we were not close to getting to Fremont by the 2pm expected. This was the snow's fault. It was heavy enough to be annoying, though not so heavy as to cause traffic hazards. Just slowness, especially once we got past the Grand Rapids outskirts and were on two-lane county and smaller roads. The drive lasted three hours, meaning that we got into town just in time to check in to our bed-and-breakfast/AirBnB (turns out the place works both legitimate and Internet bookings), the Gerber Family Guest House. So we moved our stuff into there first.

The house turns out to be something like forty houses grown together. It is so large. There are a whole bunch of rooms, each with a person's name, suggesting the most prominent resident of each, and the rooms all have their own bathroom, inviting the question of what these rooms were before they were bathrooms. For our room (Sally) I think the answer was ``nursery room''. It has the bathroom sink on the outside wall, which made sure the water started frigid for the first couple minutes after you turned it on, so that can't be the original plan. Bathroom sinks get interior pipes where possible. The room also has more closet space than our actual house, one a good-size walk-in closet and one a charming little shelved closet with a three-quarters-height door. It gave me such strong feelings of being at the home my grandparents built in the 40s, right down to the sloped ceiling in the bathroom.

Also the place had an estimated twenty living rooms, all connected to one another, plus multiple kitchens. One was probably a servant's kitchen. One --- the yellow one --- we were invited to use and was where they had the snacks available for free use. Also at least two sinks and two four-burner stoves, one next to each other, as if I were making a joke about the brobdingnagian nature of the place. The many rooms were also decorated with Gerber family photographs and trinkets from the history of the Gerber baby food factory, so you could have some idea of who the people who had guests in this house were. They were in black-and-white and dressed like your grandparents' wedding pictures.

It was a neat place, large and open and with a seeming never-ending number of new rooms to discover. Also apart from [personal profile] bunnyhugger, FAE, and this one person I think was doing housekeeping Saturday morning I never saw anyone else in it. [personal profile] bunnyhugger had better success, spotting some other pinball players hanging out in common areas Friday night, but I had stayed in our room catching up on my Internet friends and whatnot, so missed all of that. Really fun, charming spot, though, and already at the top of our list for if we ever have to stay overnight in Fremont again.


Finally we reach the next event on my photo roll, back in the United States but without setting my camera back to Eastern Time! So please take the metadata on this with a grain of salt and conversion from Central European Summer Time to Eastern Daylight Time. This was Juneteenth, which we thought might be a good day for riding at Cedar Point. It was ... mm, there's been better. It looks like Father's Day might be the better mid-summer amusement park day.

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This would also be our last visit to the park before Siren's Curse, the roller coaster dropped into the park to distract from the problems Top Thrill 2 was having, would open.


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And, as you can see from the park sinking under six inches of water, maybe they shouldn't have invited the Siren to Curse the park. We weren't sure any roller coaster would open through this. ... Also note that the park had replaced its Cedar Point 150 sign erected for the sesquicentennial.


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The carousels were running! We got some damp rides to the Midi-enabled band organ.


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And Blue Streak would be our first Cedar Point coaster of the year. I'm inexplicably fascinated by the channel dug into the ground for the dispatch of the coaster trains.


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The park was doing brisk business selling rain ponchos.


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This uncharacteristically empty restaurant used to be a Chickie and Pete's, the only one I ever ate in (I guess it's a chain), and before that, was a sports bar where Dad could hang out while the kids were having fun. It's empty this year except for the person sitting on the porch there. Probably something will be done with it eventually but who knows when or what it'll become? (Another restaurant.)


Trivia: In debating whether and how to ask Vice-President Chester Arthur to assume the office of President following the shooting, but before the death, of James Garfield, the only strong precedent the Cabinet could agree was relevant were the periods of insanity of British King George III, when the Prince of Wales only accepted the regency following an Act of Parliament. The first of those periods was November 1788 through February 1789, when a Regency Bill was approved by the Commons but not settled by the Lords; the second, in October 1810, when a Regency Bill was passed, ultimately with the King's assent. Source: From Failing Hangs: The Story of Presidential Succession, John D Feerick.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein. I swear to you all, I am reading this book, it's just over 800 pages and I haven't had much time to simply sit and read.

tree silhouette

Jan. 18th, 2026 08:50 pm
tally: (vegan)
[personal profile] tally posting in [community profile] common_nature
My favorite photo from my trip home during the holidays.


Anime Tracker Winter 2026

Jan. 18th, 2026 03:30 pm
lovelyangel: Fern from Frieren: Beyond Journey's End (Fern Smile)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
Kohaku Ichimura
Kohaku Ichimura
In the Clear Moonlit Dusk, Episode 1

I’m still working on streamlining my anime reporting, trying to get down to just two posts a season – an early tracker and a final count. Here’s the initial summary of the shows I sampled – and which ones are getting attention. (Shows are on Crunchyroll unless otherwise specified.) There are a lot of sequels I’ll be following, too. Note: I still haven’t gotten around to watching the new shows on HIDIVE. I remain stressed for time this month.

All the Shows, Below This Cut )
[personal profile] quippe
The Blurb On The Back:

Sarah Wynn-Williams, a young diplomat from New Zealand, pitched for her dream job. She saw Facebook’s potential and knew it could change the world for the better. But, when she got there and rose to its top ranks, things turned out a little different.

From wild schemes cooked up on private jets to risking prison abroad, Careless People exposes both the personal and political fallout when boundless power and a rotten culture take hold. In a gripping and often absurd narrative, Wynn-Williams rubs shoulders with Mark Zuckerberg, Sheryl Sandberg and world leaders, revealing what really goes on among the global elite - and the consequences this has for all of us.

Candid and entertaining, this is an intimate memoir set amid powerful forces. As all our lives are upended by technology and those who control it, Careless People will change how you see the world today.


The Review (Cut For Spoilers): )

The Verdict:

Sarah Wynn-Williams is a former New Zealand diplomat who was Director of Public Policy at Facebook between 2011 and 2017. This memoir of her time there contains few new revelations about Facebook’s activities and her apparent naivety never rings true but does offer insight into Zuckerberg and Sandberg and the disconnect between their words and actions while also providing context for Facebook’s current activities and political alignment.

Snowdrops

Jan. 18th, 2026 01:33 pm
bookscorpion: a derpy bee (derpbee)
[personal profile] bookscorpion posting in [community profile] common_nature


The snowdrops are starting to flower, I am so excited.

TWICE, the First

Jan. 17th, 2026 07:54 pm
lovelyangel: Sana RTB Special in Japan (Sana Concert)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
TWICE performing “I Can’t Stop Me”
TWICE performing “I Can’t Stop Me”
TWICE This Is For World Tour
Climate Pledge Arena • Seattle, Washington
January 13, 2026
Sony RX100 VII • Zeiss 24-200mm (35mm equiv) f/2.8-4.5
f/4.5 @ 200mm • 1/800s • ISO 3200

This is a lengthy post written mainly for myself so that I’ll have a record of what actually happened. At my age, memory is the first thing to go.

tl;dr: I went to Seattle to see the TWICE This Is For World Tour Concert at Climate Pledge Arena.

I feel extra fortunate in that I was able to get tickets to two TWICE concerts this month. Of the two concerts, only the first one, in Seattle, was I able to get a fancy VIP Soundcheck reserved seat ticket, which provides:
  • One premium reserved or general admission ticket to the show
  • Access to the pre-show TWICE soundcheck
  • Exclusive VIP gift item
  • VIP laminate and lanyard
  • Pre-show tour merchandise shopping opportunity
  • Early entry to the venue
  • Designated check-in and on-site VIP event staff

I’ve never had this before and I was eager for the experience.

A TWICE Adventure, Below This Cut )

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy

Jan. 17th, 2026 10:34 am
lovelyangel: (Ensign Lefler)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
U.S.S. Athena
U.S.S. Athena
Star Trek: Starfleet Academy, Episode 1

(Spoiler-free Commentary)

The premiere episode of Star Trek: Starfleet Academy is available for free viewing (for I don’t know how long) at YouTube. I made time to watch it last night.

I had been hopeful for a good showing, and I was not disappointed. I’ve always loved Holly Hunter (since Broadcast News... and, yay! The Incredibles!) and want her to be a big success here. Also, I’m a fervent Trekkie – from way back to the actual broadcast years of the original series in the 1960s.

In the episode, Holly Hunter and Paul Giamatti were fabulous, as expected. The cadets were the expected variety of races, temperaments, maturity, composure, and intelligence; they have room to grow.

(One odd thought... if you take the academy’s chancellor and most? all? of the academy’s recruits into space... wouldn’t losing them all at once be catastrophic for the academy? I guess we’d better hope that only a small percentage of cadets are on the Athena at any one time. Dunno.)

I don’t have the time nor the budget to subscribe to Paramount+, so I won’t see the remainder of season one until much later. But I’ll continue to monitor reviews. There are always lots of review articles online. I did follow review articles of Foundation and Murderbot when I was watching those series. There are plenty of Starfleet Academy reviews online currently.

There was one article I enjoyed: I Love That Holly Hunter Can’t Sit in a Chair Normally on ‘Starfleet Academy’ at Gizmodo. And I too love that about Captain Ake.

What was quite interesting was the comments section of the article. Apparently a large number of Trekkies really dislike the new show. Reading their complaints was interesting. I hope the producers of the series ignore that feedback and simply continue on their chosen path.

On the other hand, a couple of comments did resonate with me.

I LOVED her doing all that! I'm 5'2" myself and while I don't often get the chance to be in chairs like her character's, I could see myself doing that on occasion. I almost certainly did as a kid. As for those having a "problem" with this show, I am a long-time Trek fan, having started watching as a kid right after it went into syndication in the 1970s (I'm just one year older than the franchise), and I love every iteration. Are they all perfect? No. Do some of them challenge Roddenberry's vision? Of course. Are they woke? You better believe it, from day one 60 years ago! But they never stray so far that you can't recognize the ultimate message: We can be better. We can do our best to be kind, understanding, tolerant, collaborative and uplifting. If you don't like that, fine; don't watch. But don't tell me Starfleet Academy is not Trek, because it very, very much is, and it proved that in the first two episodes right off the bat.
–– MartinC

and:
I liked her character, immensely. And look – I’m 70, and I know they’re targeting a generation that’s several removed from me, but it’s still Trek … and I love it.

And I’ve got to say … when they brought the Athena (god, what a gorgeous starship) down to San Francisco, with Rufus Wainwright singing “you’d better wear some flowers in your hair,” it was practically a religious moment for me. I feel sorry for anyone who can’t share that joy.
–– Zaphod

Haters probably didn’t like Lower Decks or Prodigy or Strange New Worlds either. Well, let them sulk elsewhere. I like all flavors of Trek. (Admittedly, I have some reservations about Enterprise.) Haters include non-Trekkie White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller. SMH. Let Miller know that Star Trek has been “woke” for 60 years.

Just One Last Look to Fill My Heart

Jan. 19th, 2026 12:10 am
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

And now, at long last ... the last pictures of our European Vacation, an odyssey full of disappointments and delights. It ends, as you'd hope, with snacks.

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The bag we got our dinner in one night, which I love just because ``eet smakelijk'' looks like something you might come up with if you were faking Dutch for ``eat smiling''.


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Oh yeah, one of the bags of baby carrots that they gave us as we left Plopsaland for some reason. Not just us; everyone got two bags per. I have no explanation for this phenomenon.


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And now, sad to say, we had to leave. Here's a view from De Lijn of Plopsaland; you can see the hotel up front and The Ride to Happiness behind.


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More views of Plopsaland from afar.


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And the the sad last look at Plopsaland, on the train bringing us to Amsterdam. It was a sad evening.


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We stopped to change trains in Gent, which I didn't recognize as the Ghent, but we were fascinated by and curious what this handsome-looking building in the distance was. Turns out, it was the (historic) Ghent train station.


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We were stumped thinking what it was, having nothing but these remote views. There was plenty of structure above --- and below --- us that was obviously modern train station so it didn't occur to us these were all part of the same train station complex.


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One of my favorite compositions of [personal profile] bunnyhugger looking out of frame. ... In hindsight if I'd paid attention to the Gent-Sint-Pieters sign I'd have realized where we were but, have to admit, we were mostly sad and rushed.


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Still, there were pigeons having a good time, so that's nice.


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And come the next day we got to the airport, which still had the old-style click-click-click destination board! Mostly; the flight numbers and air liveries were on flat TV screens. But the signs still clicked, like destination signs ought.


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Also, a picture of one of the snacks we'd bring back to Michigan with us to have with afternoon coffee break. A Nutri-Score of E means it's Excellent, right?


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You can tell this is a quality wafer chocolate snack by its affording a seven-differences puzzle.


Trivia: On its second flyby of Earth, in December 1992, the Galileo probe flew 300 kilometers above the South Atlantic and within one kilometer of the intended target, accurate enough that post-Earth trajectory maneuver TCM-18 was cancelled, saving about five kilograms of propellant for later mission operations. Source: Mission To Jupiter: A History of the Galileo Project, Michael Meltzer.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

It Just Isn't Long Enough

Jan. 18th, 2026 12:10 am
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

In pictures, I'd like to share the last of our photos at Oostende and then getting back to our hotel, as we had to leave early and get to Amsterdam for our early-morning flight.

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Here's what it looks like when you'd think you could just hop onto a drawbridge as it closes. I bet if you tried all sorts of people would be tense at you, though.


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And we're back and traffic can move freely again!


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Under the overhang here are those portals to the bicycle dimension, and far in the background is De Lijn.


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Unfortunately they have vehicle-wrapping advertisements in Belgium too, but at least the ones in Dutch read funny. (It translates something like 'So that's the taste of pleasure'.)


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Here's our train! It looks so very narrow but it's an extremely normal size once you're in.


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Unfortunately the ride back was so packed there was no good photograph-taking, or even sitting. But we got back to our home station and hey, here's that blue ring again!


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Statue standing outside the welkom-in-De-Panne center of a woman who looks like she's seen better days maybe, but so have we all.


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Also found in De Panne: funny supermarket names!


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Really big fans of American television networks here.


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And this was our hotel. I think we were on the second floor, so you could actually see our hotel room from here.


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There comes a point where you have so much fire extinguishing technology on display at the hotel that it becomes unsettling. I know you're asking why that second fire extinguisher is chained up but don't worry, there's a guy comes around with the key every like five minutes.


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The view out our window, which makes this corner of De Panne look like a SimCity 2000 location.


Trivia: By 1777, thanks to Lavoisier's research, France was able to produce two million pounds of saltpeter per year, with a yield considered the best in the world. By the 1780s it could propel cannonballs 50 percent farther than British powder did. Source: The Invention of Air: A Story of Science, Faith, Revolution, and the Birth of America, Steven Johnson.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

Sunday for the first time in years we made the not-quite-two-hour drive to Fremont, out somewhere near nothing in the world. The main reason for this is that the Clubhouse Arcade there --- formerly Special When Lit, formerly the Blind Squirrel League --- is the location of this year's Michigan State Pinball Championship, both Open and Women's, and [personal profile] bunnyhugger needed the practice time. Might still need some more.

But also going on was the first Michigan Seniors Pinball Championship. This event, really a just-for-fun thing, was open only to pinball players fifty years or older, which [personal profile] bunnyhugger and I are both in. (There was also a Youth Championship, which eight kids played in, though one had to leave early.) This threatened to be an all-day thing, and it nearly was, for other people.

Qualifying started with twelve rounds of matchplay, drawing people in random pairs on random games, many but not all of them in the State Championship this coming weekend. And I, dear reader, started out with a loss on Golden Arrow after putting up a should-be-awfully-good 81,120 (or something) score; my opponent got just a couple thousand more. All right; that happens. Then came another loss, this time on my best-ever game of X's and O's, a caveman-themed tic-tac-toe game which has a huge skill shot if you can make it the first five seconds of your ball plunging into the shooter lane. I had practiced this ahead of time and managed it once out of three times, ordinarily enough to win a game even if you don't, as I had, blow it up all three balls. But what do you know but my opponent came back and whittled away all that score on me. Then on to Joker Poker, and a loss; then on to Jacks To Open, and a terrible loss. At this point I was four games in, out of twelve, and was doing as well as if I had stayed home in bed. I can't say I was heartened.

But then my luck changed! With the next game, Blackout, I had a killer first ball and my opponent never got close again. And this started a heck of a winning streak, with my getting wins both impressive and deserved (Future Spa, Barracora, World Cup) and total nonsense (Surf Champ, a race to the bottom that I lost). I even beat CST on an electromechanical game, to my endless amazement. Ten games in, I was at the cut for finals and looking good.

But then my luck changed! With a close loss on Firepower and then having to go up against PH on Scuba, a 1960s game with tiny flippers that I had maybe one good ball on, to PH's four. Ah well. I would have to play a seven-way tiebreaker for the last six spots in playoffs, and on my old Pinburgh friend Jungle Queen. I came in in the middle of the pack, which is fine, as the important thing is that I not come in last.

I might as well have, though. Playoffs were double-elimination group-of-three games and I lost early and often, becoming one of the first players to lose two rounds. [personal profile] bunnyhugger, who'd won more games than I had in qualifying, had a similarly disheartening race-out-of-qualifying, knocked out in the winners bracket by the guy I lost on X's and O's to, and in the second chance bracket to PH who somehow hadn't won his first round. PH would go on not just to beat [personal profile] bunnyhugger but also everyone else in the second chance bracket, putting him up against the winners bracket champion, the always formidable CST. And PH went on to beat CST two matches in a row, taking the first ever state Seniors Championship in dramatic fashion. Do like to see that being exciting at least.

The advantage of being knocked out fast in playoffs, though, is that [personal profile] bunnyhugger was able to sniff around the games, trying them out, gathering intelligence to use this coming Sunday. Hopefully to use a lot of it, but pinball is fickle and anything can happen. I'll share the news with you when it's there to share.


Back to Oostende and our walking around while we could in that truncated Sunday in Belgium, back in June.

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Now, if we'd known there would be restaurants we might have got something to eat here. Note the Señorita Daisy so apparently you can get either Spanish or Mexican food in Belgium. Also, burgers and fries.


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We were intrigued by what the Bistro Beethoven might be, but also weren't hungry. You can see it's connected to Beethoven's Cafe, though.


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Getting ready to return to the tram line and oh, what's this? The drawbridge is drawing!


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Look at the underside of that bridge. Almost no chewing gum stuck to it at all!


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And here's the boat making its way down the channel, that we all stopped and waited for.


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Bye!


Trivia: The mistle thrush is one of the few birds to eat mistletoe without harm. It excretes the semi-digested slime from the inside of mistletoe fruits, which the plant hopes to have land on tree branches, stick and sprout seeds. Source: Slime: A Natural History, Susanne Wedlich.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

Somebody Check My Brain

Jan. 16th, 2026 12:10 am
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

In my humor blog this week, as you've seen on your Reading page or perhaps in your RSS reader (LiveJournal Friends Pages count) you've seen the end of one MiSTing, a whole brand-new one, two panels from a dumb comic book, some comic strip action, and me complaining about AI scraping. Want to live it all again? Here's your chance:


And in pictures, we're as far along De Lijn as we would get and walking around some before heading back to our hotel. Take a look.

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And here we are at Oostende's famous Cathedral ... uh ... something. Just love all that spikiness, though; it's very soothing to keep looking at and spotting new detail.


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And a monument nearby to the soldiers and dead of the World Wars.


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Not sure if the smaller structure, left, is the old cathedral or merely a church.


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The older cathedral has this text explaining it, although the shadow of the inset makes it a difficult thing to photograph and so transcribe.


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Another view of the cathedral, looking even richer with detail than before.


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Small sign letting you know about the mausoleum here too.


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Sometimes you just need to get really close to an enormous building and look up.


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Sometimes you just need to get not quite so close to an enormous older building and look up.


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Found the Hidden Mickey! Up on top of the frame there, turned upside-down.


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Huh! Now what would a heraldic shield and a pointing brass arrow mean for us?


P1090643.jpeg

Well, look at that, we're being led around the cathedral right to ...


P1090644.jpeg

... a big communal space? I'm not sure we needed the guidance here. Maybe it makes sense if you've got the pocket guide. Please note that this is a duly-posted Zone.


Trivia: In 2017 World Bank chief economist Paul Romer was stripped of control of the research division after declaring he would not clear any report for publication if the word ``and'' made up more than 2.6% of its text. Source: Seriously Curious: The Facts and Figures That Turn Our World Upside-Down, Editor Tom Standage. Romer claimed to be trying to improve the readability of reports by discouraging complex compound sentences. The 2.6% margin was apparently chosen so the texts would match the readability of academic papers.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

Trump vs. Minnesota: A Realization

Jan. 15th, 2026 09:34 pm
dewline: Snoopy screaming in frustration (Augh)
[personal profile] dewline
All this horror and heroism in Minneapolis-St. Paul of late...in the cities that gave us Charles Schulz of all people.

A Thousand Stars: Episode V, Part 31

Jan. 15th, 2026 10:53 am
matril: (Default)
[personal profile] matril
Luke's friends are in trouble, and he has to rescue them. An unambiguous duty, right? Well...not according to Yoda. Even as Luke is on the verge of departing, Yoda continues to urge him not to leave. It's a painful conundrum. If he honors the very cause that Han and Leia fight for, he must be willing to sacrifice anything, even his loved ones. It's so crucial that more than just a disembodied voice, Obi-Wan's ghostly form shows up to bolster Yoda's argument. (Though interestingly, he's not 'life-sized,' instead a smaller version that doesn't overshadow Yoda.)

They warn him of the dangerous temptations he faces during this period of his training. No doubt they have his father's mistakes very much in mind here. But Luke seems to hardly hear them, so troubled is he by the vision he's seen.

So off he goes, which leads to a curious collection of shots featuring the two Jedi Masters. The X-Wing's lights shift in colors and tone, making them almost seem to fade and vanish. This pairs with Obi-Wan sadly claiming That boy is our last hope.

But then Yoda is briefly illuminated by a bright light from the ship, which just as quickly changes to a dreamy red, as Yoda declares There is another.

You could probably create the over-extended analysis that since the bad guy's lightsaber is red, red is always evil and therefore Yoda's claim is ominous and bodes something sinister. But let's not be ridiculous. The vibe here is more mysterious and mystical than anything else. I remember it always used to give me goosebumps as a little kid. One brief phrase, unexplained, left for us to ponder and speculate.

Next time, blue skies and cloudy circumstances...
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

And now a spot of happy news! It turns out Crystal, our mouse, isn't dying of cancer at the advanced age of maybe two years. It turns out she's just old. Also fat.

[personal profile] bunnyhugger had the veterinarian's appointment, early in the morning, while I went in to another office day at work. And it turns out the vet doesn't think there's anything particularly alarming at work in her innards. To make sure we could get a CAT scan done but for obvious reasons we don't want to put her to that stress.

But she has gained a lot of weight. Something like ten grams, which doesn't sound like a lot until you remember she started at 48. So, she has to stop getting so many snacks, which may be a self-solving problem as the young mice don't see any reason they shouldn't have treats we give her more.

One treat we do have to give her and her alone, though? Everyone's favorite arthritis pain-manager, meloxicam. The catch is that it's hard to give an injection into a mouse's mouth that doesn't threaten shoving it down their lungs. So we're looking to trick her into eating it, by soaking the meloxicam into a bit of bread. This has caused us to realize we're not sure Crystal has ever had a bit of bread and so she doesn't know whether it's a treat. Bread smeared in peanut butter, though, peanut butter being the food mice love as much as cartoon mice love cheese? She's not sure she likes that either. But also impairing things is that we took her out of her cage to put in the travel cage and feed her there, and that's circumstances that put anyone off their diet.

So we have to figure the best way to get medicine into mouse on a regular timetable. If we're lucky she'll come to see it as a special treat she and no other mouse gets to have and maybe that helps her feel not quite so aching and toddling. If not, well, we're old hands at doing stuff for our pets' good that they don't see why we're bothering them about.


Have some more pictures now of Oostende, the far point of our trip on De Lijn and where our last full day in Europe started to end.

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Public art outside the train station, a couple concrete benches along with statues in case you want to sit in a faceless person's lap.


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Somewhere over that way was a lighthouse. It didn't seem near enough to visit, especially behind fences like that, so we can't say we got any credits with the North American Lighthouse Society European League.


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I think it's lovely they have a whole ship channel dedicated to the Mercator projection map!


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We figured on the cathedral as the thing to walk to while we were out there and heading up that way discovered a tattoo parlor.


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We didn't get anything this time but we were delighted by the Popeye, Betty Boop, Flower, Minnie Mouse, and ... Snuffy Smith For Some Reason ... tattoos they had on offer.


P1090610.jpeg

Serious things to ponder on a car painted to look like a late-evening sky.


Trivia: The traditional 753 BCE date for the founding of Rome is generally credited to the calculations of Marcus Terentius Varro, 116 - 27 BCE. Source: Marking Time: The Epic Quest to Invent the Perfect Calendar, Duncan Steel.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

Where You Can Only Swim if You Try

Jan. 14th, 2026 12:10 am
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

I know what you really want to know is What’s Going On In The Phantom (Weekdays)? What’s coming for The Phantom? October 2025 – January 2026 so after reading that, please enjoy a double dose of pictures from our ride on De Lijn:

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We've reached the portion of the shore where there's parasailing, that's nice to see.


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Quick stop to have detraining passengers get eaten by a crocodile.


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Here's a hotel, I believe, that has this mesh wrapping that caught my fancy, I think because it looks like those mesh bags they'll put an orange in to carry.


P1090574.jpeg

And the Atlantic Ocean, seen from the other side from what we were used to back in New Jersey.


P1090578.jpeg

Nice and tolerably centered view of the shoreline and I'm guessing a parking payment station.


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There's those parasailers again.


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Is it really the Spilliaert House? Sign says so. I can't tell you anything more than that.


P1090584.jpeg

And here's the station at Oostende, roughly the halfway point and where we had to stop to turn around.


P1090587.jpeg

It was a multimodal station, buses, interurban, trains, probably boats, and as you can see, portable holes.


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The portable hole, you can see, leads to a dimension of bicycle parking.


P1090588.jpeg

Also a drawbridge, raised and lowered as boats moved along the channel.


P1090592.jpeg

Here at the fabulous Belgian Hall of Justice ...


Trivia: New Jersey's constitution of 1844 expanded male suffrage to all adult white male citizens who had lived one year in the state and five months in a particular county. There was no move made to restore the voting rights of Black people or women, which they had enjoyed from 1776 through 1807. Source: New Jersey: A History of the Garden State, Maxine N Lurie, Richard Veit.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

dewline: "Aux armes pour les poches, tout le monde! (design)
[personal profile] dewline
I'm shopping for a particular kind of font family. Looks close to Helvetica UCE, has multiple weights like Gravitica Compressed or Tungsten and has at least two character sets in addition to Latin. Greek and Cyrillic at least.

Can anyone here help me with this?
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

We are coming up on the Michigan State Pinball Championship, in which I will not be playing. Neither will [personal profile] bunnyhugger. We don't play enough events, given how busy the Michigan pinball schedule is. Nor how competitive it is; even if we did do some pinball event every weekend we might not earn enough competition points to make the top-24 in the state.

But the day after the (open) Pinball Championship is the Women's Championship, which [personal profile] bunnyhugger runs and is also qualified for. And this week she's been calling news departments and such for tv stations anywhere that might be interested, and a few have got back to her. One of the Grand Rapids stations hopes to talk with her Thursday for a segment to air Friday. There's this Muskegon station that ... might or might not actually exist. She's been unable to tell, from their web site. And closer to home?

Lansing's Channel 10 interviewed her last week, for a segment that ran on today's 3:00 afternoon news show. This didn't talk about the state championship, though, just the upcoming start of the Lansing Pinball League season. [personal profile] bunnyhugger got to talk a fair bit about what's fun in pinball, and how the league is a pleasant, comfortable place welcoming to new players, and at the end of this she got cut off for mysterious reasons. I assume there was a time constraint that couldn't be worked around.

[personal profile] bunnyhugger was worried the video they took of her playing Attack From Mars would show off to any experienced player that she wasn't doing well under the news cameras. She needn't have worried; the editing cut up the flow of the game enough that all you could tell is she kept the ball from draining several times over. And that, in the end, she hit the shot that blew up a saucer, exactly the sort of visually distinctive and exciting thing you want to show on TV. There are more challenging accomplishments you can do on other games at our local hipster bar, but I'm not sure there are any so obvious to the novice that Something Exciting Is Happening.


Sunday we too De Lijn, an interurban that's been running the west coast of Belgium since the 19th century; the whole run is supposed to be an outstanding experience. Unfortunately we could only take it halfway, because we'd discovered late Saturday night that we had to leave De Panne early in order to make our plane flight home Monday morning. So we took half the line and you're going to see it.

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Waiting for the train! We had our tickets and were just waiting to hop on.


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On the train here, looking back at the Blue Ring that's surely the companion to that Golden Ring over in Royal Oak or whatever it is in Michigan.


P1090558.jpeg

One of many features passed on the way up the coast; I believe it was a memorial to Great War dead. Don't mess with that Nood-opening; looks dangerous.


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We have no idea what that Ferris wheel's deal is.


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And then we encountered this sign of these beloved(?) Belgian(?) cartoon(?) stars(?) on the side of this hotel(?).


P1090565.jpeg

I feel like I'm looking at a meme.


Trivia: The Chicago Tunnel Railway is a system of about 62 miles of track, almost all underneath the city. In the 1940s 150 electric locomotives and three thousand cars delivered coal and other freight to basements of buildings in the Loop and hauled away ashes and more freight. Source: The Story of American Railroads, Stewart H Holbrook.

Currently Reading: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II, Maury Klein.

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