Your privacy is at great risk in this era of Internet of things, after revelation of spying backdoor's inInternet routers and Chinese Electric Goods we now have another revelation of spying by LG SmartTV's. Findings made by developer @DoctorBeet revealed how LG is spying on users watching habits including logging of file-names watched by users from there external USB disk drivers as shown below to remote servers. The communication is clearly sending out "unique device ID" (which could be traced back to you) along with the information about what is being watched and too completely unencrypted.
Friday, 29 November 2013
Tuesday, 26 November 2013
Everything you need to know about Apple's new Mac Pro
Hell finally froze over yesterday and Apple announced a new Mac Pro at WWDC. At first glance, the new machine was as mysterious as it was terrifying to me and many other creative pros who have been waiting for ages for this thing to drop. But now that Apple has a full site page for the new machine and I've gotten some info from people familiar with its internals and with OS X 10.9, the Mac Pro has become less of a mystery.
But that's also what's freaking us out.
The design
At 16.8cm × 21.1cm for its cylindrical machined aluminum case, the new Mac Pro is tiny, and no other workstation-class Xeon desktop with a discrete workstation GPU -- or two, in this case -- looks anything like it. You get the feeling that the designers sat around coming up with ideas for the new Mac Pro and said, "if Darth Vader edited video, what would his computer look like?" Well... it would probably look like this.
Ars Technica
The inside is a truly amazing bit of engineering, organised in a tube-like shape with a triangular arrangement of the motherboard elements along the exterior walls of the "thermal core," a unibody-like heatsink that draws heat away from the GPU, CPU, and memory.
Even more unusually, the machine has only one (1) fan that cools everything, wind-tunnel style.
So the Mac Pro will, I suspect, be a ridiculously quiet workstation as well. This is Apple engineering at its best, and I won't have any concerns about using this for long sessions of V-Ray rendering or ZBrush sculpting. Detractors will say it's going to overheat if you do anything serious, but Apple knows these things need to run around the clock for days on end. It didn't put a dual workstation GPU in there and expect people not to use it extensively. More about that further on.
The new Mac Pro makes the previous generation look (thankfully) as outdated as it should, given that the machine it's replacing uses technology from 2010. All the expected modern technologies are here, plus some that will put the new machine ahead of many current competing workstations: dual Gigabit Ethernet, HDMI 1.4, Thunderbolt 2.0 with DisplayPort 1.2 support for up to three 4K displays, 802.11ac wireless, Bluetooth 4.0, 1,866MHz ECC RAM, PCIe-based flash storage, and dual AMD FirePro GPUs with up to 6GB of VRAM. The addition of Wi-Fi as standard is a nice addition, but it's kind of a gimmick considering the machine's lack of upgradeability.
Judging by the animation on Apple's site, the RAM also appears to be easily user-replaceable. Additionally, Apple opted to build in PCIe-based flash storage, and it appears to be on a daughter card.
Performance-wise, the move to PCIe-based internal storage as standard was really smart. Since SATA3 tops out at 600MBps, it's soon going to be the weakest link as the next generation of SSDs start to push beyond that range. Considering that Apple uses fast Samsung SSDs as standard in its laptops, I'm sure the company will slap a very fast SSD in the new Mac Pro. Expect companies like OWC to make Mac Pro-specific flash storage upgrades after the machine launches.
As far as the other technologies go, it's clear that Apple is pulling out all the stops to make the Mac Pro a serious professional's tool that won't get dated any time soon. Which is good, because the stuff inside it better last...
A truly epic lack of expandability
Ask any Mac Pro users where "small size" sits on their list of workstation needs and they will tell you it's down at the bottom, squarely between "should make my bed in the morning" and "covered in fur". The added desktop space will be nice to make room for those three shiny 4K displays that we can apparently afford, but "tiny" isn't on my list of wants for a workstation. Fortunately for me, "rack-mountable" isn't on there either, since cylindrical isn't the most server-ready format.
But the small size creates a potential problem. Aside from the regressive lack of any easily accessible ports on the front of the machine, the new Mac Pro has some serious expandability issues.
Internal hard drives
I'm personally on the fence about this one and see it as more of a nuisance than a showstopper. Most professional video people use external RAID arrays for their video work, and the new Mac Pro's six Thunderbolt 2 ports will provide more than enough expandability to accommodate them.
But I don't do much video work, and the four internal drive bays of the existing Mac Pro enclosure became a comfy standard for me and my work. Anything more seems like too many -- but zero extra drive bays is, to put it mildly, too few. Now I will be forced to replace my existing eSATA RAID enclosure since eSATA/Thunderbolt adapters are stupidly expensive and there are no PCI slots in the machine to accommodate an eSATA adapter card. Considering the still-high price of external Thunderbolt enclosures, the price of the Mac Pro better be reasonable, because it's clear that many of us will be forced to take this route as well.
I think that Apple is doing two things with this approach to expandability: one, it hopes to light a fire under third-party Thunderbolt supporters the way it did with USB and the iMac. Two, it wants to drive a wedge between professional video on the Mac (still the standard, regardless of how many times you troll me) and video editing on the PC. Many tools that were once PCI-only have been moved to an external Thunderbolt enclosure, much like how audio cards for FireWire and USB became the norm in mobile music. I'm sure that Apple's move with the Mac Pro was meant to help accelerate that trend so that the Mac Pro and MacBook Pro can share formerly PCI-based video hardware. For many devices, the 20Gbps bandwidth of Thunderbolt 2 will be fine for this purpose, but those will also cost more than a vanilla PCI card.
It seems that the price of the new Mac Pro keeps rising.
Four USB 3.0 ports
This is one of the worst culprits in the new Mac Pro's lack of expandability. It's not even reasonable to have less than six USB ports on a workstation. With such a limited amount of USB connections and internal expandability, the minimal profile of Apple's new Mac Pro will be predictably mired by a clumsy caboose of USB hubs and Thunderbolt devices.
No optical drive
Over a year ago, when I first considered the prospect of a tower without an optical disk, it seemed premature. I was doing periodical archiving of my portfolio to a Blu-ray drive that was also supported fine by Adobe Encore. I'd occasionally use the Superdrive to reinstall software from DVD. But today, even my MacBook Pro has a hard drive caddy where the internal Superdrive used to be. All my software archives are either on a hard disk or in the cloud. Autodesk doesn't send my Maya updates on DVD anymore since it's all done via Web, and if my machine's in need of an OS reinstall, Apple's OS even boots from the cloud or a USB stick.
Sure, the need to make a DVD backup for a client may come up, but I can just use my gaming rig's Blu-ray/DVD burner or use my girlfriend's external USB Superdrive (which she uses with her MacBook Air) on the Mac Pro. Well, hopefully -- rather stupidly, the drive doesn't work with my MacBook Pro. Apple, please unlock that thing, because the new Mac Pro is getting expensive enough as it is.
That GPU
So with the new Mac Pro, graphics pros get a mixed blessing: two workstation-class AMD FirePro cards with a boatload of memory and compute power... flattened like a pancake and screwed onto two sides of the Mac Pro's thermal core.
I don't care much that it's a FirePro since that -- with the exception of its ECC RAM -- is just a marketing term for the drivers and support you get with a professional GPU. If you've read any of my reviews of the Quadro for Mac or the HP Z820, I mention that the lack of a workstation card in current Macs is a non-issue since you already get support for professional applications with Geforce and Radeon GPUs in OS X, and developers like Autodesk work to certify their applications with those gaming cards in OS X. The flip side of the new FirePro card is that if you want to use the Mac Pro for the occasional game, you'll get full support and bug fixes for those too. Nothing really changes from an end-user perspective except the cooler name and the increase in VRAM.
The other potentially good side of the "workstation GPU" label of the FirePro is that Apple doesn't need to charge you the inflated price for two actual FirePro cards. Apple has obviously made an arrangement to buy the hardware for less than you would personally pay an OEM for two cards (which might tell us why two Nvidia GPUs aren't in there, considering how Nvidia let AMD take the PS4 and XBox One because the margins offered by Sony and Microsoft were too low to warrant the time and manufacturing effort). Since AMD and Apple aren't writing a completely separate driver for FirePros vs. Radeons, and because they don't need to build an entirely separate support network for the FirePro, there's no reason why these pro GPUs will include the huge markup that gets foisted on retail/OEM FirePro users. So you are, in theory, getting the best of both worlds: two beefy workstation GPUs, full support with professional applications, and a lower price tag.
As for what to expect performance-wise, it's hard to say since the last iteration of Radeon 7950 for Macs was a huge letdown for me. In my experience with apps like Maya and Cinema 4D, it came nowhere near the performance with pro apps that you see in Linux (fastest) or Windows (fast) with the same 7950. A dual 6GB GPU with OpenGL 4.1 support (coming in OS X 10.9) would do much to address my concerns about long-term shelf life for 3D on the new Mac Pro, but Apple and AMD need to address OS X's driver performance shortcomings, because they are significant. Once the hard work of getting tessellation and other OpenGL 4.1 features is done, I really hope they start honing GL speeds in OS X because the last thing I want is a slow video card with lots of video RAM and a fancy name -- for four years.
But many 3D users aren't even going to get to the point of using the new Mac Pro. The fact that the GPU is not user-replaceable remains a huge issue for people like me, and this is going to do a lot to send potential Mac Pro 3D users to Windows PCs. If there are only good/better/best purchase options, with the GPU and the CPU speeds linked for build options on the Mac store, which would further limit our options. I really hope there's some freedom on the configuration end, since I usually buy a top-end GPU but the mid-speed Xeon.
Crossfire for OS X
I spoke with one developer who has some knowledge of how dual-GPU support works for the Darth Pro, and it seems that OpenGL apps can leverage both GPUs with some extra work by the developers. That means that we could see Crossfire-like support for professional 3D applications in OS X (OpenCL compute apps don't need to be modified to use both GPUs' stream processors).
This is something that Windows professional OpenGL apps don't get in Crossfire/SLI setups, and the second GPU of SLI and dual-GPU cards goes unused in pro apps under Windows and Linux. With dual GPUs as a standard feature and the available APIs, this could persuade developers to do the extra work. But, being a long-time Maya beta tester, I know how companies like Autodesk work: they only fork their very cross-platform code when they have to, so there's little chance of this happening with apps like Maya or AutoCAD.
No Nvidia option?
The other thing that jumps out about the new Mac Pro is that Nvidia is completely AWOL and won't have any competing GPU config. This puts a lot of video and 3D professionals in a bad spot because many need CUDA support.
Apple may be trying to not-so-delicately nudge everyone to move their code from CUDA to OpenCL, but I've seen a first-hand failure of AMD's OpenCL support with V-Ray RT for Maya. Chaos Group built V-Ray RT on OpenCL, but after extensive work trying to get the GPU variant of its RT render engine running on AMD hardware and an effort by yours truly to light a fire under Apple and AMD, Chaos Group gave up and ported it to CUDA instead. So V-Ray RT's GPU mode only works with OpenCL and CUDA -- on Nvidia hardware.
If Apple wants OpenCL and AMD to be the answer to CUDA, the support needs to be there so this kind of thing doesn't happen again. As it is, I now have zero options for V-Ray RT GPU on the 2013 Mac Pro since the software doesn't work on AMD cards, and no Quadro/Geforce card is available for the machine. I'm sure some company will eventually build a Thunderbolt 2 Nvidia GPU-in-a-box for people who need CUDA, but to quote our own Peter Bright, "Thunderbolt 2 is equivalent to 2.5 lanes of PCIe 3 or 5 lanes of PCIe 2," so it's hard to say what kind of a performance hit that will incur for compute tasks with an external GPU.
"Time will tell" seems to be the running theme with the new Mac Pro design. With such a contentious redesign, it's hard to say if this is going to be Apple's Xeon version of the Cube or a truly revolutionary approach to workstation hardware. I'll be writing a full review and pulling no punches, so expect to see that around September or October, when the Ivy Bridge Xeon E5 Mac Pro ships -- presumably in a coffee grinder box.
Saturday, 23 November 2013
Google quietly, selectively builds speedy Internet access
When Google announced plans in 2010 to jump into the broadband business, the companyreceived more than 1000 applications from communities hoping to be selected for Google Fiber, which promised gigabit-speed Internet at low prices or even free Internet for seven years if you chose a slower speed.
As we head into 2014, Google has delivered super-fast Internet to exactly one place,greater Kansas City; it's just now rolling out the service to Provo, Utah—where it purchased an existing municipal network for $1; and has announced plans for Austin, Texas, in 2014.
After that, who knows? Google has not released any further scheduling information.
But if you're Verizon, Comcast, or AT&T, you might be breathing a little easier these days, knowing that Google apparently is not planning to buy up all that unused dark fiber and compete in the residential broadband market on a nationwide scale—at least for now.
Why enter networking?
There has always been speculation about Google's motives, and, Google being Google, answers have been hard to come by. Is this just an experiment? Another attention-grabbing sideshow, like those mysterious barges floating in San Francisco Bay and Portland, Maine? Is Google trying to compete head-to-head against the incumbents? Or is Google trying to nudge the incumbents to step up their broadband game by introducing the specter of competition? After all, faster Internet means Google can deliver more ads to more end users, which is how the company makes its money.
As Google spokesperson Jenna Wandres puts it: "The simple answer to why' is this: it's for Google users. They keep telling us that they're tired of waiting for incredibly slow upload and download speeds that often take hours to just transfer an album of photos from one location to another."
According to Wandres, it's all about speed. She pointed out that Google developed the Chrome browser to make the Internet experience faster, but it can only be as fast as the Internet connections and the hardware and networks that support that infrastructure. So now, they're installing Google fiber, to make it faster.
"For the next big leap," says Wandres, "Gigabit speeds will bring new apps and talented developers to the table, who can and will take advantage of these remarkable speeds." She explains that organizations such as Kansas City Startup Village (KCSV)—an ecosystem of grassroots individuals working together to create an entrepreneur community—thrive in this type of environment; that is, an area where high-speed Internet allows developers to collaborate and share ideas.
Competition is good news
According to Forrester analyst Dan Bieler, Google Fiber "is good news because competition increases the pressure on carriers and cable providers to bring true broadband service to more households and businesses, if they want to compete effectively with Google. In my view, it is unlikely that Google fiber will target rural areas, but it's clearly an interesting option for Google to target higher-income urban areas as well as central business districts.''
"Competition is the main driver for improved services, and this will continue to be the case," adds Ian Keene, research vice president at Gartner. "But Google has discovered that rolling out its services is taking longer than they first thought. If they carry on at this pace, they will not be a threat beyond a handful of cities; not for the foreseeable future, anyway. However, where they are active, we will and have seen the competition fight back with improved subscriber offers."
For example, after Google announced plans to deliver gigabit Internet to Austin, AT&T announced plans to up its game in Austin. AT&T has promised to provide ultra high-speed gigabit Internet (called GigaPower) to its Austin users in December, with initial symmetrical speeds up to 300Mbps and an upgrade to the 1Gbps by mid-2014 (at no extra cost, of course).
But it's still too early to tell whether Google's efforts will prove to be economically feasible, or whether Google will continue to expand beyond the three locations already identified. "Google, like many others, has learned that the enormity of the costs involved in building broadband infrastructure creates a dilemma," says telecom analyst Craig Moffett. "It is extraordinarily difficult to earn a reasonable return on building an infrastructure to compete with cable. Verizon tried with Verizon FiOS and, after reaching only 14 percent of the country, eventually conceded that further expansion was just not economically justified."
Moffett explains that at least Google is giving it the old college try; but the markets they have chosen, so far, are all unique cases. "For example," he says, "In Provo, they're building on a network that was already there. In Austin, we'll get a better sense of what the economics might actually look like. At this point, I think it is reasonable to conclude that fiber-to-the-home deployments like these will remain the exception rather than the rule."
How it works
With more than 1100 applicants, Google could choose the communities that offered the most advantageous terms and conditions. These installations require access to utility poles, roads, and even substations in order to lay their fiber networks, so applicants had to be willing to expedite that process.
In the case of Kansas City, Google only extends fiber to neighborhoods with a certain number of preregistered customers.
According to Wandres, locations must be fiber friendly, technological leaders, and residents must show a genuine willingness to work with Google; that is, to be flexible, move quickly, and cut through the red tape.
"It's a long process and requires a lot of work," Wandres says. "There must be a strong demand for fiber among the user base (for those who are excited about a technological hub) and for entrepreneurs who can advance the technology. In Kansas City, the Mayors' Bi-state Innovation Team came up with a playbook for how Kansas City could benefit from fiber. And there's another group now tasked with following through on those plans.''
In Kansas City, subscribers can get gigabit Internet for $70 per month or the gigabit service plus TV (200 channels, HD included) bundle for $120 a month. Both of these options provide free installation plus all the equipment necessary to enable the service to function, such as the network gear, the storage device, and the TV box. Additional benefits include 1TB (terabyte) of storage across Gmail, the drive, and Google+ photos and, for the bundle, one Nexus 7 tablet.
Kansas City residents who want Internet access, but may not classify themselves as power users, can get Google's free Internet service, which runs at 5Mbps. The free service does require a one-time installation fee of $300 (or $25 a month for 12 months), then the service is free for at least seven years.
"At the end of seven years, we will begin charging the market price for comparable speeds—which should be $0, as long as Internet speeds increase as much as we hope over the next few years," Wandres adds. "In other words, we think that in seven years, Internet speeds should be ubiquitously faster in America and, by that point, nobody should have to pay for a connection speed that is 5Mbps download/1Mbps upload."
Brittain Kova, co-leader and communications pilot at KCSV says, "With regards to speed, nobody has been able to break the gig. We've tried. Downloading tons of files while gaming and running multiple videos simultaneously and we still barely see a dent. What companies are experiencing is an extreme amount of time savings; for example, www.sportsphotos.com, a company that moved to the KCSV from Springfield, Missouri, is now able to upload thousands of high resolution photos in a matter of hours; a project that in the past, took days, if not weeks to accomplish."
"In addition," says Kova, "Google fiber has been the catalyst that's brought the community together in ways that may have never happened, or certainly would have taken years to see the outcomes. It's bringing like-minded people who want to innovate and collaborate, who know we (KC) have a short window of time to do something big, and we're really leveraging this opportunity to do great things for the community as a whole. From households to startups, corporate and civic, we're all working together for the first time in years and it's exciting."
Based on the Google fiber city map, the Kansas City project is still in progress. Thirteen more cities in Kansas and six additional cities in Missouri are scheduled next for this service.
Next up, Provo, Utah
The situation in Provo is somewhat different, because Google purchased the existing iProvo city network for $1. So, Google didn't have to start from scratch, it just needed to upgrade the existing network, which was built in 2006.
In a recent blog post, Provo Mayor John Curtis said, "Unfortunately, while we've had the desire, we haven't had the technical know-how to operate a viable high-speed fiber optic network for Provo residents. So, I started looking for a private buyer for the iProvo network. We issued a Request for Qualifications and a Request for Proposal and even hired a private consultant to guide our efforts. [And now] under the agreement, Google Fiber is committed to helping Provo realize the original vision."
Provo's customer plan; that is, the monthly price for gigabit Internet or the Internet/TV bundle is the same as Kansas City ($70 or $120, respectively) except that everyone in Provo pays the installation fee of $30, not just the users who sign up for the free 5Mbps/1Mbps service. And, like Kansas, the free service is only free for seven years (or longer, based on the market price for comparable speeds after seven years).
Wednesday, 20 November 2013
How to live large on every battery charge
While it's easier to find outlets for charging your mobile device in vehicles and public places these days, there will always be the occasion when you need to nurse the battery in your laptop, smartphone, or tablet because you can’t charge it. Whether you forgot bring your charger, are stuck in the woods, or you simply want to revel in the un-tethered-ness of it all, here are some tricks for achieving longer run time.
Increase the run time on any device
Fact: your battery has a set amount of juice in it, and there's not a darn thing you can do to increase it (safely anyway). Ask Boeing, or Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
So if electrical capacity is finite, it's pretty obvious you'll need to reduce consumption to make it last longer. The only way to do that is to turn things down or off, just as you do with the lighting and appliances in your house. You knew that, but maybe you didn't know just how much stuff there is to turn down or off.
The most obvious component that you can turn down, and leave off when not in use, is the display. Reduce the brightness as far as you can, and turn it off whenever you don't need it. Reduce the automatic shutoff setting. The more aggressive you are the more power you'll save. If you're in dire straits, manually shut it off as quickly and as often as possible.
The GPS circuitry and the real-time navigation software that use it are the most notorious power sucks in mobile devices such as smartphones. They stress not only the radio, but the CPU with graphics. If you're low on juice, memorize the general location and route, and then wait until you're close before you go crazy with the GPS app. Stick with just the voice cues if you can.
Bluetooth, cellular, NFC (near-field communication), and Wi-Fi radios are also major power drains. Turning these off when you don't need them can double your battery life. Airplane mode, which turns them all off, is intended to save your battery, which drains very quickly when your phone constantly is searching for signals that are non-existent at 35,000 feet. Note: if you have a phone that supports Wi-Fi calling (T-Mobile/Windows Phone 8), using the feature will increase battery run times, because the Wi-Fi radio uses less current.
Finally, while multitasking makes switching between apps quicker, it also uses more power. Even if an application isn't front and center, it still has to be serviced by the operating system, and it might be performing tasks in the background. Run only one app at a time when you're low on battery.
Tips for laptop users
So far, everything I've already discussed applies to any mobile computing device; however, there's a lot more you can do when the device in question is a laptop. In addition to dimming your display and turning off radios, there's a host of other hardware you can turn off, such as the back-lit keyboards, Firewire ports, Wi-Fi, serial and com ports, Web cams, sound and auxiliary video controllers, and your optical drive (if you laptop even has one). The power savings when disabling any one device might not be great, but disable a bunch and it can make difference.
To disable any piece hardware component that allows it (CPUs and drive controllers can't be), type "device manager" using the Windows find function (the box at the bottom or the Start Menu, or simply typing in Metro), or right-click on Computer, select Manage, and open Device Manager from the tree on the left. Right-click on any item to disable or enable it.
Then there's the software. Oh, the software. I already talked about running only one application at a time, but applications are only the tip of the iceberg. You might be running dozens of convenient, but unessential background processes. Prime examples are software updaters, printer and scanner control panels, and online storage service apps. There are even a number of Windows features—such as search indexing—that can be disabled. To kill unnecessary processes, use the Windows find function as described above. But this time, type "task manager." Alternatively, right-click on the taskbar and select "Start Task Manager", or press Ctrl+Alt+Del and select the same thing. Once the Windows Task Manager dialog appears, select the "Processes" tab and peruse the process names and descriptions.
Generally speaking, you can safely kill any process with a third-party brand name in it (Adobe, Apple, Dell, Google, HP, Dell, etc.). Right-click over the program and select End Process Tree to kill it and any non-visible processes that it spawned. Don't worry, you're not doing anything permanent here, the process will reappear after you restart or log off and log in again. Hopefully, the time you take disabling stuff doesn't drain more juice that leaving them running will. It pays to familiarize yourself with this culling while your laptop is running on AC power, so you can do it quickly when it counts.
If you wish to disable background apps and processes so that they don't automatically return at restart, run msconfig.exe (use the Windows find function). You'll find items you can live without under both the Startup and Services tabs. If they prove important, you can always re-enable them. For more in-depth information and control over how services start (automatically or when required), run services.msc, again using the find function. Uninstalling unused applications is also a boon.
How to boost a battery’s lifespan
The tricks to maximize your lithium-ion battery's useful lifespan, i.e., the number of times you can recharge it before it no longer accepts one, are pretty basic. There are three things that will prematurely age a Li-ion battery: Consistently draining it to the automatic shutdown point, heat, and over-charging/over-voltage charging. That last practice is actually dangerous and can lead to fire or even explosions.
The number of recharge cycles you'll get out of your Li-ion battery drops with how far you drain it on a regular basis. You can get as many as 5,000 cycles if you only discharge it to the 90 percent level each time, and perhaps only a few hundred if you run it down to 10 percent. Don't go crazy trying to stay tethered all the time. But you might want to break the habit of waiting for the low battery warning before plugging in.
Habitually leaving your Li-ion powered device in a hot car or near another heat source can significantly reduce its recoverable capacity (the amount of charge it can absorb). You could easily reduce a four-hour run time to three hours in a couple of months doing this. Touch chargers, which are only about 80 percent as efficient as wires, turn the other 20 your into heat. Stylish and convenient as they might be, using a touch charger could reduce your battery's lifespan.
Avoiding heat doesn't mean that freezing your devices or batteries will make them last forever. As a matter of fact, Li-ion batteries will not accept a charge if the ambient temperature is below freezing. Hybrid and electric cars that use Li-ion batteries keep them warm in cold climates. Basically, your battery is most comfortable at what you probably think of as just a little cooler than comfortable--60 degree Fahrenheit.
As to the over-charging/over-voltage charging issues, you're pretty much at the mercy of the device, charger, and battery manufacturer. Li-ion batteries have charge controllers that mostly prevent bad things such as overcharging and over-discharging from occurring. But mistakes happen, so if you notice an undo amount of heat in either a charger or the device being charged, stop using it until you find out what's going. Check with the vendor. If it burst into flames, quickly move it to an area where it catch anything else on fire, if you can do so safely, and get away from it. The byproducts of the combustion can be corrosive and toxic.
When you store a lithium-Ion battery, try to store it at 60 degrees with somewhere around a 40 percent charge. The charge will prevent the battery from going to sleep and never waking up. This is why you quite often get a new mobile device that's already partially, but not fully charged.
The Bottom Line
It all boils down to this: To extend run time, turn stuff down or off. To extend a Li-ion battery's lifespan, don't consistently drain it to low levels or expose it to heat on a regular basis. Store it at 60 degrees at a 40 percent charge. Batteries are all about freedom, so try to nurture good habits without killing the joy.
May your batteries run long and linger (and be recycled properly).
Ooma Office review: This VoIP-based phone system makes small businesses seem big
Every business must interact with its customers via the telephone at some point. And it won’t matter how great your employees are, or how superb your product might be, if your customers have a bad experience trying to reach the right people on the phone.
A full-featured phone system capable of handling multiple phone lines, conference calls, voicemail, and other features can lend a small office a larger and more professional air. But getting all these features can entail a significant capital expense involving custom equipment and professional installation. And a platform that supports remote workers can render the system even more complex and expensive.
Ooma has a better idea. The company has developed a business-oriented version of its very successful home-based VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) system. Ooma Office is a full-featured virtual PBX (Private Branch Exchange) that can support multiple phone lines, five extensions, and 15 virtual extensions at a very low cost (for both the equipment and the service).
This being a VoIP system, you probably want to know about voice quality before you read any further. You needn’t worry: It’s excellent. I can’t say the same of the synthesized voice of the virtual receptionist, but there is an alternative. More on that later.
How much does it cost?
The Ooma Office starter pack includes a central Ooma base station, two Linx modules, one phone number (you can port your business’s existing phone number for free), an online fax, and three physical extensions (one for the base station and one for each Linx module). The Linx modules communicate with the base station using the DECT 6.0 wireless protocol, so you don’t need to worry about them sucking up your Wi-Fi network’s bandwidth, or having just the right infrastructure for power-line networking.
The hardware costs $250, plus a subscription fee of $10 per month per user and $10 per month per phone number. The system will support two additional Linx modules at a one-time cost of $50 each. Buying additional phone numbers lets you map them to extensions, so that callers can reach your employees directly without going through the virtual receptionist.
You will, however, need to provide your own conventional handsets for the system (as fancy or as plain as you like, wired or wireless. Just plug one into the base station and one into each Linx.) You’ll also need broadband Internet service (since that’s how VoIP works). Calls within the U.S. and Canada are free. International calls are billed against a prepaid account (prepayments are made in increments of $25).
Features and functions
Now that you have a grasp of how much Ooma Office costs, let’s take a look at the features it offers, and how well they work. Incoming calls can be routed to a virtual receptionist, or if you purchase additional phone numbers, you can route them directly to the extensions you assign. The virtual receptionist can greet callers with custom messages created with a text-to-speech converter, or with audio files that you record and upload.
The receptionist’s synthesized female voice is good, but not great. Most businesses will likely prefer to record their own greetings—both for that personal touch and to make sure people can understand everything the virtual receptionist needs to say. But you’ll need to provide your own mic and recording software to do this. You can also upload on-hold music in the form of an MP3 or WAV file, but you’re limited to a stingy file size of just 5MB.
The virtual receptionist has separate menus for business hours and after hours, and you can assign commands to each of the 10 buttons on a phone (0 through 9). For example: “Press zero to talk to an operator,” “For Sales, press 1,” “Press 4 to reach [employee name],” “Press 5 to dial by employee name,” “Press 8 to leave a general voicemail,” and so on. If you prefer, you can configure the system so that incoming calls bypass the virtual receptionist, and are instead routed to a specific extension.
The system is very flexible at setting business and off hours. You can define a different schedule for every day of the week. You can also define a holiday schedule, and you can even define multiple time intervals for each day. But you can record only one greeting for business hours and one for after hours. An office that’s closed for lunch from 12:00 to 1:00 each day, for example, can’t record a message to inform callers that it’s only temporarily closed.
Each phone connected to Ooma Office has its own three-digit extension. Incoming calls can be directed to these extensions via the virtual receptionist, users with physical extensions can use these numbers to call each other (outside workers with virtual extensions cannot), and all workers can transfer calls to each other—including to workers working at remote locations and using virtual extensions.
Each extension also has its own private, PIN-protected voicemail, and voicemail messages can be converted to text and emailed to the person assigned to that extension. If you have employees who travel frequently or who work outside the office, calls to their extensions can be automatically forwarded to another number, such as a cell phone. These virtual extensions can still be assigned voicemail accounts.
If you establish ring groups, multiple extensions will ring at the same time. If you have several sales people in the office, for example, you can program the virtual receptionist to announce “Dial 1 for sales,” and the call will be simultaneously routed to several extensions, including virtual extensions. Whichever extension responds first, takes the call. The system is very easy to program using a Web-based interface.
Ooma Office supports three-way conference calls, placing calls on hold, and call waiting. The last major feature I’ll cover here is the conference bridge. This enables a business to host its own conference calls for up to five participants. This feature is protected by a PIN to prevent unauthorized users from dialing in (the same PIN is used for all participants), but it does consume one of the available extensions.
This product is too limited for operations with more than a handful of employees, but operations with one to five employees—especially virtual businesses with employees who work remotely or who travel frequently—will find lots of value in Ooma Office. It can make a small business seem big, and it save small businesses lots of money on phone bills.
13 highly productive Android apps that play nice with your PC
Productivity hits the road
The PC simply isn't the end-all and be-all of the computing world anymore. Instead, it has become just one of many screens vying for your attention, as more and more of our tasks shift to tablets and smartphones.
But getting things done on disparate devices doesn't mean you have to abandon a cohesive workflow. These 13 Android apps sync, link, connect, or just plain play nice with your computer in ways that make it easier to stay productive no matter where you are—and with minimal hassle. Check 'em out.
Astro File Manager
Staying productive on your mobile device often involves mucking around in the Android file system, placing and plucking files from here, there, and everywhere. That file system is hidden from users by default. Astro lets you dive in. 'Nuff said.
Actually, not quite. Astro also has killer search capabilities that can find your files no matter where they're hidden on your phone, and "Cloud Hopping" technology that lets you seamlessly move files between multiple cloud storage services without downloading them to your phone first.
Folder Sync
If AirDroid sounds intriguing only because of its wireless file management, check out Folder Sync, yet another incredible app.
Folder Sync relies on customizable sync rules designed to place your phone or tablet's folders in the cloud service (or personal server) of your choice—SkyDrive, Dropbox, SugarSync, Box, and Ubuntu One are just a few of the many options supported. Want to sync the folders only when changes are made on your phone, or when they're updated in the cloud, too? Which folders? And when: on a schedule or any time changes are made? This app does it all, and it makes shifting files from your phone to your PC and back again utterly seamless.
EasyTether
Sometimes, your phone's most useful productivity feature is its mobile Internet connection, which can be a lifesaver when you need to break out your laptop on the road. Some wireless subscription plans include wireless hotspot capabilities baked in, but if yours doesn't, give EasyTether a whirl.
EasyTether's a rare breed: It lets you tether your laptop to your mobile device's broadband via USB without the need to root your phone. You'll need to install both the app on your phone and an EasyTether program on your PC, so you'll need to set it up before you're in dire need of the mobile Web. The free version is great by itself, but it doesn't allow you to browse sites with HTTPS encryption. It's worth paying the one-time, $10 fee for the full version to remove that obstacle.
Lookout Antivirus and Security
Before you go plugging your phone into your PC, you'll want to make sure your device isn't host to a swarm of malware—some of which is actually designed to use Android as a sort of Trojan Horse, carrying very bad things into your computer.
Don't sweat the overhyped Android malware threat too much, though. Just slap the free, lightweight Lookout Antivirus and Security app on your phone and/or tablet and never look back.
OfficeSuite Pro
But what if you actually need to bang out some work on your Android? Productivity suites are a dime a dozen in the Play store, but many lack the crucial ability to save your work to the cloud, or—in the case of Google's free Quickoffice and Microsoft's premium Office Mobile for Android phones—only support limited cloud options.
OfficeSuite Pro, on the other hand, plays nice with Google Drive, Box, Dropbox, SkyDrive, and SugarSync. Cloud-saved files are files that are easily accessed on your PC! The app also plays nice with Microsoft Office's myriad document, spreadsheet, and presentation formats, as well as PDF files.
Google Cloud Print
Printing options on mobile devices mostly suck. Google's Cloud Print doesn’t. After you connect your printer to Cloud Print—any printer on any Net-connected PC will do, plus you'll need the Chrome browser installed on your computer—you'll be able to print documents and pictures by sharing them to the Cloud Print app via Android baked-in Share options. It's incredibly handy while you're out and about, and if you don't need paper copies, Cloud Print also lets you save screens to your Google Drive as PDFs.
In the future, you won't even need an app to tap into the power of Cloud Print, as Google has baked its functionality into Android KitKat. But given Android's fragmented OS adoption, you might as well install this killer app on the phone you own today.
Evernote
C'mon, it's Evernote. You know, the premier note-taking app in the world?
Evernote syncs your notes across all devices, so scribbles you've jotted on your PC will carry over to your smartphone, and vice versa. The Android Evernote app does a whole lot more than basic note-taking, though. This superbly designed app packs killer search functionality, to-do checklist creation, audio note-taking, and the ability to upload camera snapshots straight to the service—a tremendously powerful feature when paired with Evernote's excellent optical character recognition technology—and it plays nice with a legion of value-adding apps and services.
A premium subscription adds even more (offline notes), but the basic Evernote for Android app costs nothing to use.
Sure, OfficeSuite costs a bit more than free alternatives like QuickOffice and Kingsoft Office, but the price is worth it: Besides the widespread cloud and file format support, OfficeSuite is hands-down the slickest, fullest-featured mobile office suite around.
Dashlane or Lastpass
We're big proponents of password managers here at PCWorld, because they make using unique passwords for all the sites you visit an absolute breeze. Two of our favorites are Dashlane and LastPass, and each offers an Android app that lets you get to your stored passwords while you're on the run.
Of the two, Dashlane's interface (pictured) is definitely the sleeker option—what's up with LastPass's funky mobile browser?—but both work just fine, complete with the option to cut and paste stored passwords into other apps. LastPass offers a premium plugin for the Dolphin HD mobile browser that skips all the cutting-and-pasting and lets you automatically fill out login info in-browser, while Dashlane can store other info, like address and credit-card info.
Dashlane and LastPass apps: Free (LastPass requires $1 per month subscription after 14 day trial)
Splashtop Remote Desktop
Ruh-roh! You're on the road with your phone or tablet and you desperately need to access a file you've left on your home PC—and even worse, that PC folder isn't one that you have backed up by Folder Sync. What's a poor traveler to do, other than curl up in a ball and sob uncontrollably?
Simple: Boot up Splashtop Remote Desktop and tunnel into your computer from afar.
Splashtop Remote Desktop does exactly what its name suggests, letting you view and control your Windows PC right from your mobile device. It works great for "Oh no!" moments like the one described above, or for opening files and websites that your PC can handle, but your phone can't (Flash). I sometimes use it to stream movies or games. Even better: It's dead-simple to use.
PocketCloud Explore
If you don't need a graphical interface as part of your remote desktop arsenal, PocketCloud Explore lets you dig around your PC's files for free—at least if you need to do so only on a single PC, and don't need to transfer anything bigger than 25MB.
PocketCloud Explore presents you with your PC's folder tree once you've installed companion software on your computer and booted up the app. Now you can navigate your hard drive until you find the file you're looking for. Selecting a file opens it in a native Android app (like Kingsoft Office or the baked-in Gallery app).
It's especially great for accessing documents and Office-type files. A $5 per month premium subscription ditches the ads, unlocks remote access for up to 10 PCs, and ups the file size limit to 1GB.
Tasker
Tasker doesn't directly meld with your PC, but it's just so insanely useful that I couldn't leave it off the list. This handy-dandy app lets you automate virtually every aspect of your phone, using customizable "profiles" that launch specific actions when certain criteria are met.
For example, you can have your phone disable its cellular modem and connect to Wi-Fi when you're at home, automatically start playing music when you're near your Bluetooth-equipped car, turn off your GPS and Bluetooth to save juice at work, or even—if you want to get really creative—tackle super-specialized tasks that can help you get things done for your specific line of work.
And that's just the tip of the iceberg. Pocketables has a series of great guides to getting started with Tasker if you need help.
The final frontier: Droidbooks
If the thought of tinkering with Tasker has started your DIY juices flowing, you could go a step further and actually install Android on your PC. Creating a custom Droidbook won't really help you get more work done, but it sure is nifty to play around with.
The PC simply isn't the end-all and be-all of the computing world anymore. Instead, it has become just one of many screens vying for your attention, as more and more of our tasks shift to tablets and smartphones.
But getting things done on disparate devices doesn't mean you have to abandon a cohesive workflow. These 13 Android apps sync, link, connect, or just plain play nice with your computer in ways that make it easier to stay productive no matter where you are—and with minimal hassle. Check 'em out.
Astro File Manager
Staying productive on your mobile device often involves mucking around in the Android file system, placing and plucking files from here, there, and everywhere. That file system is hidden from users by default. Astro lets you dive in. 'Nuff said.
Actually, not quite. Astro also has killer search capabilities that can find your files no matter where they're hidden on your phone, and "Cloud Hopping" technology that lets you seamlessly move files between multiple cloud storage services without downloading them to your phone first.
AirDroid 2
The awesome AirDroid 2 app lets you wirelessly move files between your 'Droid and your PC, even if they're nowhere near each another. But the handy-dandy features don't end there: Once you have AirDroid up and running, you can sling text messages, pinpoint your phone's location, and even manage app installations from within the sanctity of your Web browser. Or you can push URLs from your PC to your Android, or copy clipboard text from your phone or tablet to your PC.
Seriously: AirDroid is one mighty useful app, and more features—including remote phone usage and camera controls—are unlocked if you opt for a $45 per year premium subscription.
If AirDroid sounds intriguing only because of its wireless file management, check out Folder Sync, yet another incredible app.
Folder Sync relies on customizable sync rules designed to place your phone or tablet's folders in the cloud service (or personal server) of your choice—SkyDrive, Dropbox, SugarSync, Box, and Ubuntu One are just a few of the many options supported. Want to sync the folders only when changes are made on your phone, or when they're updated in the cloud, too? Which folders? And when: on a schedule or any time changes are made? This app does it all, and it makes shifting files from your phone to your PC and back again utterly seamless.
EasyTether
Sometimes, your phone's most useful productivity feature is its mobile Internet connection, which can be a lifesaver when you need to break out your laptop on the road. Some wireless subscription plans include wireless hotspot capabilities baked in, but if yours doesn't, give EasyTether a whirl.
EasyTether's a rare breed: It lets you tether your laptop to your mobile device's broadband via USB without the need to root your phone. You'll need to install both the app on your phone and an EasyTether program on your PC, so you'll need to set it up before you're in dire need of the mobile Web. The free version is great by itself, but it doesn't allow you to browse sites with HTTPS encryption. It's worth paying the one-time, $10 fee for the full version to remove that obstacle.
Lookout Antivirus and Security
Before you go plugging your phone into your PC, you'll want to make sure your device isn't host to a swarm of malware—some of which is actually designed to use Android as a sort of Trojan Horse, carrying very bad things into your computer.
Don't sweat the overhyped Android malware threat too much, though. Just slap the free, lightweight Lookout Antivirus and Security app on your phone and/or tablet and never look back.
OfficeSuite Pro
But what if you actually need to bang out some work on your Android? Productivity suites are a dime a dozen in the Play store, but many lack the crucial ability to save your work to the cloud, or—in the case of Google's free Quickoffice and Microsoft's premium Office Mobile for Android phones—only support limited cloud options.
OfficeSuite Pro, on the other hand, plays nice with Google Drive, Box, Dropbox, SkyDrive, and SugarSync. Cloud-saved files are files that are easily accessed on your PC! The app also plays nice with Microsoft Office's myriad document, spreadsheet, and presentation formats, as well as PDF files.
Google Cloud Print
Printing options on mobile devices mostly suck. Google's Cloud Print doesn’t. After you connect your printer to Cloud Print—any printer on any Net-connected PC will do, plus you'll need the Chrome browser installed on your computer—you'll be able to print documents and pictures by sharing them to the Cloud Print app via Android baked-in Share options. It's incredibly handy while you're out and about, and if you don't need paper copies, Cloud Print also lets you save screens to your Google Drive as PDFs.
In the future, you won't even need an app to tap into the power of Cloud Print, as Google has baked its functionality into Android KitKat. But given Android's fragmented OS adoption, you might as well install this killer app on the phone you own today.
Evernote
C'mon, it's Evernote. You know, the premier note-taking app in the world?
Evernote syncs your notes across all devices, so scribbles you've jotted on your PC will carry over to your smartphone, and vice versa. The Android Evernote app does a whole lot more than basic note-taking, though. This superbly designed app packs killer search functionality, to-do checklist creation, audio note-taking, and the ability to upload camera snapshots straight to the service—a tremendously powerful feature when paired with Evernote's excellent optical character recognition technology—and it plays nice with a legion of value-adding apps and services.
A premium subscription adds even more (offline notes), but the basic Evernote for Android app costs nothing to use.
Sure, OfficeSuite costs a bit more than free alternatives like QuickOffice and Kingsoft Office, but the price is worth it: Besides the widespread cloud and file format support, OfficeSuite is hands-down the slickest, fullest-featured mobile office suite around.
Dashlane or Lastpass
We're big proponents of password managers here at PCWorld, because they make using unique passwords for all the sites you visit an absolute breeze. Two of our favorites are Dashlane and LastPass, and each offers an Android app that lets you get to your stored passwords while you're on the run.
Of the two, Dashlane's interface (pictured) is definitely the sleeker option—what's up with LastPass's funky mobile browser?—but both work just fine, complete with the option to cut and paste stored passwords into other apps. LastPass offers a premium plugin for the Dolphin HD mobile browser that skips all the cutting-and-pasting and lets you automatically fill out login info in-browser, while Dashlane can store other info, like address and credit-card info.
Dashlane and LastPass apps: Free (LastPass requires $1 per month subscription after 14 day trial)
Splashtop Remote Desktop
Ruh-roh! You're on the road with your phone or tablet and you desperately need to access a file you've left on your home PC—and even worse, that PC folder isn't one that you have backed up by Folder Sync. What's a poor traveler to do, other than curl up in a ball and sob uncontrollably?
Simple: Boot up Splashtop Remote Desktop and tunnel into your computer from afar.
Splashtop Remote Desktop does exactly what its name suggests, letting you view and control your Windows PC right from your mobile device. It works great for "Oh no!" moments like the one described above, or for opening files and websites that your PC can handle, but your phone can't (Flash). I sometimes use it to stream movies or games. Even better: It's dead-simple to use.
PocketCloud Explore
If you don't need a graphical interface as part of your remote desktop arsenal, PocketCloud Explore lets you dig around your PC's files for free—at least if you need to do so only on a single PC, and don't need to transfer anything bigger than 25MB.
PocketCloud Explore presents you with your PC's folder tree once you've installed companion software on your computer and booted up the app. Now you can navigate your hard drive until you find the file you're looking for. Selecting a file opens it in a native Android app (like Kingsoft Office or the baked-in Gallery app).
It's especially great for accessing documents and Office-type files. A $5 per month premium subscription ditches the ads, unlocks remote access for up to 10 PCs, and ups the file size limit to 1GB.
Tasker
Tasker doesn't directly meld with your PC, but it's just so insanely useful that I couldn't leave it off the list. This handy-dandy app lets you automate virtually every aspect of your phone, using customizable "profiles" that launch specific actions when certain criteria are met.
For example, you can have your phone disable its cellular modem and connect to Wi-Fi when you're at home, automatically start playing music when you're near your Bluetooth-equipped car, turn off your GPS and Bluetooth to save juice at work, or even—if you want to get really creative—tackle super-specialized tasks that can help you get things done for your specific line of work.
And that's just the tip of the iceberg. Pocketables has a series of great guides to getting started with Tasker if you need help.
The final frontier: Droidbooks
If the thought of tinkering with Tasker has started your DIY juices flowing, you could go a step further and actually install Android on your PC. Creating a custom Droidbook won't really help you get more work done, but it sure is nifty to play around with.
Wednesday, 13 November 2013
Make Skype Calls Directly From Your Outlook.com Inbox!
Even with the best email service, sometimes text isn’t enough, and we all face those situations where it is just easier to jump on a call to talk something out. We know sometimes a quick call can accomplish more than a long email reply.
That’s why we are bringing Skype audio and video calling to your inbox. Now, with Skype for Outlook.com, you can choose the right medium for your message, whether it is an email, call, video call or instant message (IM) — you can connect with your Skype and Messenger friends all in the same place. This experience will start rolling out in the U.K. today, is coming to the U.S. during the coming weeks and is on track to be available worldwide this summer. For those of you in the U.K., download the Skype plugin for Outlook.com now.
Get Skype in Your Inbox
Skype for Outlook.com requires a one-time download of a plugin for your browser (available for the most recent versions of Internet Explorer, Chrome and Firefox). After you download the plugin, simply connect Skype to Outlook.com using your Microsoft account.
Customers with an existing Skype account will be asked to link Skype and Outlook.com in a few simple steps. Just merge your Microsoft and Skype accounts and you’re off and running. This will also allow you to add all of your Skype contacts to Outlook.com contacts.
Using Skype for Outlook.com is Simple
Just click on the Skype audio or video call buttons in your IM conversation. To start a call while reading an email from a friend on Outlook.com, move your mouse over the friend’s picture and click on the Skype audio or video call buttons that appear above his or her contact details.
Reach and Be Reachable
We’re excited to offer many of the best ways to keep in touch in one place. With the preview version of Skype for Outlook.com, we’re bringing two great communication experiences together and helping you stay in touch virtually anytime, anywhere.
As we said, this preview experience will start rolling out to UK customers beginning today and is coming to the U.S. and Germany in the coming weeks with worldwide availability this summer.
Installing Windows Server 2012 (step by step)
Windows Server 2012, codenamed "Windows Server 8", is the sixth release of Windows Server. It is the server version of Windows 8 and succeeds Windows Server 2008 R2. Two pre-release versions, a developer preview and a beta version, were released during development. The software was generally available to customers starting on September 4, 2012.
In this easy step by step guide, we will learn how to install and activate Windows Server 2012.
Before you start make sure you have the minimum requirements to install Windows Server (Windows Server Requirements):
Processor: Minimum: 1.4 GHz 64-bit processor
Ram: Minimum: 512 MB
Disk Space: Minimum: 32 GB
Other requirements:
Ram: Minimum: 512 MB
Disk Space: Minimum: 32 GB
Other requirements:
- DVD drive
- Super VGA (800 x 600) or higher-resolution monitor
- Keyboard and Microsoft® mouse (or other compatible pointing device)
- Internet access
You can then download the evalution copy of Windows Server 2012 from here, Download the ISO and burn it to some DVD:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-US/evalcenter/hh670538.aspx?ocid=&wt.mc_id=TEC_108_1_33Now that we have everything we need, We can Start:1- Insert the Windows Server 2012 DVD, and once you get the following message press Enter to boot from the setup2- Wait for a while till the setup loads all necessary files (Depending on your machine, it will take couple of minutes)3- Once the setup files are loaded, the setup will start with the following screen. You can change these to meet your needs (the default values should be fine for now)6- In the following setup screen, you will see four options. Select Windows Server 2012 DataCenter Evaluation (Server With GUI).7- After you click Next from previous screen, Read the License terms, tick the "I accept the license terms" and click Next8- Now It will ask you for the drive (or partition) you want to install Windows on. Here I'm installing it on the one partition I have here. NOTE: This will remove the content of the partition. Either you create a partition to install windows on, or you can test this on a testing machine9- Now once we picked our partition, clicking on next from previous screen will start the setup. This process might take a while.10- Once the setup is done, it will restart and start your Windows Server 2012 for the first time. It will ask you then to set up a password for the Administrator user11- The setup will finalize your settings, might take a couple of minutes
12- Once the setup is done, you can log in for the first time to your Windows Server, as the screen says, press Ctrl+Alt+Delete to log in, and use the password you set in the setup process
13 - Once you Log in, Windows Server 2012 will show the Server ManagerCongratulations! you have now Windows server 2012 Installed with Datacenter.
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