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Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Penang expects to create 27,000 new job opportunities

Career advancement: Visitors checking out the booths at the 9th Penang Career & Postgraduate Expo 2011 at the Penang International Sports Arena


 By KOW KWAN YEE  kowky@thestar.com.my

Penang foresees opportunities opening with record RM12.2 billion FDI inflows


PENANG expects to create 27,000 new job opportunities this year after the state managed to attract a record of RM12.238bil worth of foreign direct investments (FDI) last year.

State Local Government and Traffic Management Committee chairman Chow Kon Yeow said the state government expected the new job opportunities would flow in together with the inflow of foreign capital.

The jobs would be mostly be located in the electronics and electrical sector (E & E), Chow said after opening the Ninth Penang Career and Postgraduate Jobs Expo on Saturday.

He said Penang was also facing an acute shortage of electronic engineers and this needed to be addressed fast.

Career advancement: Visitors checking out the booths at the 9th Penang Career & Postgraduate Expo 2011 at the Penang International Sports Arena

On the expo, Chow said it was considered timely as it could help create greater and quality employment prospects which would further develop Penang’s economy.

Also, an international electronic manufacturing company from Shanghai, China, had set up a booth at the expo to source for Malaysian workers.

It was one of three foreign firms which were offering employment opportunities.


Hi-P International Co Ltd’s human resources supervisor Tina Yao said many foreign companies valued Malaysian workers for their skills and good conduct.

Yao said that last year was the first time that her company took part in the expo and it had recruited many Malaysians.

“This is why the company decided to join the expo for the second time, to recruit more engineers, particularly in the E & E sector,” she said.

Yao said most of the jobs offered by Hi-P were for managerial-level posts and in the research and development field.

“Most of the posts offered were based in Shanghai, while some are in Suzhou,” she said, adding that the company had representative offices in Singapore, Thailand, China, the United States, Poland and Mexico.

“We are willing to pay a salary of 30% more than the local market pricing,” she added.

The other two foreign companies were from Singapore and they were seeking for security officers and customer service personnel.

Organised by PenExpo Events Sdn Bhd, the event featured some 3,000 vacancies offered by over 50 employers with more than 70 booths set up including from the manufacturing sector and universities.

It’s just another matter of choice

Comment by BARADAN KUPPUSAMY




The importance of the English Language has become a hot topic and issues discussed before are coming to the forefront again.

AT an Indian community leaders meeting in 2009, it was passionately argued why Science and Mathematics should be taught in Tamil and not English, as was the case in our schools from 2003 until repealed six years later.

Midway, a participant stood up and brought the heated debate to a standstill. “Why are you all debating in English? Speak in Tamil!” she said.

Very few among the debaters could articulate as confidently in Tamil, which goes to show that their mastery of English had propelled them in their jobs, career and life to the extent that many were successful.

Despite strong opposition from mainly parents, the Government reversed the “teaching Science and Maths in English” policy, better known as PPSMI, in favour of teaching in the pupil’s mother tongue in primary and Bahasa Malaysia in secondary schools.

Lately there is a move back towards English, not totally, but in a more intelligent way by providing alternatives for parents who want their children to be taught the subjects in English.

Schools tailored to teach in English are being considered to cater for parents who want it.

Providing alternatives is a key component of a fair, just and democratic education system because it gives choices for parents.

Most parents want their children to get a modern education that arms them to face and survive in a tough competitive world.

Parents are upset those choices and flexibilities are currently missing.

They say today’s globalised world is ruled by English, the language that the English colonial masters had spread across the world first through conquest and later through trade, economic development and promotion of education.

For long, education in English was elitist and enjoyed by the political elite, but later it spread to the masses through missionary schools and government support for a mass schooling system.


The process took several centuries and finally an English-speaking world took shape.

As the diverse world continued to globalise, it needed a common language and English became that language, but former colonies now independent were left grappling over the medium of instruction in their school system – whether to continue with the inherited English language or switch to the native language.

At one time or other, across Asia, Africa and the Middle East, the issue had raged.

Societies had to variously adapt to meet demands for native language as an instruction medium and the need to master English for self-advancement and for social and economic advancement.

Some African societies stuck with English and eventually became English proficient and have produced great scholars, novelists and poets whose influence goes beyond their native societies because of their mastery of the language.

A classic example is the Nigerian master Chinua Achebe.

This is not to say that non-English speaking societies have not produced equally great thinkers.

A good example is Egypt’s Naguib Mahfouz, who wrote in Arabic to win the 1988 Nobel prize for literature.

Some societies have found ingenious ways to promote their native language and English, like in Hong Kong where primary education is in Mandarin but English plays a major part in secondary education.

Ours have been a brave exercise in reversing the English medium to fully Bahasa Malaysia.

While English is taught, its mastery has been seriously hampered, especially among students from working-class families.

Numerous studies shows that our graduates are leaving colleges and universities without a grasp of English and facing problems finding jobs.

In 2003 the Government sought to reverse the damage and improve the sciences by teaching science and mathematics in English, a programme known as PPSMI.

Millions of ringgit were spent and students and teachers pressed into the scheme, with manuals being produced and high technology brought into play.

PPSMI was heavily criticised by many who wanted the subjects taught in the mother tongue, i.e. Bahasa Malaysia, Mandarin and Tamil, instead of English.

The mother tongue proponents, who were usually at odds with each other, were united against the “return of English”.

In 2009 the decision was made to revert the teaching of the two subjects to Bahasa Malaysia in national schools and mother tongue languages in national-type schools from 2012.

However, parents have been consistently arguing otherwise and even took to demonstrating to make the point that instruction in English is beneficial and that they should be heard and their needs satisfied.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, in a Facebook encounter with fans last week, was asked about PPSMI.

He responded by saying that a system, where some schools can teach the subjects in English while others teach in the mother tongue, was being studied.

While uniformity and national integration are the key elements of our education system, the world view has changed to seeing diversity and pluralism as key characteristics of an effective education system.

Parents know this more than anybody else and that’s why they have been pressing for an English alternative for those who want it – and there are many.

Monday, April 11, 2011

US human rights status slammed




BEIJING - China accused the US of hypocrisy in a report critical of US human rights on Sunday.

The Human Rights Record of the United States in 2010 was released by the Information Office of China's State Council in response to the Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2010 issued by the US Department of State on Friday.

Related readings:US human rights status slammed Hu Jintao addresses human rights issuesUS human rights status slammed China's Progress in Human Rights: 2003 (White Paper)
US human rights status slammed Police in Hunan urged to respect human rightsUS human rights status slammed China's efforts to better protect human rights
The US reports are "full of distortions and accusations concerning human rights in more than 190 countries and regions, including China", China's report said.


The US has taken human rights as "a political instrument to defame the image of other nations and seeks its own strategic interests", the report said.

While illustrating the dismal record of US human rights, China's report said the US could not be justified in posing as the world's supreme arbiter on "human rights justice".

"However, it releases the Country Reports on Human Rights Practices year after year to accuse and blame other countries over their human rights practices," the report said. This fully exposes US hypocrisy and double standards on human rights and its malicious design to pursue hegemony under the pretext of human rights, it said.

The report advised the US government "to improve its own human rights, check and rectify acts, and stop the hegemonistic deed of using human rights issues to interfere in other countries' internal affairs".

Sunday, April 10, 2011

US trains activists to evade security, American befuddling, fake eggs




US trains activists to evade security forces
by Lachlan Carmichael
US trains activists to evade security forces AFP/Illustration – An Iranian man surfs the internet at a cafe in centeral of Tehran. The United States is training thousands …

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The United States is training thousands of cell phone and Internet pro-democracy campaigners worldwide to evade security forces in what it calls a "cat-and-mouse game" with authoritarian governments.


The US government is sponsoring efforts to help activists in Arab and other countries gain access to technology that circumvents government firewalls, secures telephone text and voice messages, and prevents attacks on websites.


"This is sort of a cat-and-mouse game and governments are constantly developing new techniques to go after critics, to go after dissenters," said Michael Posner, the assistant US secretary of state for human rights and labor.


"We are trying to stay ahead of the curve and trying to basically provide both technology, training, and diplomatic support to allow people to freely express their views."


Posner told a small group of reporters that the theme of Internet freedom will be "peppered" throughout the State Department's annual report on human rights for 194 countries that is scheduled for release on Friday.


US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is campaigning hard for freedoms of expression, assembly and association online -- what she calls the world's town square or coffee house of the 21st century.


The chief US diplomat has said the protests in Egypt and Iran fueled by Facebook, Twitter and YouTube reflected "the power of connection technologies as an accelerant of political, social and economic change."



The US government, Posner said, has budgeted $50 million in the last two years to develop new technologies to help activists protect themselves from arrest and prosecution by authoritarian governments.


And it has organized training sessions for 5,000 activists in different parts of the world.
A session held in the Middle East about six weeks ago gathered activists from Tunisia, Egypt, Syria and Lebanon who returned to their countries with the aim of training their colleagues there.
"They went back and there's a ripple effect," Posner said.


State Department officials said one of the new technologies under development is the "panic button," which allows activists to erase contact lists on their cell phones if they are arrested.


"If you can get the panic button that wipes that (list) clean before they get locked up, you're saving lives," said Posner.


The new technology has not yet been made available to pro-democracy campaigners but it will prove useful in places like Syria, where the authorities simply go out and arrest activists who use their mobile phones.


The State Department said it has already funded efforts by private firms, mainly from the United States, to develop a dozen different technologies to circumvent government censorship firewalls.


"One of them has been very successful in Iran. It's being used extensively. and we have the download numbers," a State Department official said on condition of anonymity.


"It's going viral and now that technology is spreading all over the Middle East," said the official, who declined to name the technology in order not to endanger the people who are using it.


The State Department is also funding efforts to prevent governments from launching attacks -- known as denial of service -- aimed at shutting down websites that might publish an investigative report or other critical material.

 

Of fake eggs and sex videos

ON THE BEAT WITH WONG CHUN WAI

Paul the American is keeping up with current developments locally and has called again with questions that are simply befuddling.

MY expatriate friend Paul has called again. As much as I appreciate my newfound friendship with him, I always dread his calls. He seems to always have questions that I shy away from answering.

It’s because the questions are embarrassing, a dent to national pride as I hold steadfastly to the principle that a foreigner has no business asking such things. Sometimes they leave me simply dumbfounded.

I suspect that he, like many expatriates, has also been buying pirated videos. He seems to be able to talk about so many movies and I know he never has enough time to go to the cinemas.

But he seems to have adjusted pretty well.

Like many Malaysians, he has openly denounced piracy and insists that he has never watched a pirated DVD – not even once in his life.

I am worried because hypocrisy seems to be eating into his life rather quickly.

It has eaten into the lives of many Malay­sians and I do not want to see that happen to this once naive American friend from the rural mid-west of the United States.

As expected, he asked whether he could get a copy of the video featuring a man resembling Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.

He has heard so much about it that he feels he can only make an authoritative judgement after he sees the entire video, he said.

Many of his friends have condemned the video, dismissing it as trash and gutter politics. They are outraged over the sordid political tactics.

But, of course, they would need to see the rest of the 21-minute video to make an educated conclusion.

The one-minute clip on YouTube and blog­spots was insufficient, plus it was a little grainy. Yes, a thorough viewing of the entire video would be required. Of course, it’s pathetic and immoral.

Paul, who claimed to be speaking on behalf of his friends, said that after watching the one-minute clip closely over and over again, their opinions are deeply divided.

Some have sworn that the man looked like Anwar after viewing it for the first few seconds. Others have said the first few seconds were enough to convince them that the actor was an impersonator.

He is also confused why some of his politically vocal friends – those who would usually demand for the setting up of a Royal Com­mission of Inquiry for the flimsiest issues – are angrily shooting down any proposal to set up such a commission, calling it a ridiculous idea.

Paul had another question: what’s this about real eggs and fake eggs? He has heard about pirated videos and there is this on-going debate over whether the sex video is doctored or whether the actor is really Anwar or an impersonator.

But fake eggs? This one really left me with egg on my face.

I told him that as a Penangite, I still get teased by my colleagues over how tight we hold on to our money.
Okay, stingy, if that’s the word that would please all of you who want to pick issues with Penangites.

We are constantly being reminded that we used to bring our own eggs when we buy our char koay teow.
That’s an old story but for some reason, many continue to think that Penangites are still carrying on with such thrifty practices.

I am beginning to suspect that all these people who criticise us have an agenda. A political agenda. An enemy from within.
But a fake egg? No Penangite, I can vouch on this, has ever tried fake eggs. A tray of real eggs costs RM10.50 but a tray of the fake ones costs RM11.

Come on, Penangites would never pay more for something faked – or doctored, in the current video lingo.
I had to confess to Paul that I have never come across a fake egg. I love eggs and I may need to eat these fake ones to ascertain if they are really fakes.

The news reports have said they could be from China. At this point, I had to ask Paul whether Americans, who are ever so jealous of the booming Chinese economy, could be spreading the hoax to discredit the Chinese.

As expected, Paul started to get agitated. National pride was at stake and, to him, the US is not in the business of blaming the Chinese for fake eggs. He demanded an apology.

I was in fact wondering if Paul would next demand for the setting up of a Royal Com­mission of Inquiry to determine if the eggs were fakes, how they were imported, if bribes were taken and which ministries were to be held responsible.

Of course, I would oppose that vehemently. Who is this American or his former ambassador to tell us Malaysians how to run our country?

But this American from the mid-west wasn’t sharp enough. He hasn’t become as politically emotional as many Malaysians. He hasn’t learned the art of being politically biased while pretending to be completely neutral.

Then he told me all his friends are saying they do not go to massage centres or spas now. Definitely a “no” to “rocket massage” or “sexy massage”, he said.

Yes, they need rejuvenation but NO massage. They prefer to go to “health wellness centres”.

For his final question, Paul asked if these are real or fake massages and whether they would bring “health well-being” as advertised. Friends have also asked where they can buy CCTV detectors, he said.

I think Paul will be in Malaysia for a while

Friday, April 8, 2011

Spaceships of the World: 50 Years of Human Spaceflight, How the First Human Spaceflight Worked (Infographic)

Karl Tate, SPACE.com Infographics Artist




Spaceships of the World: 50 Years of Human Spaceflight

See the spaceships that have launched astronauts and cosmonauts into space in the first 50 years of human spaceflight.
Source SPACE.com: All about our solar system, outer space and exploration

See how the first human spaceflight actually occurred when the Soviet Union launched cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin on Vostok 1 on April 12, 1961 in this SPACE.com infographic.
Source SPACE.com: All about our solar system, outer space and exploration
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Thursday, April 7, 2011

How to manage server workloads

Where to put them?
By Phil Mitchell




Broadcast 11am In our broadcast today, at 11:00BST, The Register's Tim Phillips is joined by Tony Lock, from Freeform Dynamics, and Ray Jones from IBM's mainframe division to discuss modern server workloads. You can join us here.

They'll be looking at how much of the early promise of virtualisation is being held back by operational management challenges, how the different workloads - transactions, BI, analytics, BPM, - effect these challenges, and how consolidation can play a massive part in future workload challenges, if done correctly.

The last two or three years have witnessed major shifts in the tectonics of server operations and management as “virtualisation” has begun to make inroads running corporate applications. But with the range of server platforms available on which to run applications and business services, where does it make sense to operate critical workloads?


Managing workloads of varying importance to the business across multiple platforms is not easy, even with the best management tools, and becomes almost impossible to undertake manually as the push for greater flexibility increases. This begs the question, are there any alternative solutions available to help manage workloads effectively in response to greater requirements for security, availability, performance and cost-effectiveness?

If you've been wondering about how to manage your workloads efficiently, you can join us for free right here.
If you can't make the live event, register with us today and we'll email you when the recorded version is available.

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Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Who rates the raters ?

By Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk


How do you rate the ratings agencies?

Their AAA ratings of dodgy securities helped create the financial crisis. Now, they're deciding the fate of nations. What a racket
    Standard & Poor's headquarters in New York
    Leading credit rating agency Standard & Poor's headquarters in New York. Photograph: Kurt Brady/Alamy
    Remember when your mum told you to stand up to bullies. Not always a good idea, it seems. With economies across Europe now facing meltdown, the credit rating agencies that did so much to help them get into this mess have, according to Reuters, warned the European Commission they may stop rating risky countries. Why? Because the EU has had the temerity to suggest they should be legally liable if their ratings prove to be wrong. This threat, which would leave weaker European countries struggling to raise cash, comes amid an escalating battle between European officials and the ratings agencies. But it could also mark a turning point for the credit agencies – still under fire for their role in the credit crisis, a moment when these behemoths may finally be called to account. Relations between the three main credit agencies and the EU hit a new low this week after Standard & Poor's downgraded Portugal and demoted Greece's credit status to below that of Egypt. Not so long ago, credit rating was a staid and not terrible interesting business – few cared what they thought of Greek bonds or Portuguese debt. It wasn't until the 1990s that the agencies started to rule the world. Riding on the back of globalisation and technology, the two grand forces of our age, credit agencies managed to establish themselves as the dominant independent arbiters of risk. Today, the market is dominated by Moody's and Standard & Poor's, with Fitch running third. The big three rate everything from corporate debt to pension funds to countries – and everybody listens. It's also big business: if you want a good loan, you need a good rating. Last year, Moody's sales topped $2bn. But as their business and influence have grown ever larger, more people are starting to ask who rates the raters? As the Greeks and Portuguese will testify, their influence is enormous. Far larger economies than theirs have been battered by the ratings agencies. In 2000, Moody's took on Japan, downgrading its credit and causing an international incident as the cost of borrowing in Japan shot up. Moody's concluded that the pace of economic reform was not going quickly enough in Japan. As it considered another downgrade in 2002, the Financial Times pointed out that Japan would soon be rated lower than Botswana, a country where "a third of the population is infected with HIV/Aids". Japan is still on watch, with more downgrades threatened. But where would you rather put your money, really? Time and again, the agencies have got it horribly wrong. They promoted Enron even as its management blew the company up; they promoted the subprime mortgage market as its foundations collapsed – and took the financial markets down with it. In the US, states and investors are lining up to sue over their role in the financial collapse, arguing these fools couldn't pass a pig without putting lipstick on it. This poses a big question: do they know what they are doing, or they are more interested in profits than making accurate forecasts? Former members of staff seem to think it's the latter. In testimony to the US Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, former Moody's analyst Mark Froeba said the firm's management "used intimidation to create a docile population of analysts afraid to upset investment bankers and ready to cooperate to the maximum extent possible." Froeba left Moody's after 10 years' employment, in 2007. All this is not to say that there aren't real structural problems in Greece, Portugal, Japan, Ireland or the UK, for that matter. Moody's has even said it might downgrade the US, if it doesn't get its fiscal house in order. But where were the agencies in the runup to this fiasco? Nowhere to be seen. Are they selling accurate information or "a feeling of confidence in the future", as Warwick University credit agency expert Timothy J Sinclair has it. When they were minor players, it wasn't a big issue, but now unelected executives with, at best, a spotty track record are shaping the future of nations, sailing through storms which they helped to create on the way to ever greater profits. Those who have the temerity to stand up to them better watch out. But if you were going to rate the raters, they would have to get an F.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Businesses fall prey to cyberthieves' cunning


Among the growing ranks of consumers, business owners and others being lured by the convenience of online banking are legions of cybercrooks who have found the technology a convenient way to steal from unsuspecting victims.


More than 72 million households now manage their money online - up from about 12 million a decade ago, according to the financial services firm Fiserv. It's unclear how many of them have been targeted by crooks, but the FBI and a consortium of other government agencies reported in October that "thousands of businesses, small and large, have reportedly fallen victims to this type of fraud" with municipalities and nonprofit organizations increasingly coming under attack. And unlike individuals, they lack legal protections for their losses.

Ann Talbot learned of the danger four years ago when nearly $21,000 was taken from the bank account of her general contracting firm, Golden State Bridge. Then in May last year, cybercrooks struck her Martinez, Calif., company again, making off with about $100,000 from another account.

By then, Golden State had taken out an online-theft insurance policy, which limited its liability to about $10,000, according to Talbot, the company's chief financial officer. Even so, she is wary of the outlaws preying increasingly on those who bank via the Web.

"It's a huge problem," she said, adding that many people "have no idea of the threat out there."

It's just not lay people, either. FBI Director Robert Mueller told the Commonwealth Club of California in 2009 that he stopped online banking after getting an email that appeared to be from his bank, but that he realized was bogus after answering a couple of its questions.

After that, Mueller said, his wife told him, "no more Internet banking for you."

-In September last year, federal prosecutors in New York announced criminal charges against 37 people in a global online scheme that allegedly netted the crooks more than $3 million, including $130,000 from an unidentified hospital's California bank account.


-In October 2009, lawbreakers tried to abscond with $87,000 from a Danville, Calif., church, according to the Washington Post. Luckily, the transfers were blocked by the church's bank. Last August, the Catholic Diocese in Des Moines, Iowa lost several hundred thousand dollars in an online banking breach.

-In April last year, Aleksey Volynskiy was sentenced to 37 months in prison for plotting with hackers in the U.S. and Russia to loot individual Charles Schwab brokerage accounts.

Sarah Bulgatz, a spokeswoman for Charles Schwab, said the accounts were accessed through the victims' computers and not those of her company, adding that Schwab reimburses individuals for such losses. Under the federal Electronic Fund Transfers law, the liability of consumers who report an online bank loss within two days of discovering it is limited to $50 and only after 60 days are they liable for the entire amount.

But the law doesn't protect commercial, governmental or nonprofit enterprises. And the sizable sums those entities often maintain in their financial accounts make them attractive quarry for criminals. Of 504 small and medium-size businesses recently surveyed by Guardian Analytics, which helps banks and credit unions prevent theft, 32 percent said they had experienced an online-banking scam during the previous year.

While some banks have taken steps to prevent such larceny, many others have left themselves easy prey to hackers, who are becoming highly organized and using increasingly sophisticated tactics, said Guardian CEO Terry Austin. With more and more people banking online, he added, "the banking industry in general needs to step up to provide a higher level of security."

Some people - including Talbot of Golden State Bridge - also are urging lawmakers to give commercial ventures the same reimbursements afforded individuals. They have formed an online organization - Cyber Looting Awareness & Security Project - to lobby for the change.

That worries the American Bankers Association. It fears that if a company was shielded from liability the way a consumer is, "the business would be less inclined to take the protection measures necessary to protect their online accounts," which might prompt banks to stop offering online services, said the group's spokesman Doug Johnson.

He added that banks are working with law enforcement authorities to try to limit such crimes but that the problem is increasing because more people are banking online.

Still, many others are reluctant to send their financial information across the Internet. Of the more than 3,000 respondents to a survey by German security software firm Avira in November, 31 percent - nearly one out of three - said they avoid online banking entirely for fear of being ripped off.

Even a security expert can get hoodwinked, said Larry Ponemon of the Ponemon Institute, a data-protection research outfit in Michigan. After recently receiving an email that seemed to be from his bank, "I came really close to doing something silly" that might have compromised his finances, he said. "The bad guys are getting really smart."

One of the crooks' methods is to send a person a "spear phishing" email containing a malicious attachment. Once the person opens it, their computer is infected with malware that snaps up their bank-account login information, allowing the thief to masquerade as the person and steal their money.

Another common scam is to create websites that look just like those of real banks. When people mistakenly give the sites their financial information, criminals use it to make withdrawals.

The increasing numbers of people who bank via their cell phones face another threat, according to a report in November by viaForensics, a Chicago information security firm. It discovered that some phones stored the owner's financial data, making the information vulnerable if the phone is lost. Bogus banking applications for phones also have been designed to steal money from anyone using them.

Although banks are working to fix some of the phone vulnerabilities, "it's still pretty bad out there," said Andrew Hoag, viaForensics' chief investigative officer.

Unfortunately, by the time many people realize their savings have been hijacked, there's little they can do to get it back, said David Johnston, whose Modesto, Calif., electric sign business, Sign Designs, lost about $20,000 two years ago when thieves broke into its online account and transferred the money overseas.

"I was very angry," he said. "Your money should be safe in the bank."

(c) 2011, San Jose Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.).
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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