As usual, I spent some quality time discussing with Mandy on the shoot concept before getting down to do the shoot, even if it means waiting for months (I'm a patient man). Our original idea was a gloomy windy beach shoot look. Alas, the weather turned out to be too glorious to exude any emo-ness. So it's back to shooting Mandy the Sweet. And I must say that Mandy is such a veteran model that she's got all the poses and the looks right.
Join my facebook page for more images.
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Nov 2010 Hong Kong Vacation - Day 3 to 5
Day 3, 14 Nov 2010
Day 3 was dedicated for shopping and eating along Queens Road Central. But I made a planning mistake. I went to Kau Kee Beef Noodle house and realised that it was closed on a Sunday. So wifey and I walked all the way to Yung Kee for the famous goose. I love their century egg appetizer!
After brunch, wifey did her rounds at H&M while I tried to find some clothes at G2000. We also dropped by Toys "R" Us (toys are cheaper than in Singapore). Early dinner was at Guai Kee Wanton Noodle House along Carnarvon Road. We then proceeded to a dessert store near our hotel. Apparently for the past 2 nights, we saw long queues waiting to get in. So when we arrived there are about 5pm with just a few seats left, we went in. We tried the frozen mango dessert and molten chocolate lava. THEY WERE DELICIOUS!
After dumping our purchases for the day, we walked down Nathan Road towards the bayfront. Went to SOGO and hustled with the rest of the shoppers for some Thanksgiving Sale. Before we returned to hotel, we bought BBQ sticks for supper.
(compare to my Day 3 experience in 2009)
Day 4, 15 Nov 2010
Since we missed the opening of Kau Kee on Day 3, wifey wanted to go again, so that's what we did. But not before a very late breakfast and a trip to Times Square for shopping. After getting our beef noodles, we walked down Gage Street and reached Lan Fong Yuen, famous for their ice milk tea and pork chop buns. And indeed, their milk tea is the best we've had in Hong Kong. Then just down the street is Tai Cheong Bakery, famous egg tarts.
By late afternoon, we proceeded to Mongkok and shopped at the Ladies Market cluster. Dinner was claypot rice that we chanced upon, seemingly popular with the locals. But by the time we reached hotel, we were screaming for more food. So at 1am, I went downstairs and packeted beef noodles, which tasted quite yummy.
Day 5, 16 Nov 2010
We did our hotel checkout, left our luggage at the lobby, then headed out to Harbour City. Angie felt like having porridge, so we looked for a food house that had the word "porridge". Found one, and I also ordered the beef noodles. Both were excellent choices.
Our flight was 8.20pm. We returned to the hotel to collect our luggage, then hailed a cab to Kowloon MTR, did a city check-in, then took the Airport Express to the airport. We dined at Fairwood Fast Food, the roast pork and curry beef are fine stuff.
As we took budget airline, our plane was parked on the tarmac, so we had airport buses to ferry us to the plane, which is not a bad idea, so that we need not have to walk too far to the gate, where it is often quite a distance from the main building.
(what did I do on Days 4 and 5 last year? Click here)
For more photos, visit my facebook album at this link.
Day 3 was dedicated for shopping and eating along Queens Road Central. But I made a planning mistake. I went to Kau Kee Beef Noodle house and realised that it was closed on a Sunday. So wifey and I walked all the way to Yung Kee for the famous goose. I love their century egg appetizer!
After brunch, wifey did her rounds at H&M while I tried to find some clothes at G2000. We also dropped by Toys "R" Us (toys are cheaper than in Singapore). Early dinner was at Guai Kee Wanton Noodle House along Carnarvon Road. We then proceeded to a dessert store near our hotel. Apparently for the past 2 nights, we saw long queues waiting to get in. So when we arrived there are about 5pm with just a few seats left, we went in. We tried the frozen mango dessert and molten chocolate lava. THEY WERE DELICIOUS!
After dumping our purchases for the day, we walked down Nathan Road towards the bayfront. Went to SOGO and hustled with the rest of the shoppers for some Thanksgiving Sale. Before we returned to hotel, we bought BBQ sticks for supper.
(compare to my Day 3 experience in 2009)
Day 4, 15 Nov 2010
Since we missed the opening of Kau Kee on Day 3, wifey wanted to go again, so that's what we did. But not before a very late breakfast and a trip to Times Square for shopping. After getting our beef noodles, we walked down Gage Street and reached Lan Fong Yuen, famous for their ice milk tea and pork chop buns. And indeed, their milk tea is the best we've had in Hong Kong. Then just down the street is Tai Cheong Bakery, famous egg tarts.
By late afternoon, we proceeded to Mongkok and shopped at the Ladies Market cluster. Dinner was claypot rice that we chanced upon, seemingly popular with the locals. But by the time we reached hotel, we were screaming for more food. So at 1am, I went downstairs and packeted beef noodles, which tasted quite yummy.
Day 5, 16 Nov 2010
We did our hotel checkout, left our luggage at the lobby, then headed out to Harbour City. Angie felt like having porridge, so we looked for a food house that had the word "porridge". Found one, and I also ordered the beef noodles. Both were excellent choices.
Our flight was 8.20pm. We returned to the hotel to collect our luggage, then hailed a cab to Kowloon MTR, did a city check-in, then took the Airport Express to the airport. We dined at Fairwood Fast Food, the roast pork and curry beef are fine stuff.
As we took budget airline, our plane was parked on the tarmac, so we had airport buses to ferry us to the plane, which is not a bad idea, so that we need not have to walk too far to the gate, where it is often quite a distance from the main building.
(what did I do on Days 4 and 5 last year? Click here)
For more photos, visit my facebook album at this link.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Nov 2010 Hong Kong Vacation - Day 1 and 2
Finally I have time to review my photos and relive the nice vacation I had last month in Hong Kong!
It's also quite interesting as I revisited my 2009 vacation post. and compared what I did then and now. Armed with the Samsung NX100 with 20-50mm and 50-200mm, I certainly captured more because the camera performs formidably fast.
Day 1, 12 Nov 2010
Arrived at the T1 airport at 4.40am, and checked-in at the Jetstar counter with no queue! Our flight was 6.40am. All the duty-free shops are not open, so we had our breakfast at Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf.
Arrived at Hong Kong at about 11am. This was our first vacation where we practically booked everything by ourselves. So we spent some time planning our itinerary. First, we asked how to get to Tung Chung from the airport. Then I went to the 1010 retail outlet at the departure hall to buy the CSL prepaid SIM card for data service (the sales staff was very nice to help me configure the APN). Next we had lunch at Maxim's inside the airport. Last year we went all the way to the Maxim's Palace at City Hall, but we don't really fancy the dimsum that much. Still, we decided to relive the food and since there was an outlet in the airport, we just went for it.
After lunch, we made our way to the luggage locker service counter to dump our luggages, then headed to the bus stop where the bus service brought us directly to Tung Chung. Last year we did not go to Ngong Ping, so this year I wanted to go there. The queue for the cable car was rather long, but we were rewarded with a 20-min cable car ride which was scenic and calming. Wifey was afraid of heights, so she kept rather still throughout the ride, while I was frantically capturing photos around the area.
I was rather unimpressed with the destination, which is too touristy.
After we left the Big Buddha, we did some shopping at the Tung Chung Harbour City, till early evening, then took a bus back to the airport, retrieved our luggage, hopped on the Airport Express Train to Kowloon station, caught the free shuttle bus to our hotel, Butterfly On Prat. We were surprised to find that the bathroom offers a see-through view of the bath user. The reception told us that curtains could be arranged to protect the modesty, but we were fine with it.
The hotel offers free Internet at the lobby as well as in the room. But I only brought my iPad which doesn't allow direct connectivity to the ethernet port, so I had to use my Nokia E72 via Joikuspot to establish a Wifi hotspot. The CSL data network is very reliable and I had no problems accessing data services throughout my Hong Kong stay at all locations.
After settling down, we made our rounds and got our usual supper fix.
Day 2, 13 Nov 2010
After a local-style breakfast, we took the MTR all the way to Luo Hu station where we crossed the border to Shenzhen. (For last year's trip, we also chose the 2nd day to go out of Hong Kong) After a brief immigration clearance, we got into the Shenzhen MRT and headed to Old Street station. There is a huge shopping area spanning across a few streets. Lunch was at a fast food restaurant called "Zhen Gong Fu", where they serve steamed dishes with rice.
After lunch, we took the train to Hua Qiang Rd Station. This is the electronics shopping belt, and it is here that I bought some of the cheapest accessories that I could ever dream of. Imagine 3-metre HDMI cable for S$3! I also found some very useful HDMI-DVI converters at less than S$5. I didn't buy more because I wasn't sure of the quality.
The other expensive gadget I bought was the bluetooth keyboard that I first saw in Singapore at Comex in September selling at S$98. I bought it at one of the stalls at SEG Mall for S$55. What's good about this keyboard is that it comes with a trackpad and a laser pointer, which is perfect for presentation. I intended to use it with my iPad, but unfortunately, Keynote for iPad refuses to recognise keyboard commands to move the presentation slides (it's a software constraint, not the keyboard problem). So now it's sitting in the box while I think of a way to make good use of it.
We went back to Old Street Station as Angie made up her mind to get something she saw earlier. There, we had some street food, which tasted yummy (don't they all taste good?).
After Angie got what she wanted, we headed back to the border.
(to be continued, Days 3 to 5...)
It's also quite interesting as I revisited my 2009 vacation post. and compared what I did then and now. Armed with the Samsung NX100 with 20-50mm and 50-200mm, I certainly captured more because the camera performs formidably fast.
Day 1, 12 Nov 2010
Arrived at the T1 airport at 4.40am, and checked-in at the Jetstar counter with no queue! Our flight was 6.40am. All the duty-free shops are not open, so we had our breakfast at Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf.
Arrived at Hong Kong at about 11am. This was our first vacation where we practically booked everything by ourselves. So we spent some time planning our itinerary. First, we asked how to get to Tung Chung from the airport. Then I went to the 1010 retail outlet at the departure hall to buy the CSL prepaid SIM card for data service (the sales staff was very nice to help me configure the APN). Next we had lunch at Maxim's inside the airport. Last year we went all the way to the Maxim's Palace at City Hall, but we don't really fancy the dimsum that much. Still, we decided to relive the food and since there was an outlet in the airport, we just went for it.
After lunch, we made our way to the luggage locker service counter to dump our luggages, then headed to the bus stop where the bus service brought us directly to Tung Chung. Last year we did not go to Ngong Ping, so this year I wanted to go there. The queue for the cable car was rather long, but we were rewarded with a 20-min cable car ride which was scenic and calming. Wifey was afraid of heights, so she kept rather still throughout the ride, while I was frantically capturing photos around the area.
I was rather unimpressed with the destination, which is too touristy.
After we left the Big Buddha, we did some shopping at the Tung Chung Harbour City, till early evening, then took a bus back to the airport, retrieved our luggage, hopped on the Airport Express Train to Kowloon station, caught the free shuttle bus to our hotel, Butterfly On Prat. We were surprised to find that the bathroom offers a see-through view of the bath user. The reception told us that curtains could be arranged to protect the modesty, but we were fine with it.
The hotel offers free Internet at the lobby as well as in the room. But I only brought my iPad which doesn't allow direct connectivity to the ethernet port, so I had to use my Nokia E72 via Joikuspot to establish a Wifi hotspot. The CSL data network is very reliable and I had no problems accessing data services throughout my Hong Kong stay at all locations.
After settling down, we made our rounds and got our usual supper fix.
Day 2, 13 Nov 2010
After a local-style breakfast, we took the MTR all the way to Luo Hu station where we crossed the border to Shenzhen. (For last year's trip, we also chose the 2nd day to go out of Hong Kong) After a brief immigration clearance, we got into the Shenzhen MRT and headed to Old Street station. There is a huge shopping area spanning across a few streets. Lunch was at a fast food restaurant called "Zhen Gong Fu", where they serve steamed dishes with rice.
After lunch, we took the train to Hua Qiang Rd Station. This is the electronics shopping belt, and it is here that I bought some of the cheapest accessories that I could ever dream of. Imagine 3-metre HDMI cable for S$3! I also found some very useful HDMI-DVI converters at less than S$5. I didn't buy more because I wasn't sure of the quality.
The other expensive gadget I bought was the bluetooth keyboard that I first saw in Singapore at Comex in September selling at S$98. I bought it at one of the stalls at SEG Mall for S$55. What's good about this keyboard is that it comes with a trackpad and a laser pointer, which is perfect for presentation. I intended to use it with my iPad, but unfortunately, Keynote for iPad refuses to recognise keyboard commands to move the presentation slides (it's a software constraint, not the keyboard problem). So now it's sitting in the box while I think of a way to make good use of it.
We went back to Old Street Station as Angie made up her mind to get something she saw earlier. There, we had some street food, which tasted yummy (don't they all taste good?).
After Angie got what she wanted, we headed back to the border.
(to be continued, Days 3 to 5...)
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Experiencing the Android OS Phone with Samsung Galaxy S
Call me a laggard, but last week I bought my first Android OS smartphone - Samsung Galaxy S (GT-I9000).
It's been months of light research and seeking peer opinions, struggling among the various phone formats - Blackberry Touch 9800, iPhone 4, LG Optimus, Nokia C7 were candidates of choice. It came to a point of such uncertainty that I would rather stick to my Nokia E72, no doubt a fantastic phone by itself. SMS messaging is speedy, battery life lasts 3 days, build quality is excellent. However, when it comes to online accessibility, the E72 fails to shine. Web browsers load very slowly, the Gravity connection is inconsistent, the multi-media apps like camera, photo, video apps just couldn't keep up with my demands, the firmware does not support widgets (like the new E5).
I was almost certain to get the Dell Streak, though the 5" size did doubt me much. Then it all became clear when I saw my friend using a HTC Desire. One conversation led to another (Go for higher processor speed, he said. It makes a difference in performance), and soon I was comparing the Desire with Galaxy S, finding that the latter is in most features better. Then, taking the plus points, I compared with Dell Streak and found Streak to be less stellar. At the same time, I found that Desire HD was officially launched in Singapore over the weekend, so again I did a comparison. Still, the Desire HD did not do better than Galaxy S.
I thought to myself: wow, this Galaxy S must be something. I mean, after so many many months since its launch in Singapore, this phone still beats even the latest phone models. Even the upcoming Nexus S is technically of lower-spec (no SD card slot, Bluetooth 2.1 vs. 3.0 for Galaxy S)
And so, I decided to go for Galaxy S.
One week later...
Well, it feels like a smartphone. It has all the geek functions like status icons, notification customisation, task manager, even allows you to view the applications running in the background, complete with the app utilisation space. And like any computing devices that supports multi-tasking liberally, there are times where the Galaxy S freezes momentarily as something executes in the background. With my Galaxy S consuming 3.5G data traffic when running TweetDeck, Foursquare, Gmail, corporate mail on the background, the battery life is unable to sustain a full working day. (Disabling 3.5G and using only the slower GSM network extended my battery life comfortably)
But I like it how I have control over the device. Similar to all Android phones, the Galaxy S has 2 views: the home screen view and the applications view. The latter is exactly like the old iPhone interface: just pages and pages of installed apps. The home screen is the one that all phone makers customise, where you can move your icons around, add live-feed widgets, create folders, and that helps tremendously in the usability. On top of that, there are shortcuts, or widgets that I can control specific functions directly, like on/off data connection, wifi connection, auto-sync function.
Comparing iPhone: which is better?
The iPhone is a phone that gives priority to the app that runs on the screen. As such, the experience is much more pleasant. To the normal user who desires a fuss-free consistent computing experience without worrying about too many customised (and maybe confusing) options, the iPhone will seem to work better. The large library of apps also mean that there are a lot more apps that make the iPhone very app-ealing.
The iPhone delivers the app experience that no other mobile device can match, but if you are not a very app-y person, you probably get bored of the iOS interface. And if you realise, many iOS apps are there to overcome iPhone limitations, whereas Android apps are there to maximise the capabilities of the OS.
iOS or Android, with iPad on one arm and the Galaxy S on another palm, I already own the best of mobile communication devices with me, allowing me to engage with the right device that works best in the numerous situations that life throws to me.
It's been months of light research and seeking peer opinions, struggling among the various phone formats - Blackberry Touch 9800, iPhone 4, LG Optimus, Nokia C7 were candidates of choice. It came to a point of such uncertainty that I would rather stick to my Nokia E72, no doubt a fantastic phone by itself. SMS messaging is speedy, battery life lasts 3 days, build quality is excellent. However, when it comes to online accessibility, the E72 fails to shine. Web browsers load very slowly, the Gravity connection is inconsistent, the multi-media apps like camera, photo, video apps just couldn't keep up with my demands, the firmware does not support widgets (like the new E5).
I was almost certain to get the Dell Streak, though the 5" size did doubt me much. Then it all became clear when I saw my friend using a HTC Desire. One conversation led to another (Go for higher processor speed, he said. It makes a difference in performance), and soon I was comparing the Desire with Galaxy S, finding that the latter is in most features better. Then, taking the plus points, I compared with Dell Streak and found Streak to be less stellar. At the same time, I found that Desire HD was officially launched in Singapore over the weekend, so again I did a comparison. Still, the Desire HD did not do better than Galaxy S.
I thought to myself: wow, this Galaxy S must be something. I mean, after so many many months since its launch in Singapore, this phone still beats even the latest phone models. Even the upcoming Nexus S is technically of lower-spec (no SD card slot, Bluetooth 2.1 vs. 3.0 for Galaxy S)
And so, I decided to go for Galaxy S.
One week later...
Well, it feels like a smartphone. It has all the geek functions like status icons, notification customisation, task manager, even allows you to view the applications running in the background, complete with the app utilisation space. And like any computing devices that supports multi-tasking liberally, there are times where the Galaxy S freezes momentarily as something executes in the background. With my Galaxy S consuming 3.5G data traffic when running TweetDeck, Foursquare, Gmail, corporate mail on the background, the battery life is unable to sustain a full working day. (Disabling 3.5G and using only the slower GSM network extended my battery life comfortably)
But I like it how I have control over the device. Similar to all Android phones, the Galaxy S has 2 views: the home screen view and the applications view. The latter is exactly like the old iPhone interface: just pages and pages of installed apps. The home screen is the one that all phone makers customise, where you can move your icons around, add live-feed widgets, create folders, and that helps tremendously in the usability. On top of that, there are shortcuts, or widgets that I can control specific functions directly, like on/off data connection, wifi connection, auto-sync function.
Comparing iPhone: which is better?
The iPhone is a phone that gives priority to the app that runs on the screen. As such, the experience is much more pleasant. To the normal user who desires a fuss-free consistent computing experience without worrying about too many customised (and maybe confusing) options, the iPhone will seem to work better. The large library of apps also mean that there are a lot more apps that make the iPhone very app-ealing.
The iPhone delivers the app experience that no other mobile device can match, but if you are not a very app-y person, you probably get bored of the iOS interface. And if you realise, many iOS apps are there to overcome iPhone limitations, whereas Android apps are there to maximise the capabilities of the OS.
iOS or Android, with iPad on one arm and the Galaxy S on another palm, I already own the best of mobile communication devices with me, allowing me to engage with the right device that works best in the numerous situations that life throws to me.
Saturday, December 11, 2010
What's In The Envelope?
There's something in the manila envelope...
Ooh, there's an iPad in it.
Except, it's not made of paper. Look closer.
Made up of soft cloth material on the inside and smooth leather-like finishing on the outside, this iPad protective case lets you re-enact that "wow" moment as Steve Jobs unveiled the first MacBook Air.
There's velcro inside that helps to keep the flap secured, although it doesn't work due to the iPad thickness.
If you are interested to get one, head down to this Hong Kong based online shop to order. Free shipping worldwide.
Ooh, there's an iPad in it.
Except, it's not made of paper. Look closer.
Made up of soft cloth material on the inside and smooth leather-like finishing on the outside, this iPad protective case lets you re-enact that "wow" moment as Steve Jobs unveiled the first MacBook Air.
There's velcro inside that helps to keep the flap secured, although it doesn't work due to the iPad thickness.
If you are interested to get one, head down to this Hong Kong based online shop to order. Free shipping worldwide.
Thursday, December 9, 2010
Melody of the Night
It has been a long while since I caught up with Melody. Last Friday, when I was all alone in Singapore (wifey was out for business trip), I arranged to meet up with Melody for dinner and a photoshoot.
Orchard ION was crowded with Christmas shoppers and snappers. Melody was dressed to kill. Who can resist staring at her? Just look at her legs and the fatal stilettos.
Next change, Melody flaunts her Givenchy heels.
For the final change, we decided to do it in the Orchard ION car park, since by then it was devoid of vehicles.
Orchard ION was crowded with Christmas shoppers and snappers. Melody was dressed to kill. Who can resist staring at her? Just look at her legs and the fatal stilettos.
Next change, Melody flaunts her Givenchy heels.
For the final change, we decided to do it in the Orchard ION car park, since by then it was devoid of vehicles.
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Christmas with HP - AMP-lified
Hewlett Packard (hp) invited me to a blogger party event to showcase their latest lifestyle products. The PR people from Waggener Edstrom has put in a lot of effort to make this event a unique experience. First, they couriered a box of jelly beans, a sweet teaser. Then at the event itself, they went all out to infuse fun and interaction among the guests with ice-breaking games. I also like the way they planned the execution of the product walkthrough: assigning guests to different stations so that the crowd is spread and rotated among the product showcase.
Some of the products that were launched include
1. HP ENVY(14) Beats Edition, the first HP notebook built for music.
2. TouchSmart Desktop PCs, computers with touchscreen plus HP's exclusive Touch software.
3. HP ENVY(17) 3D, letting you watch 3D movies on the laptop.
What caught my eye was not the latest products, but this:
It's not the HP laptop I'm eyeing on, but the item below it and next to it. It's a HP USB Media Docking Station and HP Notebook Projection Companion. The docking station supports any device via standard USB ports, and once docked, you get audio and extra USB ports to use all your peripherals with the connected device. The Notebook Projection Companion, as you can see, is extremely portable and powerful. I can imagine bringing that around for mobile training or use it in my room.
Some shots I took during the event:
Check out more official photos to the event here.
From now till 31 December 3010, HP is giving Christmas shoppers great offers every day, at http://hp.com.sg/store . Visit now to find something to buy for your loved ones.
To ride on the festive cheer, HP is challenging me to think of ways to AMP my Christmas.
Well, seriously, I have been doing so many photo shoots for this year, but in contrast, I only composed 2 piano tracks. (Listen to them here and here) While my photos mostly impress the person whom I am shooting for, my compositions (since my Piano Spa album series) appear to reach out to a wide audience.
So if I have time (and inspiration), I would sit down and compose a whole lot more music, for people who matters a lot to me.
In fact, as I was drafting this blog post, I decided to start my AMP-ing and worked on my third composition for the year. This song is dedicated to my wife who has just returned from a business trip last night, and how I missed her presence in the house, and waiting for her return to my love.
Returning to Love (3:50)
Read about how other bloggers AMP their Christmas at the HP Singapore Facebook page.
Some of the products that were launched include
1. HP ENVY(14) Beats Edition, the first HP notebook built for music.
2. TouchSmart Desktop PCs, computers with touchscreen plus HP's exclusive Touch software.
3. HP ENVY(17) 3D, letting you watch 3D movies on the laptop.
What caught my eye was not the latest products, but this:
It's not the HP laptop I'm eyeing on, but the item below it and next to it. It's a HP USB Media Docking Station and HP Notebook Projection Companion. The docking station supports any device via standard USB ports, and once docked, you get audio and extra USB ports to use all your peripherals with the connected device. The Notebook Projection Companion, as you can see, is extremely portable and powerful. I can imagine bringing that around for mobile training or use it in my room.
Some shots I took during the event:
Check out more official photos to the event here.
From now till 31 December 3010, HP is giving Christmas shoppers great offers every day, at http://hp.com.sg/store . Visit now to find something to buy for your loved ones.
To ride on the festive cheer, HP is challenging me to think of ways to AMP my Christmas.
Well, seriously, I have been doing so many photo shoots for this year, but in contrast, I only composed 2 piano tracks. (Listen to them here and here) While my photos mostly impress the person whom I am shooting for, my compositions (since my Piano Spa album series) appear to reach out to a wide audience.
So if I have time (and inspiration), I would sit down and compose a whole lot more music, for people who matters a lot to me.
In fact, as I was drafting this blog post, I decided to start my AMP-ing and worked on my third composition for the year. This song is dedicated to my wife who has just returned from a business trip last night, and how I missed her presence in the house, and waiting for her return to my love.
Returning to Love (3:50)
Read about how other bloggers AMP their Christmas at the HP Singapore Facebook page.
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