The Vulcan
Table of Content:
Ep. 1: The Needs of the Many
Ep. 2: The Needs of the Few
Ep. 3: 'T' Minus Negative
Ep. 4: A Pon Too Farr
Ep. 5: Seeing is Believing, Part 1
Ep. 6: Seeing is Believing, Part 2
Ep. 7: Mind in a Vat
Ep. 8: The Job
The Vulcan Character Highlights
The Vulcan - E3: 'T' Minus Negative
The Vulcan is flying back into the Neutral Zone. A pale blue point of light, distinct from the white light of background stars, from a distant satellite, slowly grows in size and brightness as the ship gets closer.
S'Talla is dictating her log, "Captain's Log, star date: Three seven eight five point seven.
"We are headed back to the Neutral Zone. Arthur Santayana, and the escaped Orion slave Cialoa, have stayed on as crew, leaving the Vulcan with nineteen personnel aboard. Arthur has provided us with confirmation of the existence of a secret Romulan military research station that may be studying the Vaikar-Kau-Bureki. We are going to attempt the capture and reverse engineering of a sentry satellite to confirm the location of the station, and provide us with a key code to pass through the alarm barrier surrounding the station. Our hope is to pose as a private contractor bringing in supplies to the station. Art has been to the Romulan station to deliver black market supplies. Skyvik and Sadek will pose as Romulan business men to try and gain access to the station."
Vulcan's bridge planning room
Art is in the bridge planning room with S'Talla and Sam. Mr. Naxx is sitting at the conference table looking on. Cia is across from Naxx. Sam is seated at one end of the table while both S'Talla and Art are standing. Art is pacing.
Art explains, "I don't know if what I saw was this stone you are interested in, but I saw a large… I suppose 'stone' could fit the description. It looked like a stone pyramid about forty centimeters tall, on a diagnostic pedestal in another room. I only got a quick glimpse through the window. There were scientists around it. It looked like they were studying it, but for all I know, someone just wanted a stone pyramid in the middle of their lab."
"Our long range sensors have not indicated the presence of a vessel large enough to be a science station. Are you sure of your location, Mr. Santayana?"
"Of course I am." explained Art. "I flew the Mean Kid there to deliver dilithium at a very generous profit."
Sam asks, "Why didn't they simply resupply through official channels?"
Art hopped up and down on his toes. "Apparently they wanted to avoid going through official channels to resupply their energy stores. Whatever they were doing, I don't think the Empire knew about it."
Art added, to help Sam make the decision, "I should add that I also made enough profit to buy a two year supply of medicine for the refugees on R9-17's colony base, selling… ahem… a specialty import from Andor, to some of the executive officers."
Naxx speaks, "Perhaps a secret Romulan research station would be cloaked. Our immediate problem is getting through the sensor fields to the station. The next problem will be getting aboard the station."
Art answers, "Getting aboard is the easy part. There are a couple of individuals who had some special requests for me. I didn't want to take the job in the first place, but there was a generous incentive and I needed to aquire medical supplies for the refugees hiding from the Klingons.
"The Mean Kid was the name of your ship?" asks Sam.
Art sags into despondency, "I don't want to talk about it."
Naxx fills in, "The Mean Kid" was confiscated by the Syndicate and disassembled when Billy… Art was discovered smuggling an escaped slave onboard.
"I don't understand the human tendency to become attached to their vessels, but Art seemed to think of that ship as a partner more than a tool."
Art straightens up, "She was a partner. The most loyal and reliable friend any captain could have."
Sam explains, "In the days of sailing, on Earth, captains were said to be married to their ships. That's why ships are often referred to as she, and later, when women also became ship captains, the tradition just held."
S'Talla comments, "Interesting; Illogical, but interesting.
S'Talla asks Art, "How did you get past the sentry network to deliver your cargo? It is too many days of flight to go cloaked the entire way, and this part of the Neutral Zone has more security than others."
Art stopped and his eyes got slightly rounder as he remembered, "That was why my commission was so high. This sector was offline for eight days while they performed a maintenance cycle and, I was told they were installing some sort of signal array. They were trying to take advantage of the short window. The station personnel were expecting me. I don't know what they will do if we just show up."
"If only you knew how to reach your contact ahead of our arrival." Naxx said, "But I have faith that Billy Gruff will be able to talk his way aboard."
"Cia," S'Talla got back on track. "... you think you can capture one of the sentry satellites and break into it to get access to the NZ security network?"
Cia nodded, "I worked on several of the nexus satellites in another sector of the Neutral Zone. Ship's that have approval to pass the Zone's security include Federation fleet ship's and the Romulan Star Navy. It is assumed you have permission to pass if you possess the transponders that prevent the security system from alarming. Either case, all traffic is logged for possible review.
"Any object that passes through the Neutral Zone will be recorded and analyzed for artificial power signals. Unnatural anomalies are flagged and logged on a distributed network. Without the transponders, the satellite will alarm, signaling both the Romulan and the Federation Central Neutral Zone Security Groups to retrieve the data and investigate the event. We will have about fifteen minutes to stop the transmission of the alarm and no more than twenty-eight minutes to make sure the network nodal handshake protocols are transmitted. Otherwise, someone will be dispatched to investigate why a nexus node has stopped working.
"If I, and Ya and Ne can reach the satellite without setting off an alarm, we can install an interface and bring our computers online while attached to the CPU housing. I believe we could rewrite the sensor report and erase any anomalous data we may have caused to trigger a transmission. We have to move quickly because, once we charge up any electronics, the satellite will sense it. But I believe it can be done."
"That includes allowing us to download the NZ map of their satellite network?" S'Talla asks. "How will you get back to the ship?"
"Oh no. We wouldn't be able to return to the ship."
Everyone looks stunned.
Cia goes on, "Once the system is under our control, the Vulcan can simply come and pick us up. We will have complete access to all the sentry satellites, so all you will have to do is query the network as if you were part of it. The Vulcan will appear as nothing more than an unremarkable component to the whole sentry grid. No need to download any data files. We will have a live connection."
Naxx interjects with a grin, "It's enough to make a Vulcan smile."
-
In Professor Kazzak's lab, the Professor is working on an interactive wall screen. It is covered in gravity and time wave formulas. There is an out-of-scale icon of a ship flying past a star. The star emits concentric circles of gravity wave and radial gravitational space/time energy lines perpendicular to the gravity lines. The ship has a path drawn in a tangential curve across the gravitational lines.
The Professor says to Dr. Gödel, "Dr Gödel, what do you come up with for the energy scalar? Do you find your formula gives the same answer as the square root of the factorial of t over v1 summed with big 'G' to the distance r?"
Francesca Gödel nods her head and says in a clear, firm voice, "Yes Professor. The math agrees. I even ran a simulation against the ship's computer. I think you've got it right."
The professor races over to an input panel and taps a couple of buttons. A 3D holo-projection of the model ship flies a repeated path past a star. The hull of the ship reads a changing number projected onto it.
The professor and Dr. Gödel watch a couple of replays of the flyby. The hull of the ship starts dark, but grows lighter as the simulated induced energy increases.
Kazzak asks, "have you placed and aligned all the gravity induction coils? I want to test the system before we cross a large gravitational field. Any bad alignment could pull the ship apart."
Dr. Gödel assured the professor, "I am certain of my placements. I have gone through and double checked five of the six inductors. I will check the sixth one when I have finished entering the final formula. I am confident in your theory professor and I can't wait to see it work."
Kazzak comments, "It would mean a level of independence from dilithium crystals to be able to generate high levels of continuous power directly from the gravitons of a large mass like a star.
"Believe it or not, but I too am excited." confesses the old Vulcan in an emotionally neutral tone.
Dr. Gödel doesn't look up from her work, nor acknowledge the Professor's last comment. She understands that it is bad form to acknowledge any Vulcan expression of emotions.
Professor Kazzak walks over to a control panel. He studies the display while adjusting controls.
"Done!" calls out Francesca Gödel. "The formula is entered and tested for errors. I'll go, and double check that sixth inductor." She strides confidently out the large bay doors which open upon her approach.
The Professor glances up to watch her leave. "Amazing, for a human." he says quietly to himself. Then, he adjusts the goggles he wears up high on his head, down over his eyes, and turns back to his work. He raises them up immediately to look, when the bay doors sweep open a second time. S'Talla had just passed Dr. Gödel in the passageway.
"I apologize for the interruption, but I am hoping you can help." S'Talla attempts to explain her presence.
Professor Kazak lowers his goggles again. The opaque mat grey lenses cover his eyes from view, and he returns to his work at the control screen. "There is no need to apologize." he comments.
He begins reading over the new set of formulas he brings up on the screen. Otherwise, he ignores S'Talla.
S'Talla quietly watches in an attempt to be polite. Finally, she asks, "How can you read those formulas through your safety goggles?"
The Professor continues to ignore the captain and brings up another set of formulas. He changes a number and turns to watch the replay of the virtual model ship passing through the gravity field on the projection. A list of six floating numbers begins to scroll upward in very slowly increasing values.
The old Vulcan speaks to his assistant through his com badge, "That's it Francesca, very good. You've got it."
S'Talla turns her attention to the hologram. She realizes the Professor isn't going to stop his work for her. She turns back, to track the old Vulcan as he walks over to a large energy cell with a faint green glow indicating a low level of stored energy. He reads the screen of his small tricorder.
The doors sweep open again. Francesca marches back in past the Captain and joins the Professor at the power cell. "Is is is it wo wo… wo… working? Are are are y y you seeing any… ch… charge b b b b build-up, … P… Professor?"
Kazak absently replies, "Yes."
Francesca is elated. She jumps up in the air and lands, leaning in to give her mentor an excited hug, but stops herself immediately.
Sam and Skyvik enter the bay at that moment.
Francesca, stepping back after her excited hop, turns, looking for a more receptive outlet for her excitement. She spots Captain S'Talla and runs the few steps over to embrace S'Talla in the hug Francesca thought better of giving to Professor Kazak. S'Talla holds rigidly while Dr. Gödel figures out that S'Talla, like her Vulcan mentor, is equally unmoved to reciprocate, as Francesca could tell the big Vulcan Commander, who just stepped up to join the group, would be.
Francesca quickly apologizes to S'Talla, "S…s…sorry, Ca…ca…captain."
Then, Dr. Gödel spies Sam and lunges for her. "It works, S… S… Sam."
Samantha returns the exuberant scientist's hug and smiles. "That's fantastic! What worked?"
"Our experiment." explains the Professor. He finally turns from the display and looks at the group, pushing his goggles up on his head. "Get OUT! You are not authorized to be here. Who let you in?"
Francesca sputters, "I… I'm s…sorry, Professor. I… I th… th… think I left… left the d d d door open…"
"No." Kazzak stops his assistant. "You did your job perfectly. Captain S'Talla, get your people out and keep them out. It is bad enough that you have free run of my laboratory."
Skyvik ignores Kazzak's words and addresses S'Talla, "Captain, we have a plan. We can launch the Orion and the Bynars from the Vulcan at low impulse speed, from outside the Zone. Their inertia will carry them to the satellite without emitting an energy signal."
"How will you stop them, once they get there?" asks the Professor, suddenly curious. The white haired scientist adjusts his goggles on his forehead and looks at S'Talla. You are attacking a sentry satellite in the Neutral Zone. This was your question for me."
Kazzak turns back to Skyvik, "Getting to a sentry satellite undetected is simple. Your team will need to be traveling at an initial velocity somewhere around 500 meters per second to get there in a reasonable amount of time, from a safe distance for the ship. How do you propose to stop? You are not going through all this just to destroy it. You want to tap into it. Logically, you have someone who knows how to program it, probably that Orion, but what is your plan to slow the spacewalkers?"
Skyvik addresses the Professor, "Pressurized gas and mass inertial cannons. Our only problem is a reliable chronometer that doesn't emit an energy signal."
The professor turns to Doctor Gödel, "Francesca, give the O.S.S. agent my coil spring timer so he can leave."
Kazzak turns to S'Talla, "Now you need to apologize for interrupting.
"I will be there to watch this operation from the bridge. I wish to be sure to get my time piece back."
Francesca Gödel opens a cabinet. Inside is a collection of antique scientific instruments: an old fashioned brass microscope, a small telescope, antique magnetic compass, rulers, slide rule, dividers, a pair of old incandescent flashlights, analogue voltmeter, and more. Francesca hands a watch to Skyvik. "It… it… it is an an an ancient wa… wa… wa… wa… watch." She explains.
The professor adds, "It operates on a spring, regulated with a flywheel. It is surprisingly accurate for a piece of seven-hundred year old technology."
Table of Content:
Ep. 1: The Needs of the Many
Ep. 2: The Needs of the Few
Ep. 3: 'T' Minus Negative
Ep. 4: A Pon Too Farr
Ep. 5: Seeing is Believing, Part 1
Ep. 6: Seeing is Believing, Part 2
Ep. 7: Mind in a Vat
Ep. 8: The Job
The Vulcan Character Highlights
The Vulcan - E3: 'T' Minus Negative
The Vulcan is flying back into the Neutral Zone. A pale blue point of light, distinct from the white light of background stars, from a distant satellite, slowly grows in size and brightness as the ship gets closer.
S'Talla is dictating her log, "Captain's Log, star date: Three seven eight five point seven.
"We are headed back to the Neutral Zone. Arthur Santayana, and the escaped Orion slave Cialoa, have stayed on as crew, leaving the Vulcan with nineteen personnel aboard. Arthur has provided us with confirmation of the existence of a secret Romulan military research station that may be studying the Vaikar-Kau-Bureki. We are going to attempt the capture and reverse engineering of a sentry satellite to confirm the location of the station, and provide us with a key code to pass through the alarm barrier surrounding the station. Our hope is to pose as a private contractor bringing in supplies to the station. Art has been to the Romulan station to deliver black market supplies. Skyvik and Sadek will pose as Romulan business men to try and gain access to the station."
Vulcan's bridge planning room
Art is in the bridge planning room with S'Talla and Sam. Mr. Naxx is sitting at the conference table looking on. Cia is across from Naxx. Sam is seated at one end of the table while both S'Talla and Art are standing. Art is pacing.
Art explains, "I don't know if what I saw was this stone you are interested in, but I saw a large… I suppose 'stone' could fit the description. It looked like a stone pyramid about forty centimeters tall, on a diagnostic pedestal in another room. I only got a quick glimpse through the window. There were scientists around it. It looked like they were studying it, but for all I know, someone just wanted a stone pyramid in the middle of their lab."
"Our long range sensors have not indicated the presence of a vessel large enough to be a science station. Are you sure of your location, Mr. Santayana?"
"Of course I am." explained Art. "I flew the Mean Kid there to deliver dilithium at a very generous profit."
Sam asks, "Why didn't they simply resupply through official channels?"
Art hopped up and down on his toes. "Apparently they wanted to avoid going through official channels to resupply their energy stores. Whatever they were doing, I don't think the Empire knew about it."
Art added, to help Sam make the decision, "I should add that I also made enough profit to buy a two year supply of medicine for the refugees on R9-17's colony base, selling… ahem… a specialty import from Andor, to some of the executive officers."
Naxx speaks, "Perhaps a secret Romulan research station would be cloaked. Our immediate problem is getting through the sensor fields to the station. The next problem will be getting aboard the station."
Art answers, "Getting aboard is the easy part. There are a couple of individuals who had some special requests for me. I didn't want to take the job in the first place, but there was a generous incentive and I needed to aquire medical supplies for the refugees hiding from the Klingons.
"The Mean Kid was the name of your ship?" asks Sam.
Art sags into despondency, "I don't want to talk about it."
Naxx fills in, "The Mean Kid" was confiscated by the Syndicate and disassembled when Billy… Art was discovered smuggling an escaped slave onboard.
"I don't understand the human tendency to become attached to their vessels, but Art seemed to think of that ship as a partner more than a tool."
Art straightens up, "She was a partner. The most loyal and reliable friend any captain could have."
Sam explains, "In the days of sailing, on Earth, captains were said to be married to their ships. That's why ships are often referred to as she, and later, when women also became ship captains, the tradition just held."
S'Talla comments, "Interesting; Illogical, but interesting.
S'Talla asks Art, "How did you get past the sentry network to deliver your cargo? It is too many days of flight to go cloaked the entire way, and this part of the Neutral Zone has more security than others."
Art stopped and his eyes got slightly rounder as he remembered, "That was why my commission was so high. This sector was offline for eight days while they performed a maintenance cycle and, I was told they were installing some sort of signal array. They were trying to take advantage of the short window. The station personnel were expecting me. I don't know what they will do if we just show up."
"If only you knew how to reach your contact ahead of our arrival." Naxx said, "But I have faith that Billy Gruff will be able to talk his way aboard."
"Cia," S'Talla got back on track. "... you think you can capture one of the sentry satellites and break into it to get access to the NZ security network?"
Cia nodded, "I worked on several of the nexus satellites in another sector of the Neutral Zone. Ship's that have approval to pass the Zone's security include Federation fleet ship's and the Romulan Star Navy. It is assumed you have permission to pass if you possess the transponders that prevent the security system from alarming. Either case, all traffic is logged for possible review.
"Any object that passes through the Neutral Zone will be recorded and analyzed for artificial power signals. Unnatural anomalies are flagged and logged on a distributed network. Without the transponders, the satellite will alarm, signaling both the Romulan and the Federation Central Neutral Zone Security Groups to retrieve the data and investigate the event. We will have about fifteen minutes to stop the transmission of the alarm and no more than twenty-eight minutes to make sure the network nodal handshake protocols are transmitted. Otherwise, someone will be dispatched to investigate why a nexus node has stopped working.
"If I, and Ya and Ne can reach the satellite without setting off an alarm, we can install an interface and bring our computers online while attached to the CPU housing. I believe we could rewrite the sensor report and erase any anomalous data we may have caused to trigger a transmission. We have to move quickly because, once we charge up any electronics, the satellite will sense it. But I believe it can be done."
"That includes allowing us to download the NZ map of their satellite network?" S'Talla asks. "How will you get back to the ship?"
"Oh no. We wouldn't be able to return to the ship."
Everyone looks stunned.
Cia goes on, "Once the system is under our control, the Vulcan can simply come and pick us up. We will have complete access to all the sentry satellites, so all you will have to do is query the network as if you were part of it. The Vulcan will appear as nothing more than an unremarkable component to the whole sentry grid. No need to download any data files. We will have a live connection."
Naxx interjects with a grin, "It's enough to make a Vulcan smile."
-
In Professor Kazzak's lab, the Professor is working on an interactive wall screen. It is covered in gravity and time wave formulas. There is an out-of-scale icon of a ship flying past a star. The star emits concentric circles of gravity wave and radial gravitational space/time energy lines perpendicular to the gravity lines. The ship has a path drawn in a tangential curve across the gravitational lines.
The Professor says to Dr. Gödel, "Dr Gödel, what do you come up with for the energy scalar? Do you find your formula gives the same answer as the square root of the factorial of t over v1 summed with big 'G' to the distance r?"
Francesca Gödel nods her head and says in a clear, firm voice, "Yes Professor. The math agrees. I even ran a simulation against the ship's computer. I think you've got it right."
The professor races over to an input panel and taps a couple of buttons. A 3D holo-projection of the model ship flies a repeated path past a star. The hull of the ship reads a changing number projected onto it.
The professor and Dr. Gödel watch a couple of replays of the flyby. The hull of the ship starts dark, but grows lighter as the simulated induced energy increases.
Kazzak asks, "have you placed and aligned all the gravity induction coils? I want to test the system before we cross a large gravitational field. Any bad alignment could pull the ship apart."
Dr. Gödel assured the professor, "I am certain of my placements. I have gone through and double checked five of the six inductors. I will check the sixth one when I have finished entering the final formula. I am confident in your theory professor and I can't wait to see it work."
Kazzak comments, "It would mean a level of independence from dilithium crystals to be able to generate high levels of continuous power directly from the gravitons of a large mass like a star.
"Believe it or not, but I too am excited." confesses the old Vulcan in an emotionally neutral tone.
Dr. Gödel doesn't look up from her work, nor acknowledge the Professor's last comment. She understands that it is bad form to acknowledge any Vulcan expression of emotions.
Professor Kazzak walks over to a control panel. He studies the display while adjusting controls.
"Done!" calls out Francesca Gödel. "The formula is entered and tested for errors. I'll go, and double check that sixth inductor." She strides confidently out the large bay doors which open upon her approach.
The Professor glances up to watch her leave. "Amazing, for a human." he says quietly to himself. Then, he adjusts the goggles he wears up high on his head, down over his eyes, and turns back to his work. He raises them up immediately to look, when the bay doors sweep open a second time. S'Talla had just passed Dr. Gödel in the passageway.
"I apologize for the interruption, but I am hoping you can help." S'Talla attempts to explain her presence.
Professor Kazak lowers his goggles again. The opaque mat grey lenses cover his eyes from view, and he returns to his work at the control screen. "There is no need to apologize." he comments.
He begins reading over the new set of formulas he brings up on the screen. Otherwise, he ignores S'Talla.
S'Talla quietly watches in an attempt to be polite. Finally, she asks, "How can you read those formulas through your safety goggles?"
The Professor continues to ignore the captain and brings up another set of formulas. He changes a number and turns to watch the replay of the virtual model ship passing through the gravity field on the projection. A list of six floating numbers begins to scroll upward in very slowly increasing values.
The old Vulcan speaks to his assistant through his com badge, "That's it Francesca, very good. You've got it."
S'Talla turns her attention to the hologram. She realizes the Professor isn't going to stop his work for her. She turns back, to track the old Vulcan as he walks over to a large energy cell with a faint green glow indicating a low level of stored energy. He reads the screen of his small tricorder.
The doors sweep open again. Francesca marches back in past the Captain and joins the Professor at the power cell. "Is is is it wo wo… wo… working? Are are are y y you seeing any… ch… charge b b b b build-up, … P… Professor?"
Kazak absently replies, "Yes."
Francesca is elated. She jumps up in the air and lands, leaning in to give her mentor an excited hug, but stops herself immediately.
Sam and Skyvik enter the bay at that moment.
Francesca, stepping back after her excited hop, turns, looking for a more receptive outlet for her excitement. She spots Captain S'Talla and runs the few steps over to embrace S'Talla in the hug Francesca thought better of giving to Professor Kazak. S'Talla holds rigidly while Dr. Gödel figures out that S'Talla, like her Vulcan mentor, is equally unmoved to reciprocate, as Francesca could tell the big Vulcan Commander, who just stepped up to join the group, would be.
Francesca quickly apologizes to S'Talla, "S…s…sorry, Ca…ca…captain."
Then, Dr. Gödel spies Sam and lunges for her. "It works, S… S… Sam."
Samantha returns the exuberant scientist's hug and smiles. "That's fantastic! What worked?"
"Our experiment." explains the Professor. He finally turns from the display and looks at the group, pushing his goggles up on his head. "Get OUT! You are not authorized to be here. Who let you in?"
Francesca sputters, "I… I'm s…sorry, Professor. I… I th… th… think I left… left the d d d door open…"
"No." Kazzak stops his assistant. "You did your job perfectly. Captain S'Talla, get your people out and keep them out. It is bad enough that you have free run of my laboratory."
Skyvik ignores Kazzak's words and addresses S'Talla, "Captain, we have a plan. We can launch the Orion and the Bynars from the Vulcan at low impulse speed, from outside the Zone. Their inertia will carry them to the satellite without emitting an energy signal."
"How will you stop them, once they get there?" asks the Professor, suddenly curious. The white haired scientist adjusts his goggles on his forehead and looks at S'Talla. You are attacking a sentry satellite in the Neutral Zone. This was your question for me."
Kazzak turns back to Skyvik, "Getting to a sentry satellite undetected is simple. Your team will need to be traveling at an initial velocity somewhere around 500 meters per second to get there in a reasonable amount of time, from a safe distance for the ship. How do you propose to stop? You are not going through all this just to destroy it. You want to tap into it. Logically, you have someone who knows how to program it, probably that Orion, but what is your plan to slow the spacewalkers?"
Skyvik addresses the Professor, "Pressurized gas and mass inertial cannons. Our only problem is a reliable chronometer that doesn't emit an energy signal."
The professor turns to Doctor Gödel, "Francesca, give the O.S.S. agent my coil spring timer so he can leave."
Kazzak turns to S'Talla, "Now you need to apologize for interrupting.
"I will be there to watch this operation from the bridge. I wish to be sure to get my time piece back."
Francesca Gödel opens a cabinet. Inside is a collection of antique scientific instruments: an old fashioned brass microscope, a small telescope, antique magnetic compass, rulers, slide rule, dividers, a pair of old incandescent flashlights, analogue voltmeter, and more. Francesca hands a watch to Skyvik. "It… it… it is an an an ancient wa… wa… wa… wa… watch." She explains.
The professor adds, "It operates on a spring, regulated with a flywheel. It is surprisingly accurate for a piece of seven-hundred year old technology."
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