196 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
196 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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COMPUTER'S 'N ME
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by Rich Griebel
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It was a dark and stormy night . . . .
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Not buying it, eh? Well this is a little story about my
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coming of age in the world of computers. It all started on
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Christmas, 1991. While visiting family in California, I struck up a
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conversation with my brother about computers. He, being a Computer
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Systems Engineer for a large airline, seemed very knowledgeable on
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the subject. When I told him I had thought about buying the kids a
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computer, he got this sly look on his face immediately. I told him I
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was concerned about paying $2000 for a piece of equipment that would
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depreciate faster than a Pet Rock. I told him that with the rapid
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depreciation and upward spiral of computer technology today, the
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machine you buy now, will be old stuff in less than a year.
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My brother, obviously taken with my ability to have my finger
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on the pulse of the computer industry, said, "broke again, huh?"
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Never could fool him, unless it came to a mechanical question, I
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talk automotive, he talks to computers. Perhaps that's why he never
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married, computers are logical and rarely, according to him, ever
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break down. Women, on the other hand, are always looking for someone
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to fix their car (I duck and run at this point).
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Anyway, he came up with a 286 system, with all the goodies
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except a video card for the monitor and a printer. The best part
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was the price, I got it for nothing, he had made it out of spare
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parts. I packed it up with the kiddies in the back of my car and
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took it home. Once home and settled in, I marched myself down to a
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local computer store to buy a video card and a printer. I was
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immediately confused. I knew I had an EGA monitor and was told to
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get an EGA card, which should cost around $40.
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I was asked a rather long and confusing series of questions,
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did I want a parallel port on the card, did I want a high resolution
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card that required memory, did I want a 8 or 16 bit card. The only
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thing I could think to say was, "what have you got for $40." The
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girl at the counter turned and called "Frank" over her shoulder. She
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told me "Frank" would take care of me, I immediately concluded I had
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breached some branch of computer etiquette and was going to be
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flogged by "Frank".
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Frank turned out to be my savior. Wearing jeans, an old
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sweatshirt and his hair in a pony tail, he didn't match the folks
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on the sales floor. He looked me over, must have determined I was
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a lost soul, and asked what I was looking for. I rambled on about
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the computer I had obtained and the fact that I needed a EGA card.
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He thought about it for a minute and asked if I was going to use a
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printer. I was again lost, "Doesn't everyone," I asked, trying not
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to sound like I didn't know what I was talking about. Frank, by now
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wise to my ignorance, replied, "Not hardly, just a minute".
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I felt for sure now I had ticked off Frank, and my chances of
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getting anywhere here were slipping fast. I was surprised to find
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Frank returning from the bowels of the store with a circuit board
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in his hand. He handed it to me and explained, "This is a used card
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I've checked out, it works fine and has a printer port on it if you
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need one. Do you need any help or instructions on installing it?"
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Immediately the macho portion of my brain kicked in, how hard
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could it be to stick this little card in the computer? I refused any
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help and bought the card. It only cost me $20 so I figured I had done
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something right. I should have known I was wrong when Frank gave me a
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business card with the stores number on it and told me to call him
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when I got into a bind with the installation. I later found Frank to
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be a wise man, and utilized the phone number many times.
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Once I got the video card home, I began the task of installing
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it into the machine. First I needed a large flat space to take the
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computer apart. The dining room table looked good, and the wife was
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no where in sight. So I set the machine on the table and began trying
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to figure out how to take the case off. I have seen it done before so
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I removed the screws on the back of the machine and slipped the cover
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off. Unknown to me you don't remove *all* of the screws, the power
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supply fell out, dangling by some wires. After securing the power
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supply I looked things over.
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I matched the little video card I had purchased with one of the
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empty expansion slots. After securing the card I assembled the case
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and hooked up the keyboard and the monitor. I flipped the switch and,
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nothing. The machine came on, made some noises at the start but the
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screen was blank. I fiddled with the controls on the monitor to no
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avail. Lesson one, never put the case back together until you are
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sure the machine works. So now I call my buddy Frank. I can hear him
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smirk on the phone as he walks me through setting the little switches
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on the video card.
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I fire the machine up again (minus the case) half expecting a
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thread of smoke and a blown fuse. It worked, I had a screen showing
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the machine booting up. Quickly, I shut it off and assembled the
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case, can't waste any time, you never know what diabolical things
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the machine will do while its shut off. Now I was faced with the ever
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familiar C:\> that greets every DOS user, and I didn't have a clue.
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So when in doubt, call a kid. I called my 15 year old daughter, who
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used computers in school everyday. She looked at the screen and said,
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"Where's the gooie."
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I looked at her and using a calm controlled voice responded
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intelligently, "Huh?"
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"Dad, we use Apples and Mac's at school, it doesn't have that
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thingy there. That's *DOS*!"
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"Oh god", I thought, "what has my brother done to me now". I
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stared at the screen for a while, and tried to remember what I had
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learned when I used a computer at work. I drew a blank, which, if you
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listen to my wife, is the story of my life. So I tried a few commands
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at the prompt. For each one the computer rebuked me with a "bad
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command or file name" lecture. When I had a screen full of those, I
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got up and got something to drink. Demanding work this computer
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stuff, takes a lot out of you.
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My wife, who has a unlimited source of knowledge at her
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fingertips, walked over to the machine, turned it off and gave me
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two books that my brother had shipped with the computer. I was given
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two commands, first, clean off the dining room table, two, try
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reading the book. Its generally a wise idea to follow her commands in
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the order received. So I picked up the mess, organized the computer
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so it didn't look like something Rube Goldberg had tossed together
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and put it on a table over in the corner of the dining room. Then I
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sat down with the _MICROSOFT MS DOS 3.3 USERS GUIDE AND REFERENCE_.
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Obviously people who write these books are taught to use confusing
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and deceptive literary skills. It's like a secret code they developed
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to confuse everyone who, back in High School, called them nerds. And
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it worked. I didn't have a clue what I was reading and it was like
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the computer knew it.
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After about an hour with the book I actually got the computer
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to do something. I got it to show me the root directory. What glee!
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I had it show it to me so many times it must have thought I was lost
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because that was all I could do. I read further and finally got the
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computer to start Windows 286. For those who don't know what Windows
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286 is, it's a program Microsoft came up with to make you wish you
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had a 386. Now I was somewhere, but I couldn't get the computer to do
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anything again. I had this nice desktop, but none of the keys worked.
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By this time my frustration level was at its peak. Thoughts of some
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chain saw adjustments were running through my head. Then I found the
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Windows book, shut the computer off, and walked away to read more.
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I had always thought a mouse was something you laid traps for.
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Now I was looking through the box of parts trying to find a "mouse".
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I took everything out of the box and didn't find anything that
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matched the description "pointing device". I pictured one of those
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light pens that I had used at work. My daughter, obviously tired of
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hearing my tirades, came down stairs, looked in the box, and handed
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me a plastic switchbox with a long wire coming out of it. "Mouse",
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she said, and walked away. Our children are in league with the
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computer nerds to make sniveling idiots out of their parents. It was
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working on me.
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The long cord had a plug on the end that matched a socket on the
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back of the computer. Being a doubting type I didn't believe it was
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that simple. After all, this thing had been less than cooperative
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from the first time I turned it on. I plugged in the cord and started
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the computer. The DOS prompt appeared and I began moving the mouse
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around clicking the buttons, nothing, nadda, zip. I sat back in the
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chair and thought to myself, "There is no God." Perhaps this was the
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final straw, the final insult. Chain saw, no, death by chopping maul,
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or maybe I'll just set it out in the unforgiving Northwest Washington
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rain and let it slowly rust to death.
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I decided to load Windows again and try to figure out the
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keystrokes in the book. When windows started there was a little
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arrow, often covered by a little hourglass as Windows loaded. When
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the loading process was through, there was that arrow. I moved the
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mouse, the arrow moved. I clicked the buttons, it picked things from
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the menu. I managed to get a few things to actually work and I was
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amazed. Ok, that's Windows, but I know that there's more to computing
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than Windows. So I drop to DOS and start searching for other things
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to run. I managed NOT to reformat the Hard Drive, only because they
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build in a warning that you can't, well, almost can't, screw up.
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That's how it all started. Now I'm surrounded by computers, five
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in all, connected in a Local Area Network operating two Electronic
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Bulletin Boards and performing tasks I never thought possible back
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in January 1992. But I keep the trusty chain saw close by, you gotta
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show 'em who's the boss.
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# # #
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Copyright 1994 Rich Griebel, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Rich Griebel is a Commercial Vehicle Enforcement Officer / Washington
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State Patrol. His writing is generally reserved to training documents
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at work. He's had a wide and varied career, Truck Driver, High School
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Teacher and Law Enforcement. He can be reached at 2 BBS's, run with
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wife Sheri; COPLINK, 1:343/304 (206)653-9581 or Writer & Photographer
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Exchange, 1:343/305 (206)659-7102; or rich.griebel@gun&hose.damar.com
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also on Compuserve ID 75277,2355. He's like to hear from you.
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=====================================================================
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