A lot of the Boomers on social media are griping about all the weather talk. "Bah! It barely got above zero in July when we were kids, and we didn't call it any kinda 'polar vortex'! We called it 'winter' and went skinny dipping in the old liquid methane swimming hole!" - Tam
Silicon Forest
If the type is too small, Ctrl+ is your friend
Thursday, January 31, 2019
Quote of the Day
Wednesday, January 30, 2019
Polar Vortex
The Midwest is very cold today. Here's some pictures.
Natural color image taken by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite on January 27, 2019 - NASA Earth Observatory/Joshua Stevens |
Temperature Map |
Winds |
This one is weird, but it comes from the National Weather Service, so maybe the weather IS being werid. |
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
More Old Radios
Get in the car to go to lunch, turn on the radio and what's this? It sounds like Russian. I wasn't aware of any Russian language radio stations in our neck of the woods. Could this be coming from Russia? I mean we got that Polar Vortex thing going on, bringing real arctic weather to the Midwest, Maybe somethin's goin' on with ionosphere and I'm picking up a broadcast from Moscow.
Well, no, turns out it was a local station, 1010AM, supposedly some kind of Christian station. I mean that's what the web site says, but I don't understand Russian so I have no idea what they are actually saying.
Still kind of surprising. There seem to be almost as many Spanish language radio stations as English, but I hadn't heard any other language until today.
This radio showed up on Reddit the other day, supposedly from a Communist country. Something funny about this story. I thought radios were pretty much outlawed in the Soviet Bloc. I mean they went to a great deal of trouble to jam foreign radio broadcasts. But maybe the radios were too useful in spreading the regime's propaganda, so they didn't wage war on the equipment, but rather on the airwaves. And maybe only the party faithful, the ones who could be trusted not to listen to any of the lies from the imperialist running dogs, got radios.
The push buttons at the bottom of the front panel are kind of curious. They are labeled O, P, L, M, S & US. L, M & S likely refer to Long, Medium and Short wave bands. US might refer to the FM band. O & P are anybody's guess. Does this mean that Europe didn't have FM?
Reader Eck! pointed out that the moonshiner's car radio was an BC603 tank radio from WW2. With a little digging I figured out that the moonshiner's radio was only a receiver. The complete Sherman radio set (shown above) consisted of one transmitter (the big box on the left) and two receivers (the two smaller boxes on the right, the ones with the military grade speaker grills) (and the push buttons).
The whole thing weighed 800 pounds and was mounted in the back of the turret (the white box opposite the gun). The bulge that makes up the back of the turret is for this radio.
Well, no, turns out it was a local station, 1010AM, supposedly some kind of Christian station. I mean that's what the web site says, but I don't understand Russian so I have no idea what they are actually saying.
Still kind of surprising. There seem to be almost as many Spanish language radio stations as English, but I hadn't heard any other language until today.
Short Wave Receiver |
Radio Dial |
Sherman Tank Radio form WW2 |
Sherman Tank Cutaway Drawing |
Soldiers change out radio receiver Look at it full size and you can even make out the receiver's push buttons |
Civics Lesson
Dad vs. the Dress Code, an essay by Elizabeth Crook is assigned reading from Iaman's book club. It's quite the tale, and very instructive about people and politics.
Update May 2019 added "San Marcos" so I can find it next time I go looking for it.
Update May 2019 added "San Marcos" so I can find it next time I go looking for it.
Saturday, January 26, 2019
Isla La Orchila
Russian Tu-160 aircraft make flights in Venezuela
Russia has been flying TU-160's to Venezuela occasionally ever since Hugo Chavez came into power. The TU-160 is a supersonic bomber. It's the only large supersonic aircraft still flying. It's obsolete as weapon, but it is still big and impressive and so these flights make good propaganda.
La Orchila. 2 mile long airstrip in orange. |
Los Roches, La Orchila & Caracas, Venezuela |
My take on this whole thing is that while the upper class was getting along very well in Venezuela before Hugo, the poor were not, and their frustration / desperation was what brought Hugo into power. Now we have Maduro in power, and he doesn't seem to understand the first thing about business, which is why oil production has fallen off and whole country seems to be going to hell. You'd think hanging with Putin he'd figure out that he needs to get his oil business running properly.
But maybe Putin is waiting until Maduro is really desperate so he can step in and save his sorry ass, for a price naturally. Can't really blame Putin for messing about with Venezuela, not after all the messing we (the USA) have done in his neighborhood (the Ukraine). Besides, all these despots need to stick together. Hah. Like they would. Stab each other in the back first chance they get more likely.
I suspect that property rights are at the root of this whole debacle. Pretty much all of Latin America runs on a 15th century model of property rights where the governor doles out land to his cronies and everybody else is screwed. As long as the upper class continues to squash the peasants, the communists are going to have people who are willing to listen to their bullshit, which is where we get revolutionaries.
If you want things to change, you need to give people an opportunity to crawl out of their hole without getting crushed in the process. Problem is, the upper class think they have to give up something, but if they can give the peasants an opportunity, they will reap rewards much greater than anything they are getting now. Hard to imagine, and that, I think, is the problem.
Friday, January 25, 2019
Roma
ROMA | Official Trailer [HD] | Netflix
I suppose you might call this a 'slice of life' film. We have an upper class family in Mexico, probably Mexico City, back in 1970 and some of their trials and tribulations, but our viewpoint is from one of their servants. Heartwrenching.
Update the next morning: Just discovered that Roma is a neighborhood in Mexico City.
Thursday, January 24, 2019
Camera Work
Notorious - Key exchange scene
If a movie is done right, you never notice how much trouble making this shot would have caused the camera men. I never used to notice things like this, I was wrapped up in the story and how the shot got made wasn't any of my concern. I wanted to know what she was going to do with the key now that she had it. I mean, that's why I watch movies, I want to become immersed in the story, I don't want to worry about all the technical details. I suppose that might sound strange, being as I seem to spend most of my time agonizing over technical details.
The Criterion Collection has an expose on the camera work involved in making this shot. They don't explain the crane work, but we would need a crane man to explain that, and this little bit is probably all most people can absorb in one sitting. I know my brain is full. Or maybe it's just that my belly is full of pizza.
Via Posthip Scott.
Question Of The Day
If thieves wear sneakers and artists wear Sketchers, do linguists wear Converse?
Stolen from Joe Sherlock.
Win Friends and Influence People?
Getty/Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast |
"A shadowy startup claims it can target an individual Facebook user to bend him or her to a client’s will. Experts are… not entirely convinced.
You don’t have to be a hostile foreign power to covertly influence people on Facebook. For as little as $29, a U.K. startup called The Spinner will individually target a special someone in your life with a barrage of Facebook ads subtly designed to influence their behavior, whether it’s persuading a spouse to initiate sex more often, or swaying a troublesome co-worker to quit their job."I wouldn't be surprised if it actually works. I know I can certainly be led around by the nose, given the right scent to follow.
Via Detroit Steve
Isla Aves
Venezuela Protest |
The next story is completely different:
-On December 26, three Navy personnel assigned to the Simón Bolívar scientific-naval base, on Isla de Aves, went to sea in a small inflatable boat. Soon after, they lost sight of them, and since then nothing else has been known about them. The zodiac-type boat-equipped with an outboard motor-was manned by the first sergeant Víctor García Navarro, and the second corporal Gustavo Fuentes Vera and Yohander Bravo Colmenares. The first known part about this situation indicates that the military went out to do a "sea trial", and that at approximately 4:30 pm the visual contact between the crew and the base, which operates in a palafito-type building, was lost.
Aves Island with research station |
Analysis of the case of Maritime SAR of Isla de Aves made by the Humboldt Rescue Organization. |
Some places that have made it into this blog before. |
The Dry Tortugas (links to Amazon)
Scorpion Reef
Treasure Island
Swan Island
Isla Aves (this post).
The Dry Tortugas is on this list because I read a book that was set here. I thought I had put up a post about it, but evidently not. The book is Flashback by Nevada Barr, who has written a whole series of murder mysteries, all set in National Parks.
Wednesday, January 23, 2019
Newark, Ohio
Swisher Sweets |
Jacksonville, Florida |
Newark has shown up a couple other times here.
Via California Bob.
USS Fitzgerald
USS Fitzgerald damage above waterline |
USS Fitzgerald patch over hole below the waterline |
Same thing with Trump's wall. You can build the wall, but you are going to need a small army of people to patrol it, and paying for that army is eventually going to cost more than the wall itself. But building the wall will be a grand gesture. Maybe that's all Trump is after, getting recognition in the history books for his 'great wall'.
Via Comrade Misfit
P.S. You can measure the distance between two points on Google Maps by right clicking on your first point and then selecting 'measure distance' (imagine that) from the popup menu, and then clicking on the second point. Using this technique I was able to determine that the Fitzgerald's collision happened about 75 miles south of Tokyo.
P.P.S. If the type on this page, or any other, is too small, then CTRL+ is your friend. I have to hit it two or three times on most any page in order to make it large enough to read. I probably should put this in the banner.
Tuesday, January 22, 2019
Lindybeige
The Iliad - what is it really about?
Lindybeige is Jack's latest prize, plucked from the mass of YouTube, and I must admit he's entertaining and possibly elucidating. I meant Lindeybeige is entertaining, not to say that Jack isn't entertaining, he can be, but he doesn't make YouTube videos, at least not yet. Jack, however, gets the credit for discovering Lindeybeige.
Via Jack. Oh. I guess I said that already.
Keeping Time
My own Discworld "Vetinari Clock"
Inspired by a comment on a Reddit joke.
When I was in high school there was a wall clock in each classroom. The clocks were all controlled by a master controller in the office. After school the power was shut down and the clocks stopped. In the morning, the power is turned on, and the master controller pulses all the clocks rapidly until they caught up to the correct time. At any rate, that was the story I heard. Now that I think about it, they could have just stopped the clocks at 6PM and then resumed at 6AM and it would have accomplished the same thing.
It seems like an awfully involved system for keeping the clocks running on time. I suppose the one advantage it has is that if there is a power failure, you only have to update the time on the master clock. You don't have to go around to all the classrooms and set the time on each clock individually. It might have been an IBM system. It sounds like something they would do.
Monday, January 21, 2019
Sunday, January 20, 2019
Ocean's 8
OCEAN'S 8 - Official Main Trailer
Pretty girls (well, they're all younger than I am) playing at being master criminals. Entertaining.
The Maharajah of Nawanagar wearing the necklace by Cartier-London in the drawing at right that inspired the necklace in ‘Ocean’s 8’. Photo Cartier Archives London © Cartier |
Jewels are very nice and all, but they aren't particularly useful. Oh, you can use them to cut glass, but a simple carbide point can do that. They occasionally show up in movies at the focus of an evil mastermind's laser weapon, but a professor in Washington wanted some big diamonds so he made his own. They have no real, practical value.
I guess it's kind of like art and fancy cars. When you have more money than you know what do with, you go looking for things you can buy, things you couldn't buy when you were a poor schmuck like the rest of us. It's the magpie gene, we like shiny things.
On HBO
Brunch
La Neta dining room |
Downtown Portland is a compromise location, about equally distant for both of us. It saves driving the winding roads over the hills, but I really don't like downtown. There are two reasons for this. One, driving in downtown is like driving in a parking lot. You can't go more than about 10 MPH and the streets are cluttered with pedestrians and cyclists. The other is the large number of bums you see everywhere. Most of them behave themselves, but there is always one who is making a scene, hollering or accosting people. Even the well behaved ones are a little scary. You just have to put on a brave face and have faith in the law of averages that says that scary looking guy isn't a psychopathic killer. And I'm not going to even mention the $10 it costs me for parking every time I go there.
The Hoxton Hotel some months ago |
Nothing to see here |
Dick Cepek Mud Terrain Tires |
Penzeys Spices |
Saturday, January 19, 2019
The Wall
Hadrian's Wall |
President Trump wants to build a wall along the US border with Mexico. Other people have built walls with varying degrees of success. The Great Wall of China, Hadrian's Wall (above), and the Berlin Wall all spring to mind. I have been meaning to say something about this and today Windypundit puts up a post and that pushes me off the dime. I start with a comment on that post:
Are we going to let the government decide who can cross the border and who can't? I'm pretty sure that has been one of the functions of government since the beginning of governments.I've said it before (I'm sure), but I'll say it again. If Mexico wasn't such a mess, we wouldn't have so many people desperate to leave their home and travel north to that alien land of the gringo. Of course, it's not just Mexico that's a mess, pretty much all of Latin America, from the Rio Grande River to the tip of Tierra del Fuego is a rotten, stinking mess. Some of it is our fault, things like the War On Drugs and our incessant meddling in the governments and our ruthless commercial exploitation of anything we could find to exploit haven't helped matters.
Building the wall is a bad idea. It would only work if you had an army of people to patrol it, and that would end up costing many times more than the wall would cost in the first place. Eventually, funding for that army would fade away and the wall would become just another barrier to be crossed, like a river, mountain or desert.
But a bigger problem, one that goes back to the colonial era, is the system of property rights, or the lack of such a system. Near as I can tell, all property belongs to the head honcho, who is backed by the Catholic Church. Everybody is dependent on the governor granting them some property.
Previous related posts.
Friday, January 18, 2019
Hamilton Pool
Hamilton Pool |
Made in China
Man welding steel in Chinese Factory |
Recently I've come across a couple of stories about getting stuff made in China, both are about getting things made out of steel rather than electronic widgets. They make some interesting reading.
The first is Lessons Learned From 7 Years of China Factory Visits by Dan Andrews.
Chinese Crankshafts by William.
Via Michigan Mike.
Pic of the Day
Spillway gates for the Akkat power station dam in Sweden |
When I first saw this I thought it might have been native American Indians from the Northwest USA, then I thought maybe from the Southwest, but these paintings look like they were deliberately crudely painted, something you don't see in any public display of American Indian art.
I don't quite understand this tendency towards ugly. I ran into some exceptionally ugly paintings in a brew pub in downtown Portland last week. If that is the best you can do, well, okay, I guess, but why would anyone put it on public display? I suspect limousine Bolsheviks, people who are well ensconced by a thick wad of money, but have no appreciation for any real beauty or talent. It reminds me of Inland Empire, a horrible, pointless idiotic film by David Lynch. I've seen several other of his films and I thought they were pretty great.
Maybe this is the low end of class warfare. Some people are exceptionally talented, and they are celebrated and praised. Then we have our average folks who go about their jobs, raise their families and drink their beer. Then we have people who got short changed in the valuable skill department, but are still doing their bit without much in the way of recognition, so they do things like this.
Thursday, January 17, 2019
Cold War Gadget of the Day
HP 5061A Cesium Beam atomic clock |
The Univesity of Queensland has a good summary of this device.
Via Posthip Scott.
DEADWIND
DEADWIND Trailer
Not a great murder mystery, but not bad either. We finished the last episode this evening. It's got all your standard European cop show elements, I don't know exactly what they are, but when I watch one it's kind of comforting the way all the standard elements behave as expected. I get irate when someone does something they aren't supposed to. That didn't happen too often, so it's better than average. This show was exceptional in the number of red herrings, and how far off the track they drug us.
Tuesday, January 15, 2019
Pic of the Day
SOFIA soars over the snow-covered Sierra Nevada mountains with its telescope door open during a test flight. Image: NASA/Jim Ross |
Monday, January 14, 2019
Star Trek R Us
Language Translation Device
This ad popped up on YouTube and I my mind instantly drug up the universal translator from Star Trek. This isn't quite that advanced, I mean we don't have any aliens from other planets we can try it out on, but it apparently works with several human languages.
Sunday, January 13, 2019
Far Side of the Moon
Chang'e 4 Lunar Landing In Detail
Mr. Manley does a good job here. But how is it that we know any of this at all? When we sent Apollo spacecraft to the moon 50 years ago, they were cutoff from communication when they went behind the moon. So how are we getting these pictures? We have sent probes around the moon and they have taken pictures, but they had to come back into view before they could transmit their images. This Chinese probe is on the moon, it isn't coming back into view, ever. Have the Chinese invented a new kind of super-quantum-licious communications technique that allows them to transmit through a thousand miles of rock? No, they sent another satellite, a communications relay, out to Lagrange point 2 which is out beyond the moon.
Queqiao relay satellite enters L2 orbit
Notice that this satellite doesn't just sit at the 'point', the 'point', after all, is unstable. Any slight disturbance from this location will cause the satellite to fall away from the 'point', never to return. Also sitting at the 'point' wouldn't do us any good, as the 'point' is directly opposite the Earth and so is blocked from radio communications by the moon. Instead the satellite goes into a halo orbit where it never actually crosses the point, instead it orbits the 'point'. The James Webb Space Telescope will be using a halo orbit when it eventually gets launched, which is expected in a couple of years.
Friday, January 11, 2019
Pic of the Day
Great White Fleet anchored off Coronado, April 1908. Couldn't manoeuvre in San Diego Harbor. |
Thursday, January 10, 2019
Ethereum
One year Ethereum price history |
Wednesday, January 9, 2019
Pic of the Day
930M Caterpiller Small Wheel Loader at the scene of the crime |
Tuesday, January 8, 2019
Something is Rotten in Downtown
Hooverville under the Ross Island Bridge - July, 1936 Arthur Rothstein |
Then there are a large number of vacant ground floor storefronts. Given how difficult it is to get into downtown in a car, and the large number of vagrants wandering around, I am not surprised retail operations are staying away.
Lastly, there are a large number of food trucks downtown. There is at least one entire city block given over to them. When I was working construction umpteen years ago, food trucks (aka roach coaches) would swing by once or twice a day to dispense soft drinks and candy bars. Now we have them permanently parked on what has to be some of the most expensive real estate in the city.
Hooverville NYC Central Park 1932 |
I suppose it could be that if all the upper floors are rented then they are taking in enough money and they don't need any income from the ground floor. But that doesn't make sense. They are businessmen. The reason you build or own a commercial building is to make money. Nobody does it out of the goodness of their heart. Okay, there might be the occasional odd-ball here and there, but I don't think they figure into the problem under discussion. The purpose of the building is to make money, so you make as much as possible by insuring that all of the space is rented out and generating income. But not all the space is occupied, so it;s not generating income, so something is wrong.
I've read some stories that suggest that cost to finish these ground floor spaces and then the hassle of maintaining them are too high, but that doesn't make a lot of sense to me, unless,
- everything has to be super fancy / science fictiony, which means very expensive build out costs,
- they expect a rowdy clientelle busting up the place every night,
- the government and the unions are imposing onerous costs, or
- they feel that only the right kind of store would suit the image they want to project, and such an image is vital to their campaign to make their building the most expensive place to rent and therefor the most profitable.
I am kind of partial to the last one, but with so many empty store fronts, certainly someone would cave and go for real cash money now instead of waiting for imaginary cash winnings in the future.
Hooverville NYC Central Park 1932 |
Now that I've thought about this a bit, I am beginning to think that this is a manifestation of a political battle being fought between the big landowners and some politicians. The homeless people and the 'quality of life' downtown are just pawns in this contest. The problem is that no one really knows what to do about the homeless. I am pretty sure that most of the homeless are not living in tents out of choice. Oh sure, there are a few, who actually like their vagrant lifestyle, and there are problem a few crazy people, though some recent experiences make me think that there is a similar percentage of crazies living in houses.
You know, if we can't give them houses, you'd think we could at least turn a field into a campground. And what brings them to downtown anyway? Are they working? I mean if you can find a place to shower once in while, there's no reason you couldn't hold down a job while living in a tent. I mean it would be a colossal pain, but look at all the money you would save on rent.
They might be panhandling, but not that many, not compared to the number of tents I see. There are some soup kitchens, The prospect of a free meal could keep them hanging around, especially if they don't have anywhere else to go.
Many small towns in Oregon were devastated by the collapse of the timber industry. (It did collapse, didn't it? Something about the spotted owl comes to mind.) Maybe we should set up some soup kitchens in one of these small towns? Put the homeless in the empty houses. I can why it hasn't been done. Everyone would object. It would put paid to the political battle that is going on.
Top photo via Posthip Scott
Monday, January 7, 2019
Golden Apples
How Does Apple Make so Much Money?
I sort of knew most of what's in here, but some of the numbers were very surprising. I am now carrying a cell phone with me. I've had it for a year or two, but recently my life has gotten a little more complicated, so having it with me helps. It's just a flip phone from Tracphone with a miserable camera, but the cost is negligible.
I guess the biggest surprise is the business about "easy to use". I don't think Apple products are easy to use. Seems to me like they make you take a zillion steps to do the simplest things. I think people like them because the endless maze of menus gives them something to play with. "If you just do this, and this and this and this and this and then this other thing you can send a smiley face to your BFF." Wonderbar. Not. But since Apple is making money and I'm not, I must be wrong. I still think their products are overpriced crap.
Ural Motorcycle with sidecar |
Map of the Day
Lower 48 Elevation by Scott Reinhard |
Via Detroit Steve
Sunday, January 6, 2019
Dogs of Berlin
DOGS OF BERLIN Trailer (2018) Netflix Series
This isn't the best show in the world, but it's got something, "je ne sais quoi". It's a cop show, in Berlin, with a whole cast of unsavory characters: Neo-Nazis, Turkish gangsters, German gangsters, officious busybodies and run-of-the-mill scumbags. Every one of them has some kind of major personality defect, but they manage to get through the day, somehow.
Watching this show, and from some comments I have heard from people recently, I am beginning to understand that much of the crazy shit people do is because it makes them feel alive, something your everyday, humdrum life doesn't. Much of modern life is designed to make life easy, safe and comfortable, but christ-on-a-crutch, it can also make you feel like you are being smothered. There is a fine line between feeling safe and secure and feeling like your life is killing you.
Update March 2020 replaced missing video.
Teleword
Wonderword Puzzle |
Teleword is a word search puzzle that appears in The Sunday Oregonian. The daily paper carries Wonderword, an identical puzzle. Both are produced by the same guy: David Q. Oullet, who makes these puzzles by hand.
The aren't particularly difficult, all you have to do is locate the words from the list in the grid. It takes a little time and seems to go slower as you locate more words. It can be downright tedious when you are down to two or three short words and the entire grid seems to have been marked off. It's not my favorite puzzle, but if I am not ready to start my day, it's a good way to procrastinate.
Anyway, I got to wondering how hard it would be to generate such a puzzle, so I put my programmers cap on and set to. It didn't take long before I had solution. Well, I had a program. Let's run it and see if it can generate a square from the list of words in Sunday's puzzle. I let it run overnight. It was still running the next morning and still hadn't found a solution. Hmm, maybe this problem is tougher than I thought.
Let's do a little analysis. The square is 15 letters across and 15 rows tall. There are 38 words with an average length of, let's say, 7. So any one word, on average, can fall roughly 500 different places
( 8 starting rows
times 8 starting column
times 8 directions).
means each word has 500 possible positions, so we have 38 (words) to the 500th power possible combinations, which is like a number with a thousand zeros which may as well be infinity. There isn't enough CPU power on the planet to try that many combinations. But maybe the problem isn't that tough and we'll get an answer in a some kind of reasonable time frame, like overnight.
When it didn't find an answer, I went back and revisited the code. I made some minor changes which I didn't think should effect it, but evidently it did because it returned a solution in about an hour. A solution, not THE solution. The puzzle I used as a model has ten extra letters, which would be spaces in my solution, and my program's solution only had three. Well, if we can generate one solution in an hour, maybe if we run it for a day it will find more solutions, and maybe one of those will have the required ten spaces. So some more minor changes to the code and I fired it up again.
Here's what it has so far (it shows its current state every one million attempted word placements):
R H S M T S Y D O N O V A N G
O O U P O H E A R C L A R K E
C N L L R O E A R E R O
K E H L L I D A R D A H C A R
A Y E E I A N Y N C B M M G
N C R H R N B G B I H I E E I
D O M S O M G A F L M E R R E
R M I Z P L A S L I U A R D S
O B T F O E L N T L E E L S S
L S S H R M N I S O O L S S J
L E E B C E B N O D S E
B I L L Y W D I E S L E S K R
A L L I C H D E R A S N E
P E T U L A O I S C I M
Y T S U D S G G O R T K Y
dimensionof(words): 38 wordcount: 8
placed: 30 counter: 164000000
This program is CPU intensive, which means everything else gets slow. I was thinking it would be handy to have another computer to run this program so I could go web surfing without having to drag this CPU hog around with me everywhere I went, and then I remembered that there are sites out there on the web that will let you write, compile and run programs on their servers, free. Well, shiver me timbers, let's try that. So I pulled up a few, loaded my program (copy & paste, it's only a couple of hundred lines long) and pressed the GO button. Here's the ones I tried.
I'm still dinking with the program. I will post it on github if I am ever satisfied with it.
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