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Old 04-23-2009, 12:30 PM   #1
slarkin1701 slarkin1701 is offline
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Default Are PS3's multi regional?

Is the playstation 3 multi regional ? i bought mine in ireland (region 2) all my HD DVD's are multi regional - why is bluray not?

Will my playstation play US blurays? i can play any HD DVD's
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Old 04-23-2009, 12:51 PM   #2
Moefiz Moefiz is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by slarkin1701 View Post
Is the playstation 3 multi regional ? i bought mine in ireland (region 2) all my HD DVD's are multi regional - why is bluray not?

Will my playstation play US blurays? i can play any HD DVD's
Where to start ...where to start...

HD-DVD's can NOT be played on ANY PS3...

Welcome to forum...
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Old 04-23-2009, 12:55 PM   #3
MOONPHASE MOONPHASE is offline
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All Warner Blu-ray movies are Region-Free(but most other U.S. releases are region-locked and some are not).
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Old 04-23-2009, 12:58 PM   #4
garlad garlad is offline
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Welcome slarkin! You live in ireland too?

The guys pretty much summed up your question.. PS3 games are region free I believe!
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Old 04-23-2009, 01:33 PM   #5
LifeOfAPirate13 LifeOfAPirate13 is offline
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Welcome to the forum! As you have probably already have noticed HD-DVD's will not play on your PS3. PS3 games are region free, but blu-rays are generally region locked minus some companies as stated that are region free as well. It would be nice if everything were region free but it doesn't quite work that way these days.
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Old 04-23-2009, 02:58 PM   #6
Scorxpion Scorxpion is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MOONPHASE View Post
All Warner Blu-ray movies are Region-Free(but most other U.S. releases are region-locked and some are not).
Including Paramount ,Dreamworks,Universal Studio.

to check for the latest region code free titles,this link can help you a lot.

http://bluray.liesinc.net/

Last edited by Scorxpion; 04-23-2009 at 03:07 PM.
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Old 04-23-2009, 04:30 PM   #7
slarkin1701 slarkin1701 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Moefiz View Post
Where to start ...where to start...

HD-DVD's can NOT be played on ANY PS3...

Welcome to forum...
What?

i was asking about Bluray being multi regional

i only brought up HD DVD because its better than bluray - Its multi regional - also i claim the bluray camp lied in the format war over disc size (firefly was my first bluray purchase and for some reason there where allot of discs (not 50GB discs....))

I just didnt want to say all that in my orginal post because its a bluray forum and i dont want to start a flame war but my questions stands

I understand that Bluray disc players are set to regions and some studios have region restructions while others do not. My questions is will a US, EU or Asian PS3 all play the same discs or did sony do stuff to them during the manufacturing process to limit what they can play?

sorry for the confusion of my orginal post (i was in a rush to go to the jacks)
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Old 04-23-2009, 04:59 PM   #8
WriteSimply WriteSimply is offline
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Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by slarkin1701 View Post
What?

i was asking about Bluray being multi regional

i only brought up HD DVD because its better than bluray - Its multi regional - also i claim the bluray camp lied in the format war over disc size (firefly was my first bluray purchase and for some reason there where allot of discs (not 50GB discs....))

I just didnt want to say all that in my orginal post because its a bluray forum and i dont want to start a flame war but my questions stands

I understand that Bluray disc players are set to regions and some studios have region restructions while others do not. My questions is will a US, EU or Asian PS3 all play the same discs or did sony do stuff to them during the manufacturing process to limit what they can play?

sorry for the confusion of my orginal post (i was in a rush to go to the jacks)
Troll.


fuad
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Old 04-23-2009, 06:34 PM   #9
quirkmanly quirkmanly is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by slarkin1701 View Post
i only brought up HD DVD because its better than bluray
Why are you talking about HD-DVD in the present tense?

Quote:
Originally Posted by slarkin1701 View Post
firefly was my first bluray purchase and for some reason there where allot of discs (not 50GB discs....)
Firefly was released on three 50GB discs. Did you expect 10 hours of content on a single disc?

Quote:
Originally Posted by slarkin1701 View Post
My questions is will a US, EU or Asian PS3 all play the same discs or did sony do stuff to them during the manufacturing process to limit what they can play?
PS3s do not play all discs. They will play discs of the same region of origin as the system, or discs that have no region lock applied.
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Old 04-23-2009, 06:46 PM   #10
gekke henkie gekke henkie is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by slarkin1701 View Post
My questions is will a US, EU or Asian PS3 all play the same discs or did sony do stuff to them during the manufacturing process to limit what they can play?
No, regarding Blu-ray discs, unfortunately:
- The Americas (N+S) + S.E.Asian PS3's will ONLY play zone-A Blu-ray discs and region-free discs,
- EMEA (EU/Middle East/African) + Australian PS3's will ONLY play zone-B Blu-ray discs and region-free discs,
- Asian PS3's will ONLY play zone-C Blu-ray discs and region-free discs.

Ps. I agree with you that I liked 'the other format' being zone-free, but let's not start that 'discussion' here, okay?
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Old 04-23-2009, 07:01 PM   #11
LifeOfAPirate13 LifeOfAPirate13 is offline
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LOL @ HD DVD is better than BLU. I almost fell off my chair at work bahahahahaah. HD DVD what is that? Isnt that that one technology that...ummm...HD DVD?....nope doesn't ring a bell.
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Old 04-23-2009, 07:23 PM   #12
4K2K 4K2K is offline
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A US PS3 won't play 50hz Blu-ray titles, no matter what their region code is set to.
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Old 04-24-2009, 03:26 AM   #13
mlim77 mlim77 is offline
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If anyone is looking for a muti region blu ray player, there is a new model of Kogan Blu Ray Disc Player similar to this coming into the Australian market soon...30th June, 2009

http://www.kogan.com.au/shop/kogan-b...full-hd-1080p/
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Old 04-24-2009, 04:35 AM   #14
gekke henkie gekke henkie is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 4K2K View Post
A US PS3 won't play 50hz Blu-ray titles, no matter what their region code is set to.
Blu-ray titles are usually 1080/24p around the world. The main movie is in HD format, and not in PAL-50Hz or NTSC-60Hz SD formats (like DVD). As far as the extras go, yes, some are in 480i/50 or 480i/60 and you would not be able to view these anyway. Then again, PS3's aren't region- or zone-free yet, so nothing to bother at the moment.

As for the mentioned Kogan (or one of the many other region/zone-free stand alone BD-players out there), they don't play games; I think that is what the TS (Topic Starter) is looking for.
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Old 04-24-2009, 06:32 AM   #15
4K2K 4K2K is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gekke henkie View Post
Blu-ray titles are usually 1080/24p around the world. The main movie is in HD format, and not in PAL-50Hz or NTSC-60Hz SD formats (like DVD). As far as the extras go, yes, some are in 480i/50 or 480i/60 and you would not be able to view these anyway. Then again, PS3's aren't region- or zone-free yet, so nothing to bother at the moment.

As for the mentioned Kogan (or one of the many other region/zone-free stand alone BD-players out there), they don't play games; I think that is what the TS (Topic Starter) is looking for.
It doesn't matter that Blu-ray titles are usually encoded at 1080/24p - at least for the main feature. The fact remains that:-
1) There are 50hz Blu-ray titles (1080/50i, 576/50i). Titles that have either some or all content in these formats (there's no 480/50i content - it's 576/50i)
2) 1080/50i and 576/50i (as well as 1280x720@50p) are part of the Blu-ray specifications
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blu-ray_Disc
http://www.blu-raydisc.com/Assets/Do...2955-15269.pdf
3) US PS3s are not supporting what is in the Blu-ray specifications.
4) This is a problem for both consumers and the studios.
5) 50hz or 25p is the native recording format for many productions. Not supporting it also means format conversions and lower quality video & audio encodes (like Blu-ray encodes slowed down by 4.096% or things shot at 50i which get converted to 60i), as well as increased costs for the studios.

Quote:
As far as the extras go, yes, some are in 480i/50 or 480i/60 and you would not be able to view these anyway
If a consumer owns a display that doesn't accept 50hz content (the format used in broadcasting to most of the world's population) - because the manufacturer has disabled it, other US players - those that actually support what is part of the Blu-ray specifications - allow it to be converted by the player into something the display does support.

And why would someone not be able to view 480/60i content? Are you saying there are PS3s that don't support that too?

Last edited by 4K2K; 04-24-2009 at 08:12 AM.
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Old 04-24-2009, 12:16 PM   #16
slarkin1701 slarkin1701 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by WriteSimply View Post
Troll.


fuad

I know what troll means but whats fuad?

urbandictonry

lol how does fuad stand for that?

Quote:
Originally Posted by quirkmanly View Post
Firefly was released on three 50GB discs. Did you expect 10 hours of content on a single disc?
interesting The EU one was on 4 discs - i assume 200GB worth of data - the increase in file sizes will hopefully lead to an increase in DVD sales - i was saying on another forum that with the BSG complete box set being 250 dollers is € 190ish - but 20 50GB discs? thats 1000GB for the BSG box set. Thats a 1TB file for the downloaders. So basically you can buy the box set for € 190 or you can buy a new 1TB hard drive for € 70 - ex vat - and then spend hours downloading 1TB worth of files.

Your better off buying the box set because one you work in costs of the hard drive to store it on and the time to download 1TB your better off buying the box set.

Still it will be interesting to see when they get leaked if firefly will be 200GB and if BSG will be 1TB - i doubt it because i assume it costs more money to make a 50GB bluray disc than it costs to make say a 35GB disc. i dont think each firefly disc contained 50GB and im wondering if it will be the same with BSG.

Anyway the more content and extra features they cram onto the bluray discs the more likely someone will buy the product instead of going though the effort of downloading.

Anway to get back on topic i think bluray saying 50GB discs was a bit of a con considering the amount of movies released on 2 disc blurays instead of 1 single 50GB disc full because its cheaper to make to make smaller discs meaning larger proffit margin when it goes to retail.

Quote:
Originally Posted by 4K2K View Post
It doesn't matter that Blu-ray titles are usually encoded at 1080/24p - at least for the main feature. The fact remains that:-
1) There are 50hz Blu-ray titles (1080/50i, 576/50i). Titles that have either some or all content in these formats (there's no 480/50i content - it's 576/50i)
2) 1080/50i and 576/50i (as well as 1280x720@50p) are part of the Blu-ray specifications
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blu-ray_Disc
http://www.blu-raydisc.com/Assets/Do...2955-15269.pdf
3) US PS3s are not supporting what is in the Blu-ray specifications.
4) This is a problem for both consumers and the studios.
5) 50hz or 25p is the native recording format for many productions. Not supporting it also means format conversions and lower quality video & audio encodes (like Blu-ray encodes slowed down by 4.096% or things shot at 50i which get converted to 60i), as well as increased costs for the studios.


If a consumer owns a display that doesn't accept 50hz content (the format used in broadcasting to most of the world's population) - because the manufacturer has disabled it, other US players - those that actually support what is part of the Blu-ray specifications - allow it to be converted by the player into something the display does support.

And why would someone not be able to view 480/60i content? Are you saying there are PS3s that don't support that too?
Thanks
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Old 04-24-2009, 12:35 PM   #17
RiseDarthVader RiseDarthVader is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by slarkin1701 View Post
i doubt it because i assume it costs more money to make a 50GB bluray disc than it costs to make say a 35GB disc

Anway to get back on topic i think bluray saying 50GB discs was a bit of a con considering the amount of movies released on 2 disc blurays instead of 1 single 50GB disc full because its cheaper to make to make smaller discs meaning larger proffit margin when it goes to retail.
Okay first of all the 1 layer BDs are 25GB not 35GB. And second most of the new releases depending on the studio is actually on a 50GB BD. I dont get where you are getting this conspiracy theory from of the releases just because they are 2 Disc means they are a BD25. The reason they still have 2 Discs is because you want to use up as much space as you can on the BD50 for the movie. And then just chuck all the extras on a BD25. Also check your punctuation and spelling. You sound like a teenagers that just got Blu-rays and has a crazy conspiracy theory about studios conning the consumers when you can see if it is a BD25 or BD50 on the back of the case.
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Old 04-24-2009, 04:12 PM   #18
gekke henkie gekke henkie is offline
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Quotes:
It doesn't matter that Blu-ray titles are usually encoded at 1080/24p - at least for the main feature.

It doesn't? When >95% of the discs are encoded in HD, why wouldn't that matter? If the PS3 would be multiregional, then the TS would be able to play all these movies. So, yes, it matters most in this discussion, IMHO.

The fact remains that:
1) There are 50hz Blu-ray titles (1080/50i, 576/50i). Titles that have either some or all content in these formats (there's no 480/50i content - it's 576/50i)

Irrelevant fact; <5% of the discs have their main feature in these formats. (You are right about that 576/50i, my mistake)

2) 1080/50i and 576/50i (as well as 1280x720@50p) are part of the Blu-ray specifications

Irrelevant again. Yes, it's in the spec for possible implementations, but since almost nobody has a use for it, why spend money and make the players even more expensive?

3) US PS3s are not supporting what is in the Blu-ray specifications.

Yes, they do support everything that is obligatory. Not all possibilities are, luckily, that would make all players almost identical and too expensive.

4) This is a problem for both consumers and the studios.

You are the 1st one I have heard about making SD content on BD discs into a problem. Inconvenient (concerning the extra's) yes, but a problem? No.

5) 50hz or 25p is the native recording format for many productions. Not supporting it also means format conversions and lower quality video & audio encodes (like Blu-ray encodes slowed down by 4.096% or things shot at 50i which get converted to 60i), as well as increased costs for the studios.

No, almost every movie is shot in 24 frames, not in 25p (let alone in 50i). This only relates to some productions only meant for TV/video (like soaps, etc), but most discs are movies and they (I dare to say about >90%) are shot in 24p.

If a consumer owns a display that doesn't accept 50hz content (the format used in broadcasting to most of the world's population) - because the manufacturer has disabled it, other US players - those that actually support what is part of the Blu-ray specifications - allow it to be converted by the player into something the display does support.

It is not because manufacturers disabled it, it is because implementing 2 standards (especially a 50i standard in a 110V/60Hz power environment) costs money, and because almost nobody in the US cares about this anyway, manufacturers don't have to charge more for their TV's (and would make competition harder for them). By the way, although most of the world is on 50Hz, most TV-series come from the US and are in a 60Hz setting AFAIK.

And why would someone not be able to view 480/60i content? Are you saying there are PS3s that don't support that too?[/QUOTE]

Yes, like US-PS3's will not play 50Hz, I think the EU-PS3 of the Topic Starter will not play 60Hz, but I'm not sure, since many European players support both formats (although most US players support the NTSC format only)
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Old 04-24-2009, 04:17 PM   #19
slarkin1701 slarkin1701 is offline
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Originally Posted by RiseDarthVader View Post
Okay first of all the 1 layer BDs are 25GB not 35GB. And second most of the new releases depending on the studio is actually on a 50GB BD. I dont get where you are getting this conspiracy theory from of the releases just because they are 2 Disc means they are a BD25. The reason they still have 2 Discs is because you want to use up as much space as you can on the BD50 for the movie. And then just chuck all the extras on a BD25. Also check your punctuation and spelling. You sound like a teenagers that just got Blu-rays and has a crazy conspiracy theory about studios conning the consumers when you can see if it is a BD25 or BD50 on the back of the case.
We are a MS house in work and want to keep MS products so im on IE 8 and not firefox so no spell check also i tend to be a rush during the day.

35GB was a random number i pulled out - basically im complaining about having two discs because a 3 hour movie in 1080p is not 50GB worth of data. so i dont see how or why movies that are an hour and a 1/2 - 2 hours long require 2 discs. - thats just a complaint i have about bluray - thats not why i came here which was to find out if i have to buy a us bluray player to watch a tv show i like
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Old 04-24-2009, 06:10 PM   #20
4K2K 4K2K is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gekke henkie View Post
Quotes:
It doesn't matter that Blu-ray titles are usually encoded at 1080/24p - at least for the main feature.

It doesn't? When >95% of the discs are encoded in HD, why wouldn't that matter? If the PS3 would be multiregional, then the TS would be able to play all these movies. So, yes, it matters most in this discussion, IMHO.
What I meant was, it shouldn't matter what the percentage of titles are one frame rate and what are another frame rate, when both are part of the Blu-ray specifications. Both have a significant amount of content that has been produced at those frame rates/resolutions. So both should be supported by all players.

Quote:
The fact remains that:
1) There are 50hz Blu-ray titles (1080/50i, 576/50i). Titles that have either some or all content in these formats (there's no 480/50i content - it's 576/50i)

Irrelevant fact; <5% of the discs have their main feature in these formats. (You are right about that 576/50i, my mistake)
Again it doesn't matter what the percentage is when there is content there that should be supported. What percentage of titles are Batman movies? 0.01%? Would it be okay then if no Batman movie was playable on Blu-ray? There aren't a high percentage of titles encoded at 50hz simply because players like the US PS3 aren't bothering to support it, so they convert it to something the US PS3 does support.
Quote:
2) 1080/50i and 576/50i (as well as 1280x720@50p) are part of the Blu-ray specifications

Irrelevant again. Yes, it's in the spec for possible implementations, but since almost nobody has a use for it, why spend money and make the players even more expensive?
Where does it say, in the specifications, that they are 'possible' implementations? On the Blu-ray site it says "The video formats shown in Figure 3-3 can be used for BD-ROM video streams.". I don't see where it says "don't bother supporting the ones you don't feel like supporting". I mean they're listing resolutions and frame rates that they will allow studios to use for valid BD-ROM streams, at the native resolution and frame rate of the original content, but you're saying it's fine for player manufactures to not bother allowing consumers to play it back, by not bothering to support playback?

Quote:
3) US PS3s are not supporting what is in the Blu-ray specifications.

Yes, they do support everything that is obligatory. Not all possibilities are, luckily, that would make all players almost identical and too expensive.
Where does it say which frame rates or resolutions are obligatory and which they only have to play back if they can be bothered?

Quote:
4) This is a problem for both consumers and the studios.

You are the 1st one I have heard about making SD content on BD discs into a problem. Inconvenient (concerning the extra's) yes, but a problem? No.
Not just SD content. High Definition content. Practically every European TV production ever recorded.

Quote:
5) 50hz or 25p is the native recording format for many productions. Not supporting it also means format conversions and lower quality video & audio encodes (like Blu-ray encodes slowed down by 4.096% or things shot at 50i which get converted to 60i), as well as increased costs for the studios.

No, almost every movie is shot in 24 frames, not in 25p (let alone in 50i). This only relates to some productions only meant for TV/video (like soaps, etc), but most discs are movies and they (I dare to say about >90%) are shot in 24p.
Where did I say 'movie'. I said it was the native recording format of many productions - ie. most European TV productions. But I've read that there are some European films shot at 25fps too to make it easier to broadcast, etc.

Quote:
If a consumer owns a display that doesn't accept 50hz content (the format used in broadcasting to most of the world's population) - because the manufacturer has disabled it, other US players - those that actually support what is part of the Blu-ray specifications - allow it to be converted by the player into something the display does support.

It is not because manufacturers disabled it, it is because implementing 2 standards (especially a 50i standard in a 110V/60Hz power environment) costs money, and because almost nobody in the US cares about this anyway, manufacturers don't have to charge more for their TV's (and would make competition harder for them). By the way, although most of the world is on 50Hz, most TV-series come from the US and are in a 60Hz setting AFAIK.
Yes it is because the US TV sellers disable it. The same manufacturers who make the US models also make the European models. The European models all work at both 50hz and 60hz. Here's a question and answer to Insider Kjack:
Quote:
Q: Do the Sigma chips sold in the US work with both 60hz and 50hz?
Kjack: Our firmware supports both since it is shipped world-wide. However, a TV manufacturer may limit its capabilities through their middleware or modifying our firmware.
Here's another post by Insider Kjack (of Sigma Designs - who make the chips that are in US & European HDTVs):-
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kjack
AKAIK, most new 100Hz TVs can also do 120Hz. If not, then it is purposely limited in firmware as the same panels and electronics are used these days.
Quote:
And why would someone not be able to view 480/60i content? Are you saying there are PS3s that don't support that too?

Yes, like US-PS3's will not play 50Hz, I think the EU-PS3 of the Topic Starter will not play 60Hz, but I'm not sure, since many European players support both formats (although most US players support the NTSC format only)
I find that unlikely since a lot of extras on European Blu-ray discs (eg. behind the scenes documentaries), as well as the main feature on some European Blu-ray titles are at 60hz (eg. concerts) and I've never read anything about any European player (including the European PS3) not being able to play them.

Last edited by 4K2K; 04-24-2009 at 07:09 PM.
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