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00:24Tracking stations have made positive I.D.
00:27MISP-1 is returning to Earth's atmosphere.
00:30Distance 90,000 miles, closing fast.
00:33Impact point estimated 3.00 north, 2.4 west.
00:39Z-view, proceed immediately to make recovery.
00:43Thank you, HQ Probe. Will do.
00:52Chip, set course 104. Proceed at plank speed.
00:55All right.
01:07This report just came in from HQ Probe, Admiral.
01:10MISP-1's been spotted. It's re-entering the Earth's atmosphere.
01:13Where's the point of contact?
01:16Right here.
01:19Brand, do you realize how far off that is in the original estimate?
01:22What difference does that make?
01:24Man in space, Probe 1 is coming back to Earth.
01:28We can reach the point of impact in time, Captain.
01:31We're racing toward it now, Dr. Brand. We'll get there.
01:35The first round-trip probe into deep space, and it's coming back.
01:41Gentlemen, this project has worked beyond my wildest hopes.
01:44What about all those weeks of silence when we lost them, when we were cut off from all communication?
01:50Cosmic rays, solar flares, who knows?
01:52We'll get all our information now when we get our astronaut aboard.
02:09Capsule altitude 40 miles. Impact point bearing 005 relative. Range 50 00 yards.
02:18One degree right rudder. Slow to one-third.
02:21Any minute now. We should pick it up one point off the port bow.
02:56Bring us alongside the splash point, Lee, and crack the cargo hatch.
02:59We'll load the capsule right into the missile room before we open it.
03:02Aye, sir.
03:04Maneuvering. Stand two.
03:14All secure, sir.
03:17It's your baby, Doctor. You blow the hatch.
03:23Thank you, Admiral.
03:26Gentlemen, this is a moment for history.
03:29The first Voyager to return from deep space.
03:33Let's welcome him.
03:57It's not a man, it's a robot.
04:04Voyage to the bottom of the sea.
04:07Voyage to the bottom of the sea.
04:12Starring Richard Basehart.
04:18David Hedison.
04:28Voyage to the bottom of the sea.
04:58Townsville.
05:02We're at 9.0 feet with a good trim, Skipper.
05:04Very well.
05:05See the course for Santa Barbara.
05:06Come to course 010.
05:08All ahead full.
05:09All ahead full.
05:11Keep it this way until we get home, Chip.
05:12Aye, aye, sir.
05:16Off the record, Lee.
05:18What's the big rush?
05:20We'll all feel better when we dock at the Institute.
05:22Because of that thing we picked up?
05:25That thing, Chip, might very well be the most important cargo we've ever hauled.
05:31Here we are.
05:37We're losing precious time.
05:41How much longer would you guess, Admiral?
05:44Well, let's find out.
05:46Laboratory, this is Nelson, report.
05:48Laboratory, Admiral.
05:50Radiation count is dropping at a faster rate all the time.
05:53Four points in the last ten minutes.
05:57All right, keep us advised.
05:59Four points, what is it now?
06:01Let's see.
06:03It should be down to safety limits within 15 minutes.
06:10A quarter of an hour.
06:14And we can't move.
06:17You're like an expectant father.
06:20I know.
06:21I know, but this project is so important.
06:24Think of it, Admiral.
06:25A robot with an almost human sensory system that's gone into deep space.
06:30And now it's come back just crammed full of vital information.
06:34It won't stay hot much longer.
06:37Then we'll get at the debriefing.
06:38Meanwhile, there's nothing to do but wait.
06:40I know.
06:44Admiral, the information stored in that electronic brain
06:49can open up the pathway for man to the whole galaxy.
07:13There's nothing to do but wait.
07:22Count's dropping.
07:23It's well below safe levels now.
07:26Good.
07:26How soon can we start debriefing?
07:28Any time now.
07:31I can't wait to get at the information stored in those memory cells.
07:35Neither can I.
07:43How much can it tell us?
07:45As much as we could learn by going there ourselves.
07:47And more.
07:48Sensations of sight, sound, touch.
07:53All locked up in memory cells.
07:56An indestructible package of priceless information.
08:01Whenever you're ready, Doctor.
08:04Oh, yes, yes, yes, switch on.
08:23All right to come in?
08:24Yes, of course.
08:34We're just in time to see something real or remarkable.
08:49They're getting feedbacks from somewhere.
08:55That's probably other instruments on the sub.
08:59Captain, is it possible to shut off all electronic power on this boat?
09:03How long?
09:06Well, at least until we get a preliminary reading.
09:09Ten, twenty minutes.
09:10It depends upon our trim.
09:12I'll see how long we can hold it.
09:14Mr. Morton.
09:16Morton, Captain.
09:17Stop all engines.
09:19Cut all main power banks.
09:20Hold this trim as long as possible.
09:22Aye, sir.
09:23We'll do the best we can.
09:24Thanks, Captain.
09:30These instruments seem to be all wrong.
09:37I can't make contact.
09:38It's not responding.
09:42Doesn't make any sense at all.
10:04Anything?
10:08Only gibberish.
10:10Now, this thing were human.
10:12I'd say it was in a state of shock.
10:15It's all in there.
10:17All that information, I can't get to it.
10:20Captain, we're losing trim.
10:21We've got to resume power in the boat.
10:23No.
10:25We've got to blow ballast.
10:26We're losing trim.
10:27Give me just ten more minutes.
10:28I can't risk ten minutes.
10:31Give another two minutes, Lee.
10:32Just one more try.
10:37We've dropped to 150.
10:39Rate of descent is increasing.
10:42All right, Mr. Morton.
10:43Stand fast.
10:44I'll let you know when.
10:45Aye, sir.
10:51Aye, aye, sir.
10:51Ah, it's no go.
10:52It's still as fuzzy as ever.
10:54Why?
10:55I put that brain in there.
10:56I programmed it.
11:01Admiral, we can't wait any longer.
11:03Rightly.
11:06Mr. Morton, restore all power.
11:08Bring her up to 90 feet
11:10and resume course and speed.
11:13Aye, aye, sir.
11:14I'll join you in the control room right away.
11:18Excuse me, gentlemen.
11:25Now, don't blame yourself, Doctor.
11:26Any one of a hundred things could have affected it.
11:29But I planned for all that.
11:31The Van Allen belt, cosmic rays, solar storms.
11:34It was supposed to be immune.
11:36Look at it.
11:36It's worthless.
11:38The information is still there.
11:39It has to be.
11:40We'll find a way to get it out.
11:42But we'll have to wait till we get back to the Institute.
11:44We don't have adequate facilities here.
11:46I can't just sit and wait.
11:48Can't we call the Institute?
11:49We'll have them run some of this gibberish
11:51through the giant computer.
11:53Right now, we seem to be in need
11:55of one or two giant answers.
11:57Thank you, sir.
12:40Hey, what's going on, Chief?
12:43Search me.
12:45You ought to see the way they treat that thing.
12:47I wouldn't be surprised if they sent it to Sig Bay.
12:50Yeah.
12:51You know, I nearly fell over
12:52and they blew the hatch
12:52and there was a robot.
12:54I thought we were picking up a man.
12:56Me too.
12:57Do you think it's safe?
12:59Safe?
13:00Haven't it aboard, I mean.
13:02Just another hunk of machinery.
13:04Sure, I know.
13:05Only I didn't like the look of its eyes.
13:08What's the matter, Curly?
13:09You afraid of robots?
13:11Oh, you think they might take over your job?
13:14Oh, you think they might take over your job?
13:15Nah, they ain't got the intelligence.
13:21Yes.
13:22Yes, that's right.
13:25No, we're not ready to release anything to the press just yet.
13:27I'll let you know.
13:28Now, Dr. Brand is ready with his instructions.
13:30Go ahead, Dr.
13:31Brand here.
13:33Look, I want a complete original run-through.
13:35That's right.
13:36Feed every scrap of data we started this project with
13:39into calculating organs, mark and memory organs,
13:41and all programming organs.
13:43Right.
13:44I want a rundown on every corrective measure
13:46taken for a stray course.
13:48I want a file and cross-file.
13:51That's right.
13:51A file and cross-file on all circuitry systems.
13:54Breakdown of communications.
13:56Right.
13:57Right, right, right.
14:26Breakdown of communications.
14:29Breakdown of communications.
14:29Yeah.
14:46Breakdown of communications.
14:46Okay.
14:46I don't know.
15:42Yes?
15:47Yes, we have all the readings straight now.
15:51Admiral?
15:53Not one deviation.
15:55Calculation, memory, programming, all positive.
15:58That's not possible.
15:59It doesn't make sense.
16:01Check solars, magnetics, cosmics.
16:04Brand again.
16:05Now do this.
16:07Complete computation on magnetic analyzer.
16:12Hello?
16:13Hello, can you hear me?
16:16What's wrong, Sparks?
16:17I don't know, Admiral.
16:18The signal cut off.
16:20Admiral?
16:21Can you come to the control room?
16:23Right away.
16:37I never heard anything like it, Skipper.
16:39It's coming from inside the ship, not out.
16:41What is it, Lee?
16:41Our instrumentation's going wild.
16:43Nothing's working properly.
16:46Could your robot be doing something to affect our equipment?
16:48No, I don't see how.
16:50There's nothing in its circuitry to affect your instruments.
16:53You know, if anything, this could explain the trouble we've been having down the lab.
16:56I don't follow you, Doctor.
16:58Well, don't you see if there's a malfunctioning transmitter on board?
17:01Could affect not only your instruments, but scramble the robot's sensors.
17:04I doubt that very much, Doctor.
17:06We don't have any equipment aboard that could do anything like that.
17:08Well, not necessarily, Lee.
17:10It must be that.
17:10What else could it be?
17:11There's one way to make sure.
17:14Do the electrician lay down to the master switchboard on the double.
17:17There's a failure in our telemetry.
17:19It'll show up there.
17:20And if it doesn't...
17:21Reactor room to Captain.
17:23The atomic pile shut down.
17:24No reason.
17:25Can't seem to find the trouble.
17:26We'll switch to auxiliary and surface.
17:28Try to trace down the trouble.
17:30Aye, aye, sir.
17:31All those systems couldn't have failed at the same time.
17:36Engineering, this is the Captain.
17:37Send repair teams to check the ship from stem to stern.
17:40All cabling, all wiring systems, everything.
17:43Aye, aye, sir.
17:44Mr. Morton, surface the boat.
17:46Aye, aye, sir.
17:47Ten degree up bubble.
17:48Stand by to surface.
17:59Coat maker.
18:10Who can laughocy all the things you're pulling with no strings on the sidewalk?
18:12Yes, sir.
18:13We can do, too.
18:14How do you eat people?
18:19This is easy.
18:20It's a Choice Member.
18:20For later, if you don't, miss.
18:20It will ever.
18:21And or both the other humanity.
18:25You should stop actively completion.
18:25Because of purpose,
18:29THE END
18:58THE END
19:25The gyro's out. Chip, take over.
19:45Chief, stabilize the gyro fast.
20:01Chief, take over.
20:01That hatch must have sprung loose on the first list.
20:04You caught him head-on.
20:06Take him to sickbay.
20:07Tell Doc we'll want an autopsy.
20:09There'll be an inquiry.
20:09I see. Come on, Colonel.
20:11Admiral! The robot's gone.
20:15I went down to the laboratory to check him out again.
20:17There's no sign of him. He's gone.
20:21Of course, we should have known when everything started malfunctioning.
20:29All right, men. Give me your attention.
20:33Now, you'll work in groups of two.
20:35You'll search the ship, compartment by compartment.
20:39Admiral?
20:40You're all armed. Use your weapons if you have to.
20:46To tell you the truth, I don't know what effect it'll have.
20:49Just be alert and report regularly.
20:53Okay, that's it.
20:55I'm a double, men.
21:02Why are those men armed, Captain?
21:05For protection, Doctor.
21:06They were ordered to use their weapons.
21:08To shoot the robot. Why?
21:10The brand I want the information in your robot sensors every bit as much as you do.
21:14But what good is the information going to do us if it sinks the ship with all hands?
21:18Oh, come now, Admiral. It couldn't possibly do that.
21:20It wouldn't even make the attempt.
21:22I hope you're right.
21:23Skipper.
21:26Yes, Chip.
21:27We got up to 85 feet, but our controls have jammed and we've got negative buoyancy.
21:31Unless we can free them, we're going down again.
21:33Stay with it. I'll be right there.
21:36Doctor.
22:01It's receiving you, isn't it, Brian?
22:03Yes, it's receiving me all right, but...
22:05Yes, it's receiving me all right, but...
22:07Can you get a fix of it? Locate it.
22:10Something seems to be scrambling our signal.
22:14Maybe it's scrambling our signal.
22:19That's impossible.
22:21I'll try again.
22:25Are you all right? Are you hurt?
22:27No.
22:28Look at that.
22:31It's rolling.
22:36Looks like it's up to the men.
22:52Now watch it, Curly.
22:54He could be anywhere.
22:55I told you I didn't like the look in his eyes.
23:05Vincent.
23:22He's been hit by his own bullet.
23:29Get him out of here and I'll copy it.
23:33You report.
23:34I'll take care of him.
23:41Captain Crane.
23:43Captain.
23:46This is Crane, report.
23:48Kowalski.
23:48I'm at frame 84.
23:50We ran into it.
23:51Benson fired at point-blank range.
23:53Bullet bounced off it.
23:54Came back to hit him.
23:57Seal off the corridor and get out of there.
23:58And get Benson to sick bay.
24:00Aye, aye, sir.
24:20It's no use.
24:21It's beyond repair.
24:23I have to rig something.
24:25Captain, we're losing pressure.
24:27Captain Reading to drop it all over the ship.
24:32It's ice cold.
24:35You go ahead, Admiral.
24:37I'll stay here as long as I can.
24:42It's as though the air conditioning's gone mad.
24:45We're down to 30 degrees throughout the boat.
24:47It keeps on dropping.
24:50Missile room.
24:52What's your temperature reading there?
24:5423 degrees.
24:55We're freezing, Skipper.
24:56Chip, break out cold weather gear for the whole crew.
24:58Nice.
24:59Engineering.
25:00Get a repair party to the air revitalizing room on the double.
25:03Get that central air conditioning system under control.
25:06Just check our depth.
25:07We're 250 feet and dropping fast.
25:10Unless we find a way to blow ballast,
25:11we're going to be on the bottom in a matter of minutes.
25:13Chip, how's engineering doing with the air hand pump?
25:15They're still working on it.
25:16Last report was the forward tanks are cleared.
25:18Once we clear the main tanks, we'll have positive buoyancy.
25:20We'll keep on it.
25:24Call with the gear, sir.
25:26Thanks, Gurley.
25:27Give me one for Dr. Brown.
25:28Yes, sir.
25:29Come along.
25:30I'm going up to the lab to see Brown.
25:32Maybe between the three of us,
25:34we can find some way to outthink this machine.
25:56Since it won't respond to commands, I've been concentrating on pure detection.
26:01But every time I start to get a fix on it,
26:03it does something else to throw me off.
26:05You talk as if it were doing it deliberately.
26:08That's nonsense.
26:09I know what that machine can do.
26:10I know what it can't do.
26:11I've built it.
26:12I've programmed it.
26:13Exactly.
26:14That's why I think it's been reprogrammed.
26:17How could it have been?
26:18But you said you lost all control when it passed through the Van Allen belts.
26:23Radiation may have affected its central control system.
26:25Not with its sensors completely insulated against maximum plus radiation.
26:30But something's affected it.
26:32Your robots lost all capacity to respond.
26:35It's like having a maniac loose on the ship.
26:38That's worse than ugly.
26:40It's a maniac that's been built to be indestructible.
27:07There's our trouble, all right.
27:09Listen to that air conditioner.
27:29As you were, man.
27:35Come on, let's get out of here.
27:42The air is vitalizing chamber.
27:44Of course.
27:46Sir, I'll tell you.
27:47No farther away from me than you are now.
27:49Here's our chance.
27:51Control room, this is the captain.
27:52Get all search parties to lay down the D corridor on the double.
27:55We've got the robot trapped in air revitalizing.
28:08Curly.
28:09The minute I untogged the hatch, now you hit it with everything you've got.
28:12Captain, if there's any chance of taking it without destroying it.
28:16There isn't. Go ahead, Lee.
28:25This may do it.
28:26I've managed to concoct a rather crude electronic ear that can pinpoint its exact location even behind a bulkhead.
28:35All right, Doctor.
28:36I'll assign a couple of men to tour the ship with you.
28:39Check every bulkhead until you find it.
28:40See to it, will you, ship?
28:41Yes, sir. This way, Doctor.
28:55Temperature's down another ten degrees.
28:57What's our depth?
28:59We're holding our own.
29:00Engineering must be making some progress with the ballast tanks.
29:02Good.
29:04We'll find our way to the surface, Chef.
29:10Captain, this is Patterson.
29:14Go ahead, Patterson.
29:15We're having trouble with the main ballast tank vents.
29:18They're jammed.
29:18We can't hand pump any more water out.
29:24We still need more buoyancy.
29:28What could be jamming those vents?
29:30Admiral?
29:31This is Brand. Can you hear me?
29:35Yes, Doctor. What is it?
29:37I've got it pinpointed between the inner and outer hulls at...
29:41Where are we?
29:41Frame 60.
29:43At frame 60.
29:44All right, Doctor. Stay there.
29:46Keep a fix on it.
29:47The main ballast tanks.
29:49Could it have worked itself in there?
29:51Must have.
29:53Patterson, can we still flood the main ballast tanks?
29:56Yes, sir. We just can't blow them.
29:59We've been working like dogs to clear those tanks.
30:01If we flood them again, we'll go down.
30:05How much bottom address?
30:06At least 6,000 feet. Beyond crush depth.
30:10If we flood the main ballast tanks, the water might short-circuit it.
30:14Make it helpless.
30:17I say try it.
30:19Well, I hope you're right.
30:21Patterson.
30:22Flood main ballast tanks.
30:24Yes, sir.
30:36Where is 500 feet?
30:41530.
30:45530.
30:49560.
30:51565 and holding.
30:54Strange.
30:58We're still holding at 565.
31:00We've got full tanks and negative buoyancy.
31:03Why aren't we dropping?
31:05Skipper, this is Kowalski.
31:08What is Kowalski?
31:09I'm in the corridor just before the missile room.
31:11Smoke's pouring from the air vents.
31:15All right, Kowalski. We'll sound the fire alarm.
31:18Get a detail app.
31:19That's not smoke, it's steam.
31:22Of course.
31:23That explains our buoyancy.
31:25Water in the ballast tanks is being vaporized.
31:31Coverage is rising in the boat.
31:33Above normal already.
31:34First it freezes us, now it's roasting us to death.
31:42Generator room.
31:43What happened to your auxiliary?
31:46Hello, generator room.
31:48Sparks.
31:49What's wrong with the line?
31:52What's wrong with communications?
31:55Dead.
31:57Let's get out.
32:11Captain Crane.
32:12Captain Crane.
32:13Doctor Grant, are you all right?
32:15Yes, I couldn't find my way.
32:16What happened to the lights?
32:18We're trying to find out.
32:19You lost contact with the signal again?
32:21Completely. The frequency changed.
32:23The signal faded almost like a loss of power.
32:25I couldn't reestablish contact.
32:27Let's get forward if the observation knows.
32:29There'll be less steam there.
32:30You go on ahead, I'll check the rest of the boat.
32:31I'll join you later.
32:32All right, go on.
32:38All right.
32:52What's the appraisal leave?
32:54Complete blackout.
32:55Our nuclear pile is quick cold and all communications are gone.
33:00We're dead in the water.
33:01How can this happen?
33:03There was nothing in its mechanism to produce these effects.
33:07Is it possible for a machine, if it's sufficiently sophisticated, to go berserk?
33:13To become paranoid, the same as a man can?
33:16Absolutely correct, but not my machine.
33:19I built in too many controls, too many checks.
33:22And my explanation is the only solution.
33:24That the Van Allen belt shorted all its controls, I can't buy that.
33:27I can't buy that either, but it's happening.
33:30That's not my fault.
33:31I didn't lose contact until the blackout came.
33:34Just a minute, Doctor.
33:36You began to lose contact just at the moment of the blackout.
33:41Yes, or a moment or two after.
33:42Perhaps why?
33:43That's what we've been looking for.
33:44It was right in front of us and we didn't recognize it.
33:47What?
33:48It's power source, light.
33:51Everything that moves, man, animal, machine, needs fuel.
33:56Your robot feeds on light, doesn't it?
33:58That's true.
33:59It gets all its energy from photo cells.
34:02Without light, it can't function.
34:04We can trap it now.
34:06We have the bait.
34:07What?
34:14Our man will kiss.
37:29Destroy that machine.
37:30You destroy everything we've worked for.
37:31Everything.
37:32Look, don't you realize it could still kill all of us.
37:35What happens to your information then?
37:37Look, I know I can get it under control.
37:40I know I can.
37:40All I need is more time.
37:41No, no, no, I'm sorry, Doctor.
37:43Do you listen to me?
37:44Right now, your robot is immobilized.
37:46But it could reactivate at any time.
37:48Now, we can't throw away the chance to make sure it doesn't break loose again.
37:53I can't take part in anything like that.
37:56All right, then I'll send an engineering detail in there to hack at the pieces and have it blown out
37:59the torpedo tubes.
38:00Now, wait a minute.
38:06All right, let me dismantle it.
38:11At least I can salvage part of it.
38:41All right, let me know.
38:42All right, let me know.
39:41All right, let me know.
39:54that's it
39:56you're going to be all right
39:59you get your strength back now
40:01your memory banks will transmit
40:04you'll give me all your secrets
40:06the way you've been programmed to do
40:19transmit you can understand my commands
40:22obey them transmit transmit
40:37no baby
40:40get back
40:46get back
41:03you're going to be all right
41:20he meant to kill me easy don't try to talk
41:31it's moving away
41:35government get dr browner the observation
41:4440 minutes to an hour to surface
41:48I hope we make it
42:17how deep now 465 our rate of a cent is still the same
42:21what I'd give the bro to the surface right now
42:24carry on
42:24and
43:12Feeling better?
43:14Yes, thanks.
43:17You were lucky.
43:19A mindless machine to do all that.
43:23Ed Mullet has a brilliant mind.
43:25An electronic brain dedicated to killing all of us.
43:29It's a strange statement coming from you.
43:32No, listen carefully.
43:36I had to program it with emotional reactions closely duplicating a man's behavior.
43:43But something happened out there in space.
43:45Something went wrong.
43:47Now its whole intelligence is dedicated to just one thing.
43:51Our destruction.
43:53Admiral.
43:57Yes.
43:58I'm in the crew's mess.
44:00Three of the men.
44:02It was like before, only worse.
44:04How much worse?
44:06Take my word, not pretty.
44:23Hear that?
44:25Yeah.
44:30It's coming this way.
44:36Come on, let's get after.
44:38Now, wait a minute.
44:39You go after.
44:41I want to see.
44:43Now, if it passes me, I'll get back in the port of the skipper.
44:47Okay.
44:48Good luck.
44:49Oh, thanks.
45:30Have they dogged down all hatches between it and the missile room?
45:34Yes, sir.
45:35That won't help.
45:36That thing goes through steel hatches like they were cardboard.
45:40The missile room.
45:42There's nothing we can do now.
45:44It's getting stronger every minute.
45:45Once it gets to the missile room, there's no telling what damage it'll do.
45:48Wait a minute, wait.
45:48This may be the best break we've ever had.
45:52I'm going there to meet us.
45:53Admiral, stay away from it.
45:55You saw what it did to your men.
45:57Yes.
45:58Yes, I did.
46:29It's coming in here.
46:32We're trapped.
46:33Nothing can stop it.
47:02He's looking at the magnetic mines.
47:05What if he breaks one of those loose?
47:25He's activated it.
47:27In 60 seconds, the whole ship blows up.
47:4550 seconds.
47:49Douse those lights.
47:50I'll try to lead him into the escape chain.
48:0640 seconds.
48:1630 seconds.
48:1730 seconds.
48:1930 seconds.
48:37Twenty seconds.
48:39Ten seconds.
49:00Five, four, three, two.
49:06Five, four, three, two.
49:20Five, four, three, two.
49:24Five, four, three, two.
49:34Captain, we've got full power back all over the ship.
49:38Take us to the surface, Chip.
49:40We're heading home.
49:49Well, it's gone now.
49:52All its information with it.
49:54What are you going to do now, Doctor?
49:57Do?
50:00Create another one, Admiral.
50:02Send it up there.
50:04Only this time I'll insulate it against any possible interference with its...
50:09Personality.
50:11Maybe with a prayer next time.
50:15For the robot captain or for us.
50:18Maybe for both, Doctor.
50:21Maybe for both.
50:26The End
50:27The End
50:30THE END
51:02THE END
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