971 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Power"

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After searching the vastness of the interweb for some 6 inch zilbel samples with no luck, i finally decided to record my own bell. Theres 3 versions of 4 single samples each, 4 chokes, 4 medium and 4 hard hits. I know a lot of you out there have been searching for some samples of one of these bells for a long time so here ya go guys, totally free, full to use for whatever you want, no credit needed to be given to me. These sound amazing in a mix and really add a lot of life to your drum tracks, they dont sound over compressed (theyre dry recordings) and they dont over power everything else, nice crisp and clear. Ding away my friends!.
Author: Iowaspacewizard
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07:21
It's me jamming a bit using my epiphone's explorer (tuned to drop-d). Recorded with a zoom h2 via mic-in and a jack cable. Unprocessed an undedited recording. I tried out some licks and chords. I'm not a good guitarist. Nevetheless, this might be a nice recording if you're making an animation about learning musician, or a game with a band member rehearsing alone in a room, or if you want to just chill to my little jam session. This should be mono, but i calculated the difference between left and right channel and it is not zero. So i uploaded it as a stereo file. Could use some denoising. There is some silence at the beginning so you can do that if you need.
Author: Unfa
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00:16
A playful male grrrrrowl, a bit cheesy in an austin powers kinda way.
Author: Notarobot
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00:27
This was recorded by holding a small pcm recorder (zoom h1n) very close to an ipod 4th generation. The ipod was turned on and its hard drive tried to start up. You can hear the spin up of the motor and the hard drive head clicking back and forth. The hard drive fails to power up completely and eventually shuts down again. A 350 hz high pass filter was applied, in addition to audacity noise reduction, to get this clean motor noise from the original recording. The stereo file was then mixed to mono because the mic was slightly off center from the ipod, and the stereo provides no benefit. The hard drive in this ipod is a 1. 8" 40 gb toshiba hard drive, the ipod model is a1059. The microphone was held just 3 cm (1. 2 in) from the ipod. Recording settings were stereo 44. 1 khz at 16 bit (wav format). The file is the same except it's mono.
Author: Conath
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The "annoying" speed chime, turned world famous drift hero by initial d; as it was intended to be heard by the toyota motor corporation. A common issue with these chimes is that the second impact is muted by the impact rod, this was mitigated in this file by holding the chime with a specific side up. This is marked by the second bell properly ringing out after the second impact. This rendition is a pre-timed, loopable, clean version of the chime, recorded from a real imported 86640-12070 "king kong" (kin-kon) chime. Sound created by attaching a power supply set to 12v ~0. 35a in an amateur studio. Like many of my files, these are completely free to use without even giving credit! :) my only request is you tell me where you use them!. These are also called 「速度警告チャイム」(sokudokeikoku chaimu) meaning "speed warning chime" and colloquially 「キンコンチャイム」 (kinkon chaimu) literally derived from the "kin-kon" sound it makes. Dream on‼.
Author: Drooler
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It's a fictional replyment for the song 'scarborough fair', it describes a girl has many special power for the man she loves( for the task he gave), but the price( cost) is lose the ability to have children. . . So, she can does everything, but can't be pregnant. The lyric is an example( because my english is poor, so you can change it become better):. She can makes a seamless shirt. She makes it without needle,but she can’t does even simple women make a baby as any mother have done. She can washes in dry well. That’s no water and there’s no rain. But she can’t does even simple women make a baby as any mother have done. She can plows a land with horn. That’s between sea and coastal. But she can’t does even simple women make a baby as any mother have done. The software be used is 'finale 2002', and use 'formatfactory' to change. Mid to. Wav, then use 'audacity' to edit the. Wav file.
Author: Shuinvy
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I was super inspired to post here again after an insane coincidence happened!. I was in an online class (thanks, covid) where we were supposed to redo all the sounds and music for an animation we chose. We were encouraged to use sound libraries and freesound. Org. In one classmate's animation, a sound he used seemed very familiar, and then it hit me. . It's my sound! from this site! the crazy part is he has my same first name. But anyway, thank you for taking a look and listen to this sound which is about 2 years old now, heh. I went to this exhibit about electronic and/or audio stuff. In the show they were doing on stage, they brought various tesla coils and things i forgot the name of. I decided to take a video. Within that video, is this sound! feel free to use this sound wherever, however, whenever you want. I ain't uploading on freesound for nothin'. ;d. The only processing i did was cutting out any talking during the raw recording.
Author: Resaural
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02:23
The title is pretty self explanatory. There's a little bit of wind noise. ---two primo em172 mic capsules > zoom h1. I made this recording with my newly acquired $10 primo em172 omni mic capsules, which i soldered to a cable diy loosely based on this tutorial:http://www. Wildmountainechoes. Com/equipment/diy-stereo-electret-mics-primo-em-172-capsules/this is a good example of what the capsules sound like when plugged directly into an inexpensive zoom h1 audio recorder. So far i've been pretty stunned by the performance of these capsules, which are significantly more sensitive than the built in microphones on the h1, and to my ears sound much less muddy. I'm particularly impressed by this because the capsules are running on the 2. 5v of plug-in power that the h1 delivers, which is below the minimum specs of the capsules. Even so there is remarkably little noise. I can only imagine how they would sound with a battery pack to deliver a full 5 volts!.
Author: Hargissssound
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04:08
Sheridan Square performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 7 from Air Power! (2019). Recorded at Bias Studios, September 30 – October 4, 2019. Credits: Alto Saxophone, Flute – Technical Sgt. Kristian Baarsvik*, Technical Sgt. Mike Cemprola* Baritone Saxophone, Bass Clarinet – Master Sgt. Doug Morgan* Bass – Technical Sgt. Cameron Kayne*, Chief Master Sgt. (Ret.) Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – Master Sgt. Benjamin Polk* Drums, Timbales, Percussion – Master Sgt. David McDonald* Edited By, Post Production – Master Sgt. (Ret.) Rich Sigler* Engineer [Mastering] – Mike Monseur Engineer [Recording, Mixing] – Bob Dawson Executive-Producer – Colonel Don Schofield* Guitar – Master Sgt. Geoff Reecer* Music Director – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson* Piano – Technical Sgt. Chris Ziemba* Producer – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson*, Senior Master Sgt. Brian MacDonald*, Master Sgt. (Ret.) Rich Sigler* Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet – Master Sgt. Grant Langford*, Master Sgt. Tedd Baker* Trombone – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson*, Master Sgt. Jeff Martin*, Master Sgt. Kevin Cerovich* Trumpet – Senior Master Sgt. Brian MacDonald*, Chief Master Sgt. Kevin Burns*, Technical Sgt. Logan Keese*, Master Sgt. Luke Brandon* Vocals – Technical Sgt. Paige Wroble*
Author: Composition: Master Sgt. Kevin Cerovich; Arrangement: Master Sgt. Kevin Cerovich; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
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Small Note Boogaloo performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 6 from Air Power! (2019). Recorded at Bias Studios, September 30 – October 4, 2019. Credits: Alto Saxophone, Flute – Technical Sgt. Kristian Baarsvik*, Technical Sgt. Mike Cemprola* Baritone Saxophone, Bass Clarinet – Master Sgt. Doug Morgan* Bass – Technical Sgt. Cameron Kayne*, Chief Master Sgt. (Ret.) Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – Master Sgt. Benjamin Polk* Drums, Timbales, Percussion – Master Sgt. David McDonald* Edited By, Post Production – Master Sgt. (Ret.) Rich Sigler* Engineer [Mastering] – Mike Monseur Engineer [Recording, Mixing] – Bob Dawson Executive-Producer – Colonel Don Schofield* Guitar – Master Sgt. Geoff Reecer* Music Director – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson* Piano – Technical Sgt. Chris Ziemba* Producer – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson*, Senior Master Sgt. Brian MacDonald*, Master Sgt. (Ret.) Rich Sigler* Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet – Master Sgt. Grant Langford*, Master Sgt. Tedd Baker* Trombone – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson*, Master Sgt. Jeff Martin*, Master Sgt. Kevin Cerovich* Trumpet – Senior Master Sgt. Brian MacDonald*, Chief Master Sgt. Kevin Burns*, Technical Sgt. Logan Keese*, Master Sgt. Luke Brandon* Vocals – Technical Sgt. Paige Wroble*
Author: Composition: Master Sgt. Ben Patterson; Arrangement: Master Sgt. Ben Patterson; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
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Eagle Eyes performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 8 from Air Power! (2019). Recorded at Bias Studios, September 30 – October 4, 2019. Credits: Alto Saxophone, Flute – Technical Sgt. Kristian Baarsvik*, Technical Sgt. Mike Cemprola* Baritone Saxophone, Bass Clarinet – Master Sgt. Doug Morgan* Bass – Technical Sgt. Cameron Kayne*, Chief Master Sgt. (Ret.) Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – Master Sgt. Benjamin Polk* Drums, Timbales, Percussion – Master Sgt. David McDonald* Edited By, Post Production – Master Sgt. (Ret.) Rich Sigler* Engineer [Mastering] – Mike Monseur Engineer [Recording, Mixing] – Bob Dawson Executive-Producer – Colonel Don Schofield* Guitar – Master Sgt. Geoff Reecer* Music Director – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson* Piano – Technical Sgt. Chris Ziemba* Producer – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson*, Senior Master Sgt. Brian MacDonald*, Master Sgt. (Ret.) Rich Sigler* Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet – Master Sgt. Grant Langford*, Master Sgt. Tedd Baker* Trombone – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson*, Master Sgt. Jeff Martin*, Master Sgt. Kevin Cerovich* Trumpet – Senior Master Sgt. Brian MacDonald*, Chief Master Sgt. Kevin Burns*, Technical Sgt. Logan Keese*, Master Sgt. Luke Brandon* Vocals – Technical Sgt. Paige Wroble*
Author: Composition: Master Sgt. Jeff Martin; Arrangement: Master Sgt. Jeff Martin; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
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This sound is a 1-sample long impulse at 48 khz. It covers the whole frequency range with equal power. This is a perfect sample for exciting your guitar amp or reverb unit to capture it's impulse response (ir). You can also play it through a speaker in a reverbant room to capture it's reverb characteristics. Remember that the ir sample will be no flatter than your speaker's performance multiplied by your microphone's performance (frequency response characteristics). The sample has exaclty 1 second of silence, then the impulse, then another second of silence to ensure the impulse will be played clean and untruncated on any sound system or device. My test with ir lv2 convolution plugin have proven, that this sample has absolutely flat frequency response - convolved signal was identical to the source signal. After normalization and sample-alignment of the sound clips i have inverted the polarisatin of one of them and summed them - result was absolute silence, even no hiss was present as a result. This shows the accuracy of the convolution process and proves this sound to be perfect for sampling ir. The impusle was generated with c* dirac ladspa plugin. Created using audacity.
Author: Unfa
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07:58
Skyscrapers performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 5 from Air Power! (2019). Recorded at Bias Studios, September 30 – October 4, 2019. Credits: Alto Saxophone, Flute – Technical Sgt. Kristian Baarsvik*, Technical Sgt. Mike Cemprola* Baritone Saxophone, Bass Clarinet – Master Sgt. Doug Morgan* Bass – Technical Sgt. Cameron Kayne*, Chief Master Sgt. (Ret.) Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – Master Sgt. Benjamin Polk* Drums, Timbales, Percussion – Master Sgt. David McDonald* Edited By, Post Production – Master Sgt. (Ret.) Rich Sigler* Engineer [Mastering] – Mike Monseur Engineer [Recording, Mixing] – Bob Dawson Executive-Producer – Colonel Don Schofield* Guitar – Master Sgt. Geoff Reecer* Music Director – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson* Piano – Technical Sgt. Chris Ziemba* Producer – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson*, Senior Master Sgt. Brian MacDonald*, Master Sgt. (Ret.) Rich Sigler* Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet – Master Sgt. Grant Langford*, Master Sgt. Tedd Baker* Trombone – Master Sgt. Ben Patterson*, Master Sgt. Jeff Martin*, Master Sgt. Kevin Cerovich* Trumpet – Senior Master Sgt. Brian MacDonald*, Chief Master Sgt. Kevin Burns*, Technical Sgt. Logan Keese*, Master Sgt. Luke Brandon* Vocals – Technical Sgt. Paige Wroble*
Author: Composition: Master Sgt. (Ret.) Alan Baylock; Arrangement: Master Sgt. (Ret.) Alan Baylock; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
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One friday night, me and my partner were eating dinner, and we both heard a click. She perks up, "what was that?" and i said "the dryer is running, probably something in it" and she goes "no it was inside" (our dryer is like a back door outside porch kinda deal). I noticed it came from inside as well, in the kitchen, but mentally shrugged it off because lasagna. But now i know she heard it inside too, so i walk in the kitchen where the sound came from and don't see anything moving or on. I took note of where my cats were in case anything was being chewed on: one in bed, one on the couch, they aren't chewing on anything or are even near the clicking sound, so back to dinner. About 45 minutes later, dinner is wrapped up, my partner is asleep and i start turning off all the lights. When i turn the kitchen lights off, there is a light that stays on in the corner. I have a car battery recharger there: it has usb ports in case ya lose power, charger cables, and a flashlight attached on the side. . . . Which is on. I turn it off: exact same click that i heard earlier. Do i have a ghost?.
Author: Sweet Niche
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00:29
This is a recording of my broken hard drive when i turn it on. It sounds like it attempts to read the data but then it fails and powers down.
Author: Wheatleynzl
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04:19
I tried out some new gear and methods! more mountainside rain! a complete storm from beginning to end with swelling and then waning rainfall, occasional thunder. Ms stereo bar on mic stand projected through open second-floor window, just under the roof eaves. Recorded july 20th during one of the mid-afternoon brief intense storms we can seem to get frequently in the rocky mountain foothills beginning around june. If you were listening and wondering, the direct sound of the thunder is somewhat occluded as i believe the storm was behind the overhanging roof and house from the perspective of the microphone array. The mountainous terrain and other objects in the field reflected some of that thunderclap, as well as the exterior wall of the home, and so this is all a little bit funky. Mid-side stereo recording:large diaphragm condensers mounted on octavia stereo mic mounting bar:akg perception 220 mid (cardiod) (on top, upside-down)akg perception 400 side (in bidirectional mode) (on bottom, facing left)sound devices mixpre-6 preamp+mixer+recorder (ch1+2 paired to ms stereo, gain @ +21db, fader @ unity, balance at mid/side center) w/48vdc phantom power applied, on-board mid-side encoding and monitoring in l+r, 24/96khz stereo recording. Postprocessing:cooledit 2000: edited to excerpt from longer recording. Normalized recording to 0db. Downsampled to 16bit 48khz. Flac: encoded.
Author: Chromakei
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So you liked surprising her. Here's what it feels like, dude bahahaalso, what it sounds like. A first foray into educational response, the subject slowly awakened in handcuffs, barely aware he was rapidly losing his shorts. Totally unsympathetic cohorts then lashed ankles quickly to both ends of a broomstick. Free to do as they please, unplanned things can happen, and did. Oh, dear. 😯 well he was completely vulnerable. You mean. . . Yeah. They did. 😼 at that point i think he was awake. His victim had selected the broadest and longest, high-output motorized appliance to be found, complete with bulging veins. . . Eventually, at her hands and from her “deep” feminine resolve and with considerable force, the nautilus made port. Ta-daa!! lubricant sure wasn’t needed anymore but had spent the night in the fridge. So she used it😬 end published audio, but not the still-expanding asshole, um, event. Take-away: if you cannot be respectful, at least be careful where you sleep. In fact just a bit later, the enhanced vibrators and integral power-stroking were switched on. Gracious. He didn’t know it had an “on” 🙀 and just about went wild. A lovely, cohort-induced stiffy relaxed and then, any semblance of bladder control did too - oh, oh my 😸 😹then we left.
Author: Napro
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25:10
This replica of my tinnitus was created using the free program called audacity. Http://audacityteam. Org/i had to generate 3 different 'tones' and combine them before i felt the high-ish noise was close to what i hear. I then had to search freesound for something that i only hear beneath the high pitch noise when my house is very quiet, which is something like the sound of strong wind outside a closed window or a power station a mile away. It took me a few hours, and even then i had to manipulate the sound considerably. Thanks to felix. Blume forhttp://freesound. Org/people/felix. Blume/sounds/167684/#commentsthis natural wind sound file was equalized and leveled several times, then the sound level was reduced to blend with the high pitch. But it still wasn't right. So, not being an expert with audacity, i just went down the list of 'effects', trying each one, until i found "paulstretch", which somehow increases the time length of your sound file, without stretching as in 'elastic', which would deepen the existing tones, and apparently, without copying and pasting. The sound does change somewhat, becoming just slightly ragged, but it's a very interesting effect for this application and actually got used on both elements to produce the final sound. . I hope no one enjoys this sound and can't imagine that anyone will. It makes me feel slightly sick. . Info edited 28 oct 2021: with my tinnitus at it's current level, i will never, now, be able to reproduce it again, primarily because i can't hear any sounds i create in a detailed way. And secondly, because hearing this version of the sound these days is just too uncomfortable. 🥲.
Author: Hear No Elvis
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03:16
Recording of a stone mill wheel grinding dry corn for flour. It's in a little stone outhouse, a generator outside powers a belt driven stone wheel. The recording changes in perspective and cycles from the lower part (a wooden crate to receive the milled flour) to the upper element (a large plastic funnel in which the dried corn grains are tipped) and then back down again. 48k/16 bitrecorded in 2010.
Author: Plukx
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00:08
A timbre (rendered with something akin paul naşca’s padsynth algorithm) which has partials of form m + n φ where φ is the golden ratio, and m, n are integers. Though not all the partials, just such a set that this all resembles a usual harmonic timbre. This sequence starts. 1. 000001. 618032. 618033. 618034. 236075. 236075. 854106. 854107. 854108. 47214. This sequence is of several powers of φ up and down from 440 hz (φ⁻² to φ⁵). Look at the spectra for a full dose of xen.
Author: Arseniiv
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07:20
Recorded in my dad's bedroom with lifecam hd3000 webcam. This is a much better recording than my previous oxygen concentrator file, as i hauled my desktop into the bedroom at the other end of the apartment where the machine now is, when i was home alone. The webcam is on the bed about 3 or 4 feet from the machineat the beginning of the file you hear me flip the big switch and the machine comes on with a long on beep and thumps. I edited it to start then. At 00:1. 8 what i suspect is the water pump comes on, though i may be wrong. That's when the gurgling starts though. The machine has a small reservoir for distilled water to moisten the airflow. A cup or two lasts several daysyou'll hear various hisses and thumps in a 15. 6 second cycle as it runs. At 03:03 i flip the big switch to shut the machine off, and it bubbles and gurgles away for the rest of the file, as water i assume slowly perculates back into the reservoir, the bubbling getting quieter and quieter until it doesn't even sound like bubbling anymore, until it finally ticks to a stop. At 03:16 you hear me step as i get my foot loose from the mic cord lol. At 04:13 the furnace shuts down as a car finishes going by outside in the bass register, faint traffic noises and the furnace being the only background noises you'll hear aside from my moving around a couple times, and a faint bluejay at the end. At about 07:00 you can barely hear the machine anymore, but i could hear a faint ticking with my own ears. At 07:04 the furnace comes back on. At 07:08 you'll hear a bluejay faintly calling outside and a car going by outside after, which finishes the file at 07:20. I edited out my walking to the computer to shut the recording down. From wikipediaoxygen concentrators typically use pressure swing adsorption technology and are used very widely for oxygen provision in healthcare applications, especially where liquid or pressurised oxygen is too dangerous or inconvenient, such as in homes or in portable clinics. Oxygen concentrators are also used to provide an economical source of oxygen in industrial processes, where they are also known as oxygen gas generators or oxygen generation plants. Oxygen concentrators utilize a molecular sieve to adsorb gasses and operate on the principle of rapid pressure swing adsorption of atmospheric nitrogen onto zeolite minerals and then venting the nitrogen. This type of adsorption system is therefore functionally a nitrogen scrubber leaving the other atmospheric gasses to pass through. This leaves oxygen as the primary gas remaining. Psa technology is a reliable and economical technique for small to mid-scale oxygen generation, with cryogenic separation more suitable at higher volumes and external delivery generally more suitable for small volumes. [1]at high pressure, the porous zeolite adsorbs large quantities of nitrogen, due to its large surface area and chemical character. After the oxygen and other free components are collected the pressure drops which allows nitrogen to desorb. An oxygen concentrator has an air compressor, two cylinders filled with zeolite pellets, a pressure equalizing reservoir, and some valves and tubes. In the first half-cycle the first cylinder receives air from the compressor, which lasts about 3 seconds. During that time the pressure in the first cylinder rises from atmospheric to about 1. 5 times normal atmospheric pressure (typically 20 psi/138 kpa gauge, or 1. 36 atmospheres absolute) and the zeolite becomes saturated with nitrogen. As the first cylinder reaches near pure oxygen (there are small amounts of argon, co2, water vapour, radon and other minor atmospheric components) in the first half-cycle, a valve opens and the oxygen enriched gas flows to the pressure equalizing reservoir, which connects to the patient's oxygen hose. At the end of the first half of the cycle, there is another valve position change so that the air from the compressor is directed to the 2nd cylinder. Pressure in the first cylinder drops as the enriched oxygen moves into the reservoir, allowing the nitrogen to be desorbed back into gas. Part way through the second half of the cycle there is another valve position change to vent the gas in the first cylinder back into the ambient atmosphere, keeping the concentration of oxygen in the pressure equalizing reservoir from falling below about 90%. The pressure in the hose delivering oxygen from the equalizing reservoir is kept steady by a pressure reducing valve. Older units cycled with a period of about 20 seconds, and supplied up to 5 litres per minute of 90+% oxygen. Since about 1999, units capable of supplying up to 10 lpm have been available.
Author: Kbclx
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