Re: Looking for a program

2015-10-28 Thread Gary Schindler

I should get it for myself again too!


-Original Message- 
From: Donald L. Roberts 
Sent: Tuesday, October 27, 2015 11:03 PM 
To: PC Audio Discussion List 
Subject: Re: Looking for a program 


That's it, Gary.  Thanks so much.

Don Roberts


On 10/27/2015 10:46 AM, Gary Schindler wrote:
Would you be talking about Levelator? I think it is from 
conversations.org.


-Original Message- From: Donald L. Roberts Sent: Tuesday, 
October 27, 2015 12:10 PM To: PC Audio Discussion List Subject: 
Looking for a program
I need help from other listers to locate an audio recording program 
whose name I can't recall which I lost when a previous hard drive went 
south.


This is an audio recording program which was very bare bones and would 
only produce .wav files.  The thing which made it unique is that it 
had some sort of a built in automatic gain control which did not just 
increase or decrease the volume at a fixed rate.  It was extremely 
well suited to voice recordings whose volume level fluctuated widely.


Thanks in advance for ideas.

Don Roberts








Looking for a program

2015-10-27 Thread Donald L. Roberts
I need help from other listers to locate an audio recording program 
whose name I can't recall which I lost when a previous hard drive went 
south.


This is an audio recording program which was very bare bones and would 
only produce .wav files.  The thing which made it unique is that it had 
some sort of a built in automatic gain control which did not just 
increase or decrease the volume at a fixed rate.  It was extremely well 
suited to voice recordings whose volume level fluctuated widely.


Thanks in advance for ideas.

Don Roberts




Re: Looking for a program

2015-10-27 Thread Gary Schindler

Would you be talking about Levelator? I think it is from conversations.org.

-Original Message- 
From: Donald L. Roberts 
Sent: Tuesday, October 27, 2015 12:10 PM 
To: PC Audio Discussion List 
Subject: Looking for a program 

I need help from other listers to locate an audio recording program 
whose name I can't recall which I lost when a previous hard drive went 
south.


This is an audio recording program which was very bare bones and would 
only produce .wav files.  The thing which made it unique is that it had 
some sort of a built in automatic gain control which did not just 
increase or decrease the volume at a fixed rate.  It was extremely well 
suited to voice recordings whose volume level fluctuated widely.


Thanks in advance for ideas.

Don Roberts




Re: Looking for a program

2015-10-27 Thread Dane Trethowan
I hope you find what you’re looking for but more importantly I hope you’ve 
learnt a most valuable lesson, backup your computer and that’s not hard to do.


> On 28 Oct 2015, at 3:10 AM, Donald L. Roberts  
> wrote:
> 
> I need help from other listers to locate an audio recording program whose 
> name I can't recall which I lost when a previous hard drive went south.
> 
> This is an audio recording program which was very bare bones and would only 
> produce .wav files.  The thing which made it unique is that it had some sort 
> of a built in automatic gain control which did not just increase or decrease 
> the volume at a fixed rate.  It was extremely well suited to voice recordings 
> whose volume level fluctuated widely.
> 
> Thanks in advance for ideas.
> 
> Don Roberts
> 
> 

**
Those of a positive and enquiring frame of mind will leave the rest of the 
halfwits in this world behind.





Re: Looking for a program

2015-10-27 Thread Donald L. Roberts

That's it, Gary.  Thanks so much.

Don Roberts


On 10/27/2015 10:46 AM, Gary Schindler wrote:
Would you be talking about Levelator? I think it is from 
conversations.org.


-Original Message- From: Donald L. Roberts Sent: Tuesday, 
October 27, 2015 12:10 PM To: PC Audio Discussion List Subject: 
Looking for a program
I need help from other listers to locate an audio recording program 
whose name I can't recall which I lost when a previous hard drive went 
south.


This is an audio recording program which was very bare bones and would 
only produce .wav files.  The thing which made it unique is that it 
had some sort of a built in automatic gain control which did not just 
increase or decrease the volume at a fixed rate.  It was extremely 
well suited to voice recordings whose volume level fluctuated widely.


Thanks in advance for ideas.

Don Roberts








Re: Looking for a program or utility

2013-09-10 Thread Steve Pattison

Hi Don,

You may like to have a look at the program Balabolka which is free. 
However I don't use it myself so I'm not sure if it is able to perform 
batch conversions of files in the way you want. It is available from 
www.cross-plus-a.com/balabolka.htm. I hope this helps.


Regards Steve.

On 11/09/2013 5:11 AM, Donald L. Roberts wrote:

I hope to find a utility or program which will convert a large group of
text files to mp3 audio files. The operative phrase is large group. I
can easily do this individually. But I hope to find something which
allows me to place a lengthy list of text files and then the program
will convert each to individual mp3 files. Is this what text aloud does?
It sticks in my mind that there was another such program, but I cannot
recall its name.


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Re: Looking for a program or utility

2013-09-10 Thread Isaac

use text aloud or open book
- Original Message - 
From: Donald L. Roberts donald.robert...@gmail.com

To: PC Audio Discussion List pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2013 2:11 PM
Subject: Looking for a program or utility


I hope to find a utility or program which will convert a large group of 
text files to mp3 audio files. The operative phrase is large group. I 
can easily do this individually. But I hope to find something which 
allows me to place a lengthy list of text files and then the program 
will convert each to individual mp3 files. Is this what text aloud does? 
It sticks in my mind that there was another such program, but I cannot 
recall its name.


Thanks in advance for any help.

Don Roberts

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Looking for a program or utility

2013-09-10 Thread Donald L. Roberts
I hope to find a utility or program which will convert a large group of 
text files to mp3 audio files. The operative phrase is large group. I 
can easily do this individually. But I hope to find something which 
allows me to place a lengthy list of text files and then the program 
will convert each to individual mp3 files. Is this what text aloud does? 
It sticks in my mind that there was another such program, but I cannot 
recall its name.


Thanks in advance for any help.

Don Roberts

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Re: Looking for a program or utility

2013-09-10 Thread tickpub
I have used just about every TTS program out there. The first one I use
to use was a thing called Dspeach. It is free, but the man askes for a
donation. It will work and does a good job. The one I finally settled on
was Text Aloud! I bought the upgrade and it does a nice job. But soon, I
am getting Open Book which is suppose to handle this task. But for now I
use TA!
MMM

TickPub Thanks You,
All The Best And More,
Have A Great Week,
Regards And Respect From Michael!

One Weird Trick
Could add $1,000s to Your Social Security Checks! See if you Qualify#8230
http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL3141/522fb9fe3b2b739fe5806st02duc

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looking for a program

2009-07-23 Thread Sharon Lash
I'm looking for a program that will remind me of things I need to do: classes, 
remembering dates, etc. Is there one out there? I have window-eyes and windows 
xp. Thanks.
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Re: looking for a program

2009-07-23 Thread Arthur Barney

Hi Sharon,
there is a nice little program called DBD professional, and you can get it 
at,
http://www.blindsoftware.com/ 



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Re: looking for a program

2009-07-23 Thread Casey Mathews
Day By Day is made specifically for the low vision/blind user. Below is 
taken from the web site.

I've used this, and it works great.

Day by Day Professional 2.0

* Setup multiple-user accounts, as many as you like, with optional password 
protection for user privacy

* Easily switch between user accounts on the fly
* accessible calendar that permits you to flip through dates by day, week, 
month, or year
* Save multiple notes to any date on the calendar... no more cramming all 
your events on one note
* Export all your notes, or a range of notes, to a html file, web page 
format, or a text file format
* Powerful find text feature to easily help you find words or phrases in all 
your notes by using the standard ctrl+f

* Set pop-up reminders, date and time, for any note in the calendar
* Set reminders to automatically reoccur never, daily, weekly, monthly, or 
yearly.

* choose to snooze a reminder for x minutes or accept it
* Set your own custom sounds for reminder and note events
* Built in address book that allows you to store a wealth of information 
about your contacts... over 16 fields of data
* Address book allows you to customize the fields. For example, you can 
change zip code to postal code or fax number to birthday. It's your choice!
* From within the address book, Open your default e-mail program ready to 
send an email to the currently selected person

* Open the selected person's web page from within the address book
* Export your address book to the Windows clipboard or a text file
* Dial a contact's phone number from within the address book
* Program options include: load at windows startup, minimize to the system 
tray out of your way, toggle playing of sounds, support for both date 
formats day/month/year and month/day/year
* Self-voicing mode! Turn on self voicing and tab around and have custom 
installed sound files tell you exactly where you are on the screen. You can 
use this feature if your screen reader doesn't read items properly. If your 
screen reader supports creating custom spoken prompts, you can use the 
self-voicing mode to help you identify what the screen items are so you can 
properly label them.

* tab through all options on any screen
* backup database feature
* compact database feature

All those accessible features for only $25.95 USD! If you order the BSC demo 
CD for an additional $10.00 USD, included on the CD is the four free hands 
on audio tutorials that teach you how to use DBD Pro!


Program limitations:

15 day fully functional trial
Technical Support
For technical support, please email supp...@blindsoftware.com

Download and Ordering
Purchase Day by Day Professional securely online for only $29.99

Download the Day by Day Professional setup file 2.97 MB

www.blindsoftware.com
Hope this helps.



Casey Mathews
Web Friendly Help | Demystifying Tech
www.WebFriendlyHelp.com

--
From: Sharon Lash slash...@nyc.rr.com
Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2009 10:42 PM
To: blindtech blindt...@yahoogroups.com
Cc: pc-audio pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Subject: looking for a program

I'm looking for a program that will remind me of things I need to do: 
classes, remembering dates, etc. Is there one out there? I have 
window-eyes and windows xp. Thanks.

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pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org



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Re: looking for a program

2009-07-23 Thread Arthur Barney

Hi Casey,
I also use it,
and I find it works grate.

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looking for a program

2007-12-15 Thread Terra Syslo
Does anyone know of a program that will search your music collection and
find duplicates based on the mp3 tag information so they can be removed?

email and MSN:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
skype: tlsyslo

No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.5.503 / Virus Database: 269.17.2/1185 - Release Date: 12/15/2007
12:00 PM



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Re: looking for a program

2007-12-15 Thread Michael J. Schwandt
Hi Terra,

Check out DupeGuruME from Hardcoded software at
http://www.hardcoded.net/dupeguru_me/

Mike

Terra Syslo wrote:
 Does anyone know of a program that will search your music collection and
 find duplicates based on the mp3 tag information so they can be removed?

 email and MSN:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 skype: tlsyslo

 No virus found in this outgoing message.
 Checked by AVG Free Edition.
 Version: 7.5.503 / Virus Database: 269.17.2/1185 - Release Date: 12/15/2007
 12:00 PM



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Re: looking for a program

2006-01-28 Thread Curtis Delzer
When you record anything in gw, it is *.wav first, it always converts 
even if you save to mp3, so why not just change the sampling rate 
before you save?



Curtis Delzer


At 03:16 PM 1/27/2006, you wrote:
Hello,

I like to record nls books.  I usually use Goldwave for recording these
books at 3 and 3/4 IPS, quadruple play speed.  I then change the
playback rate and save them as mp3 files.  I would prefer to use either
Recall pro or Total Recorder because those programs can record directly
to mp3 rather than recording to a temporary file and then converting to
mp3; unfortunately, Total Recorder and Recall pro lack the ability to
change the playback rate. which is essential to this process.

I am therefore wondering if a program exists which will play mp3 files
using a sampling rate other than the one used to record the file.
Specifically, I want to play an mp3 file at one fourth the sampling rate
used to record it.

I know someone will tell me to open the file in Goldwave or Sound Forge;
however, it takes almost a minute and a half to open large files in this
way.  So I want a program which can do this without uncompressing the
file.  Such a program probably doesn't exist, but it certainly doesn't
hurt to inquire.

Thanks in advance for ideas.

Don Roberts



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looking for a program

2006-01-27 Thread Donald L. Roberts
Hello,

I like to record nls books.  I usually use Goldwave for recording these 
books at 3 and 3/4 IPS, quadruple play speed.  I then change the 
playback rate and save them as mp3 files.  I would prefer to use either 
Recall pro or Total Recorder because those programs can record directly 
to mp3 rather than recording to a temporary file and then converting to 
mp3; unfortunately, Total Recorder and Recall pro lack the ability to 
change the playback rate. which is essential to this process.

I am therefore wondering if a program exists which will play mp3 files 
using a sampling rate other than the one used to record the file. 
Specifically, I want to play an mp3 file at one fourth the sampling rate 
used to record it.

I know someone will tell me to open the file in Goldwave or Sound Forge; 
however, it takes almost a minute and a half to open large files in this 
way.  So I want a program which can do this without uncompressing the 
file.  Such a program probably doesn't exist, but it certainly doesn't 
hurt to inquire.

Thanks in advance for ideas.

Don Roberts



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Re: looking for a program

2006-01-27 Thread Raul A. Gallegos
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

Hello Donald. I know you said you have used GoldWave before. What I'm 
wondering is if you have used the batch feature of GoldWave. That way 
you record the files first and then run a batch conversion to compress 
them all at once.

- -- 
For people who like that kind of book, that is the kind of book they will like.
Raul A. Gallegos ... IliwSsmc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.7 (GNU/Linux)

iD8DBQFD2rpMyw8Or2IRAlSxAJ9OvGmEQQ28/OI8GdLo0mSBjMKlQACfexkz
+hzbjWUxgwIm3h6Hn2B/tpY=
=V0ob
-END PGP SIGNATURE-

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Re: looking for a program

2006-01-27 Thread Donald L. Roberts
Thanks for the suggestion.  I have played with batch conversion only 
minimally, but this might be a viable alternative.  Thanks again.

Don Roberts

- Original Message - 
From: Raul A. Gallegos [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Friday, January 27, 2006 4:26 PM
Subject: Re: looking for a program


-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

Hello Donald. I know you said you have used GoldWave before. What I'm
wondering is if you have used the batch feature of GoldWave. That way
you record the files first and then run a batch conversion to compress
them all at once.

- -- 
For people who like that kind of book, that is the kind of book they 
will like.
Raul A. Gallegos ... IliwSsmc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.7 (GNU/Linux)

iD8DBQFD2rpMyw8Or2IRAlSxAJ9OvGmEQQ28/OI8GdLo0mSBjMKlQACfexkz
+hzbjWUxgwIm3h6Hn2B/tpY=
=V0ob
-END PGP SIGNATURE-

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Re: Looking for a Program

2006-01-06 Thread Steve Matzura
Another Redchair program I found was The Godfather, but it ran away
from me and after it was done I had no idea what I had in front of me,
so I dropped it.


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Re: Looking for a Program

2006-01-03 Thread Kevin Lloyd
Hi Steve.

There are a couple of programs that approach what you're looking for, both
from Red Chair Software.

The first is a free program that does exactly as you request, that is,
verify that the ID3 tags are valid in your music files.  It's called,
unsurprisingly and unoriginally, Red Chair's Tag Verifier.  I downloaded a
copy of it when it was first released and it looked pretty good back then.

The other piece of software that you might be able to make use of is
Audigen.  This is a complete music database that will allow you to load
your music and then browse by category or search on the ID3 tag values.  The
additional feature of Audigen that you might find interesting is that you
can use SQL to do some pretty advanced interrogation of your music files and
export the results in excel, HTML or XML.  Of course, there has to be enough
tag information to load the music in the first place but Audigen will allow
you to auto fill missing information just to get it into the database.

Below is an article that I wrote for a magazine over here in the UK that
gives you an overview of Audigen and what it can do.

Audigen - music management made easy



By Kevin Lloyd





For some considerable time I've been looking for a program that would help
me to better manage the large collection of MP3 music files that I've
collected over the last year or two.



I wanted the program to provide me with a database that could be easily
browsed and searched and that would allow me to produce reports in varying
formats such as excel spreadsheets or XML based on various criteria.



Whilst checking out the Red Chair Software website,

http://www.redchairsoftware.com/

For an update to Notmad Explorer, a program I use to transfer music to and
organise music on my creative jukebox, I came upon Audigen which on the
product specification looked like it would be just what I was looking for.



I purchased the software there and then for a measly $17 and downloaded it
immediately.  Installation was a breeze - just a case of following the on
screen prompts and entering my activation code as the last step.  I was
certainly impressed with what I got for that paltry amount.



This is not an exhaustive review of Audigen but will hopefully give you a
flavour of the two main components that make up the application.



Audigen Explorer is the music management engine and the main reason why I
purchased this program.  The other component I'll describe briefly is
Audigen Xstreamer but more of that later.



The interface to Audigen Explorer is extremely easy to use if you're used to
working with windows explorer or My Computer.  Note that there is a checkbox
in the options menu that has been put there specifically for people that
only use the keyboard for navigation that can change the layout of the
screen.  Checking this checkbox will ensure that you have no problems using
Audigen Explorer with your screen reader.



On starting Audigen Explorer, you're presented with 9 folders as follows:

Audio Tracks

Search

Playlists

Artists

Albums

Genres

Last Transfer

Utilities

Device Information



Entering any of these folders will result in a view of your music
categorised as stated above by track, artist, album or genre.  The search
folder will allow you to search through your music catalogue with simple or
more complex SQL based queries and playlists will display any playlists that
you may have created in Audigen Explorer.

Firstly, of course, you need to load the database.  This is very easily
achieved.  Simply browse to your music folder or folders using windows
explorer or My Computer and use control + C to copy either folders or
individual files to the clipboard.  You can load both MP3 and WMA files into
the database.  Enter the Audio Tracks folder from the main menu and then use
control + V to paste the music into the database.  It's important to note
here that you won't actually be moving the files themselves in this process,
that would simply be a waste of disc space.  Instead, it is the ID3 tags
that are taken from your MP3 or WMA files and used to create the database.
If you go for the try and buy option for this program, you'll be able to
load 100 files into the database and you'll have near complete functionality
to check out the program before you buy.  When fully activated there are no
limitations on numbers of files loaded into the database.



Another great feature of Audigen Explorer is that it will allow you to edit
ID3 tags for those files that have missing or inconsistent tags.  You can do
this both on an individual file basis or on a whole batch of files changing
artist, album or tracks names as well as genre, track number and comment
fields.



Once you've loaded your music, you can use the Audio Tracks to browse your
collection in alphabetic sequence based on artist, album and track.  From
here you can build playlists, play tracks through winamp or your default
music program or copy the music files to another location

Re: Looking for a Program

2006-01-03 Thread Steve Matzura
OK, I found it and am trying it out now on a fairly large starter
folder of stuff I know is good.  Then I'll try it on a folder with
stuff I know is suspect.


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Looking for a Program

2006-01-02 Thread Steve Matzura
I'm looking for a program I cannot find anything nearly like anywhere
on the net.  This program is an MP3 tag analyzer.  Not an editor--got
enough of those--this program that I need will only read and report on
MP3 tags.

I want a program which will analyze MP3 files--either a file or
recursive folder of files--and write a list of files which contain (or
which don't contain) data in each of the standard V1 and V2 MP3 tag
fields defined so far.  If the bit for one or the other MP3 tag
formats is unset, I want that reported, as well as reporting if the
bit is set but the fields are blank or contain null values.  In this
way, I can run the program and generate lists of files that need some
fixing-up of their tags. Then I can use these generated lists in other
programs and make the changes in a consistent manner across my entire
MP3 collection.

While being a programmer, I am not a PC programmer. I don't have any
tools--compilers, linkers, assemblers, etc.--to do the job on this
platform, no less the information on the format of a .MP3 file to go
tiptoeing through it to find the data I need and report on it.  I have
far too many MP3 files to upload them to one of my VAX or Alpha
systems and write a program on that platform (which I can most surely
do since that's what I do for a living anyway), and I'm thinking that
this kind of program would be a sweet piece of cake for some
enterprising soul to cobble together reasonably easily and quickly,
and we could all benefit from it when it's polished up nice.

If you or someone you know can help out with this, please write me
off-list, as this is marginally on-topic, if at all, for this one.

Thanks in advance.


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Looking for accessible program to transfer mp3 to hiMd disk

2004-10-16 Thread Pranav Lal
Hi all,
I have a Soni walkman or whatever you call them that uses hiMd disks these 
are high capacity minidisks. The supplied software SonicStage (v2.02) that 
I use to transfer mp3s to the walkman  is crashing so I am looking for an 
accessible program that will substitute for sonicStage.

Any one know of any? I have read that realOne can do this using a plugin 
and so can windows media player but at least with series 9 things did not 
work out.
pranav
---
Pranav

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Re: Looking for accessible program to transfer mp3 to hiMd disk

2004-10-16 Thread Gary G. Schindler

Which High end minidisc recorder do you have. they just became available from Sony USA 
in the last couple of weeks. they are 
supposed to transfer at the speed of 100 X. are we talking  about the 45 hour capacity 
machinesI would think that a newer version of Sonic Stage would have had to been 
supplied instead of 2.0. ?


-- Pranav Lal [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,

I have a Soni walkman or whatever you call them that uses hiMd disks these 
are high capacity minidisks. The supplied software SonicStage (v2.02) that 
I use to transfer mp3s to the walkman  is crashing so I am looking for an 
accessible program that will substitute for sonicStage.

Any one know of any? I have read that realOne can do this using a plugin 
and so can windows media player but at least with series 9 things did not 
work out.
pranav
---
Pranav


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Re: Looking for accessible program to transfer mp3 to hiMd disk

2004-10-16 Thread Pranav Lal
Hi Gary,
I ahev a MZNH600D recorder. It takes hiMd disks of 1GB.
Pranav
At 05:28 AM 10/17/2004, Gary G. Schindler wrote:
Which High end minidisc recorder do you have. they just became available 
from Sony USA in the last couple of weeks. they are
supposed to transfer at the speed of 100 X. are we talking  about the 45 
hour capacity machinesI would think that a newer version of Sonic Stage 
would have had to been supplied instead of 2.0. ?

-- Pranav Lal [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I have a Soni walkman or whatever you call them that uses hiMd disks these
are high capacity minidisks. The supplied software SonicStage (v2.02) that
I use to transfer mp3s to the walkman  is crashing so I am looking for an
accessible program that will substitute for sonicStage.
Any one know of any? I have read that realOne can do this using a plugin
and so can windows media player but at least with series 9 things did not
work out.
pranav
---
Pranav
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---
Pranav
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