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- TELECOM Digest Mon, 21 Mar 94 08:26:00 CST Volume 14 : Issue 139
-
- Inside This Issue: Editor: Patrick A. Townson
-
- History May Repeat Itself (Donald E. Kimberlin)
- Hush-a-Phone (Steve Brack)
- Seeking CATV List (John Conwell)
- Ripped By InfoAccess (Jacque Bussey)
- SIT Tones - Where in the Archives? (Paul Cook)
- Country Code for San Marino (Clive D.W. Feather)
- Clever Data/Fax/Voice Switch Needed (Jody Kravitz)
- Re: Appel a` Communications Pour CFIP'95 (*in French*) (Jan Ceuleers)
- Information Security Work Group Meeting (Michael S. Baum)
-
- TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
- exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere
- there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of
- public service systems and networks including Compuserve and GEnie.
- Subscriptions are available at no charge to qualified organizations
- and individual readers. Write and tell us how you qualify:
-
- * telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu *
-
- The Digest is compilation-copyrighted by Patrick Townson Associates of
- Skokie, Illinois USA. We provide telecom consultation services and
- long distance resale services including calling cards and 800 numbers.
- To reach us: Post Office Box 1570, Chicago, IL 60690 or by phone
- at 708-329-0571 and fax at 708-329-0572. Email: ptownson@townson.com.
-
- ** Article submission address only: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu **
-
- Our archives are located at lcs.mit.edu and are available by using
- anonymous ftp. The archives can also be accessed using our email
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-
- TELECOM Digest is gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
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- opinions expressed herein are deemed to be those of the author. Any
- organizations listed are for identification purposes only and messages
- should not be considered any official expression by the organization.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 20 Mar 94 02:34:00 EST
- From: Donald E. Kimberlin <0004133373@mcimail.com>
- Subject: History May Repeat Itself
-
-
- In article <Digest v.14, iss.122>, rmcguire@wiltel20.wiltel.com (Russ
- McGuire) posted an announcement about Wiltel achieving an agreement
- with EmTelCuba to build the first recent-generation broadband link
- between Cuba and the U.S. by laying a new fiber optic cable between
- Florida and Cuba.
-
- I have a close interest in works of this sort due to my own personal
- career work in such spheres, so I had some private communication with
- Russ about this matter. Wiltel seems to be playing down the matter,
- in essence saying it's no biggie because the distance is short and
- there's no earth-shattering technology to announce. I don't see it
- that way. In fact, the Wiltel execs have achieved something even AT&T
- for all its prestige and established ability couldn't do. We have
- here a case where David didn't slay Goliath, but did finesse a route
- that Goliath couldn't follow. And, in the longer run, we may see some
- very old telcom history repeat itself.
-
- That may in part have to do with a burden AT&T had to bear with the
- Cuban government. It's a telecomm lesson in dealing with what are
- called "emerging nations." The Cuban-American Telephone Company of
- the pre-Castro era was a 50/50 AT&T-ITT venture that got expropriated
- very early on. Due to that very nature, Cuba's connectivity to the
- outside world was largely hegemonized by the Yanquis at AT&T until
- very recently. Up until 1951, in the era when the means of providing
- connectivity around the globe was HF radio, Cuba had only a few
- channels via AT&T into the U.S. (via AT&T's Fort Lauderdale Overseas
- Radio Station, and a few odd HF links to Spain and several of the
- Caribbean nations, and that was about it. In a breakthrough
- technology for 1951, AT&T laid its Type SA Submarine Cable System
- between Key West and Havana (78 miles) and provided at one swoop a
- dozen stable, reliable analog voice channels. (Those who know about
- the more recent technology of submarine cables will recall that the
- 1957 TAT-1 across the Atlantic was the Type SB Submarine Cable System,
- and may have puzzled what Type SA ever was.)
-
- The U.S. was enjoying growing business with Cuba through the 1950's,
- and telephone traffic was such that overflows had to spill off the
- cable onto the HF radio, which was at that point intended to be a
- "back-up." With the advent of Operator Toll Dialing and the intimate
- relation between Cuban-American and AT&T, the dial networks of the two
- countries were completely open to each other, in terms of what
- operators could accomplish. People were becoming more and more
- telephone-dependent, and the offered traffic between Cuba and the
- world skyrocketed. To handle this, AT&T and Cuban-American opened up
- one of the few SHF troposcatter links AT&T ever used, a 900 mHz link
- between Florida City (just south of Miami) and Guanabo (near Havana)
- in the mid 1950's. That link could provide 600 (and more, with
- expansion) telephone channels, or one analog video link. (In fact,
- the entire tropo system, like all such links, ran both frequency and
- space diversity. This meant the redundant link could be used for
- video at most times, not interrupting telephone use when video was
- ordered.) It was a heady time for the television networks when their
- (then) landline video networks reached Miami, and it was possible to
- "do a remote from Havana," and there were a few. Having the new tropo
- with the old SA cable for a "backup" also permitted shutting down the
- HF radio operation from Fort Lauderdale. It should have been some
- very good business, indeed.
-
- That's the way it was when revolution came to Cuba: More than 600
- channels of telephone circuits out to the U.S., with dialing
- capability and open access between the networks, plus the few bits of
- HF to other nations that had been in place for a number of years.
- And, that's the way it stayed for almost 30 years afterwards, with the
- tropo to Florida City being the prime connectivity pipe for Cuba to
- the outside world, controlled by an entity the Cubans had no reason to
- admire; seen as both economically ex-colonial and politically unacceptable.
- Yet, it was the only significant tool available.
-
- Another incident made the hurt deeper. The rift in relations between
- the countries, while not disrupting the technology, did cause problems
- in matters of money. Since AT&T and Cuban-American were partners in
- operating the links, each had a literal "open account" with the other,
- with settlements of revenue shares that could no longer be made.
- Meantime, calls originating from Cuba were given unlimited access to
- the U.S. network with automatic dialing. As the reach of that U.S.
- network expanded, fingers in Havana could reach wherever in the world
- a U.S. operator could reach, and matters of paying for it weren't
- considered. For about ten years, there were no settlements, and no
- meaningful communication between AT&T and the new regime in Cuba.
- However, the balance due AT&T was getting larger and larger.
-
- I was working in the AT&T offices in Miami the day word came down that
- we were to cut off the trunks from Cuba. Nothing like that had ever
- been done before. (In the world of international telecommunications,
- attempts are even made to keep some channels open during war, just in
- case the politicians should decide to try to talk out their
- differences. This doesn't mean that circuits are never shut down; it
- doesn't mean the technicians engage in friendly chat on them, but more
- often, some are kept up without publicity, at least so long as the
- physical plant holds up. The general public may not have access to
- them, but the governments do.) So, it was high drama in the Miami
- Testroom on that day. It only took about three hours for the telegrams
- to arrive from Cuba, asking what was wrong.
-
- Western Union was still operating with Cuba on its old submarine
- telegraph cable, the second oldest in the world. That cable has a
- special history of its own, more of which fits later in this story.
- AT&T had, of course, covered all its political bases and had the plan
- laid about how to handle this largest of "unpaid phone bills." The
- response was to tell the Cubans no more free access could be had; that
- if they wanted service reconnected, it would have to be on the basis
- of all future calls being paid on the U.S. end. That is, all calls
- sent-paid into Cuba, and all collect outbound, so AT&T could get its
- share of the revenue from somewhere. They'd have to agree to that, and
- leave it that way indefinitely. It didn't take long for the Cubans to
- agree, of course, so by later in the afternoon, the circuits were back
- up, with operators at Miami enforcing all outbound calls from Cuba as
- collect on the U.S. end. That situation remained for many years. It
- was, of course, just another hurtful Yanqui action as seen by the
- Cubans.
-
- As the satellite era grew upon the world, the Cubans saw an
- opportunity to bypass the Yanquis, if they could only get the needed
- funding and connectivity. During the years of closeness with the
- USSR, some Molnya earth stations had been installed, but these were
- largely limited to communications with Russia, and not useful for much
- connectivity into other parts of the world. Finally, by the 1980's,
- alternatives seemed feasible. The Cubans invited the world to bid
- providing them with new links to the global community. AT&T had
- reason to want to replace the now-aged analog tropo system. It was
- occupying 900 mHz spectrum Southern Bell should by then have for use
- of the growing cellular mobile telephone business. AT&T proposed a
- fiber optic cable between Florida and Cuba, but lost out to a bid from
- Italcable, Italy's highly entreprenurial international carrier. The
- Cubans accepted a deal with Italcable hauling their telephone trunks
- out by satellite to Italy and from there to the world. The U.S. and
- AT&T were stuck with the old tropo, and the SA cable, when it was
- functional. The SA cable would often be out of service for several
- years at a time, because whenever it got damaged (fairly often by a
- ship in the shallow waters of the Florida Strait), a whole, protracted
- negotiation via third parties would ensue about what nation's
- cableship would be permitted in Cuban waters and who would pay the
- bill.
-
- And that situation prevailed until Hurricane Andrew ended the life of
- the Florida City tropo antennas. (Most Americans saw the wreckage on
- TV as part of the Hurricane Andrew stories.) Now things were changed.
- While the U.S. had lost most of its connectivity to Cuba, the Cubans
- did not lose the world. It was being handled through Italy. (By that
- point in time, the Cubans claimed that some $80 million was due them
- in unsettled accounts that were frozen in the U.S., as well.) AT&T
- was indeed strapped by the way things had gone for three decades.
-
- Enter Wiltel on the scene. It turns out that John Williams, the
- leading founder of Wiltel's parent company, was born in Cuba in 1918,
- and that his family had business interests there until the revolution.
- Finally, there was someone in the U.S. who was "sympatico" to talk
- with -- someone who could reason the Latin way. Where AT&T's hegemony
- couldn't work, Williams' personal diplomacy could. It wasn't too
- difficult for Wiltel to offer an arrangement that restored a link the
- Cubans wanted, but do it in a way they could tolerate.
-
- The net result will be CUBUS-1, not a great technogical feat, but
- indeed, a great international relations feat.
-
- CUBUS-1 will be, in a way, a repeat of another submarine cable between
- Florida and Cuba 135 years earlier; one most of the world knows
- nothing about. That cable was the second long international one in
- 1858, just months after the landmark (but short-lived) cable laid
- across the Atlantic by the Anglo-American Cable Company with Cyrus
- Field as its American figurehead. Within months of the laying of the
- 1858 transatlantic cable, entreprenurial Englishmen had another one
- operating from Punta Rassa, Florida to Havana.
-
- The immediate question is: Why? Who wanted to connect the then
- mosquito-infested southwestern part of Florida to another country?
- There was hardly any population there, yet here were people, literally
- living and working in a tent town, setting up a telegraph line to
- another country.
-
- It turns out that (as in a later Alascom case not well publicized
- across the Bering Straits during the Cold War era), the engine of
- trade was operating. Cattle ranchers in Florida were shipping stock
- on the hoof from the outpost of Fort Myers to Havana, lightering them
- down the Peace River and its tributaries to Charlotte Harbor for
- embarkation to Cuba. A telegraph cable along the route made good
- business sense.
-
- And, connectivity back north along the Peace River, to gain entrance
- to the growing U.S. telegraph network made sense, too. Cuba and the
- U.S. had electrical communication many years before other capitals
- around the world did. In fact, it made so much sense that within a
- very short time, the cable route from Punta Rassa was extended beyond
- Havana to Kingston, Jamaica, providing connectivity there, as well.
- (Using the limited technology of 135 years ago, a long piece of the
- submarine cable was merely laid out on top of the ground crossing
- Cuba. That method was later used worldwide for a number of early
- submarine telegraph cables, crossing large stretches of dry land by
- just laying the cable on the ground.)
-
- As Western Union grew into international telegraphy, it purchased the
- Punta Rassa-Havana cable, bringing it ashore on Key West to provide a
- terminal for that small fishing village, too. When Key West grew
- large enough, the portion from Punta Rassa was abandoned, since Fort
- Myers and Key West were developing their own communication routes to
- Miami and Tampa as those cities grew. So, the Western Union maps
- showed a Havana telegraph cable that terminated at Key West and Punta
- Rassa was forgotten. Today, there's a small bronze marker in Key West
- that says it was the terminal for the "first telegraph cable to Cuba."
- It's one of those partial truths of corporate history books, and
- forgets the much earlier history of the _real_ "first cable to Cuba."
-
- What does CUBUS-1 portend beyond Havana? Might it be extended to
- Kingston? Might it even provide a jumping-off place for Cuba to
- become a telecommunications hub for the Caribbean? It's much too
- early to know now, but history does have a way of repeating itself,
- doesn't it?
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: sbrack@jupiter.cse.utoledo.edu (Steve Brack)
- Subject: Hush-a-phone
- Organization: University of Toledo
- Date: Mon, 21 Mar 1994 01:40:14 GMT
-
-
- A few days ago, someone mentioned the Hush-a-Phone case. I was wondering
- what that case was about.
-
-
- Steven S. Brack sbrack@jupiter.cse.utoledo.edu
- Toledo, OH 43613-1605 STU0061@UOFT01.BITNET
- MY OWN OPINIONS sbrack@maine.cse.utoledo.edu
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: John Conwell <magnus1!johnc@uu5.psi.com>
- Subject: Seeking CATV List
- Date: Sun, 20 Mar 1994 15:40:20 EST
-
-
- I am interested in following the discussions on this List, but am also
- curious about a possible List specifically for Cable TV, or land-line
- video transmissions. If anyone knows of such a list, I would
- appreciate the information. Thanks :}
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 18 Mar 1994 18:24:04 GMT
- From: jabussey@ualr.edu
- Subject: Ripped By InfoAccess
- Organization: Arkansas Children's Hospital
-
-
- Has anyone had any DEALINGS with InfoAccess? For some reason 4
- EXPENSIVE calls to this service was added to my phone. Although NO
- calls to it were made from our phones! There are only two people in my
- house, me and my wife and neither of use dialed this number. We called
- them to see about the charges and they said the calls were made from
- our phones and that we need to write a letter to the information
- provider and complain. In the mean time how can I handle this $50
- charge with the Phone company? I refuse to pay it but if its mixed in
- with my phone bill how can I NOT pay it without having my phone service
- interruped?
-
- If anyone has any ideas please email me:
-
- jabussey@ualr.edu or
- 'root@[144.30.128.156]' (include the [] in the address)
-
- Thanks in advance!!
-
-
- Jacque Bussey
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 20 Mar 94 08:17:00 EST
- From: Proctor & Associates <0003991080@mcimail.com>
- Subject: SIT Tones - Where in the Archives?
-
-
- I thought there was a reference to SIT tones in the telecom archives
- somewhere, but I can't find it. These are the three tones that one
- hears at the beginning of a toll network announcment (We're SORRY!
- All circuits are BUSY now ...)
-
- Does anyone have the specs on these?
-
-
- Paul Cook Proctor & Associates
- 206-881-7000 3991080@mcimail.com
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: Country Code For San Marino
- Date: Mon, 20 Mar 1994 01:42:38 GMT
- From: Clive D.W. Feather <clive@sco.COM>
-
-
- San Marino is a small country physically inside Italy. To the best of
- my knowledge, it is always phoned as just another area code within
- Italy (i.e. +39 541).
-
- I have a note in my files that San Marino has been allocated the
- country code 295 but is not yet using it. HOwever, I recently saw a
- posting, here I believe, that it has been allocated 378.
-
- Can anyone tell me which is right?
-
-
- Clive D.W. Feather | Santa Cruz Operation
- clive@sco.com | Croxley Centre
- Phone: +44 923 816 344 | Hatters Lane, Watford
- Fax: +44 923 210 352 | WD1 8YN, United Kingdom
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 20 Mar 94 00:08:44 PST
- From: kravitz@foxtail.com (Jody Kravitz)
- Subject: Clever Data/Fax/Voice Switch Needed
-
-
- I would like to share a single POTS line (without distinctive ringing)
- between a dial-in modem, a Fax machine, and an answering machine. All
- of the devices I've seen require incoming data calls to either be in
- "answer mode" (squirting carrier), or to press some magic key on the
- keypad at just the right time. My existing UUCP callers cannot
- accomodate that.
-
- What I really want is something that makes the voice callers do
- something special, leaving the fax/data determination to the
- presence/absence of tone. Simple and elaborate schemes are welcome.
-
-
- Thanks,
-
- Jody
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Jan.Ceuleers@k12.be (Jan Ceuleers)
- Date: Mon, 20 Mar 1994 07:05:16 GMT
- Subject: Appel a` Communications Pour CFIP'95 (*in French*)
- Organization: K12Net Belgium
-
-
- I quote Jean-Marc Jezequel:
-
- > Colloque Francophone sur l'Ingenierie des Protocoles
-
- These French are incredible. Do they really think protocol development
- has anything to do with the language the developer happens to speak?
-
-
- Origin: Experimenter Board, Antwerp, Belgium (2:292/857)
- Gated from FidoNet at 2:29/777 <Uucp@steam.fidonet.org>
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 20 Mar 1994 08:07:41 EST
- From: Michael S Baum <baum@world.std.com>
- Subject: Information Security Work Group Meeting
-
-
- This is posted for information purposes only:
-
- American Bar Ass'n
- Section of Science and Technology
- Information Security Committee
-
- Please correspond to: Michael S. Baum, Esq.
- 33 Tremont Street
- Cambridge, MA 02139-1227
- Tel: 617/661-1234
- Fax: 617/661-0716
- Net: baum@im.com
-
-
- Notarization and Nonrepudiation Work Group
- INFORMATION SECURITY COMMITTEE, EDI/IT DIVISION
- Section of Science and Technology
- American Bar Association
-
- You are cordially invited to participate in a meeting of the
- above-referenced work groups of the Information Security Committee on
- Thursday-Saturday, April 14-16, 1994 in Washington, DC. These
- interdisciplinary work groups will continue to address conventional
- and electronic notarization and certification authority issues. The
- meetings are focused around the work product of its respective
- participants and will be highly results driven. During this session,
- an extra day will be allotted to facilitate accelerated production of
- the work product.
-
- At the last meeting (January 19-20, 1994), further progress was made
- on the development of "Model Certificate-based Public Key Guideline/
- Rules of Practice" ("Guideline"). It was decided that the Guideline,
- as a first step, should reflect the requirements for "higher assurance"
- implementations. Also, following nearly a year of discussion and
- debate, a proposal was approved (by majority vote) recommending that
- the Section support, in principle, the creation of an entity to
- provide specialty certification of attorney-notaries engaging in
- professional services related to transnational electronic commerce.
-
- Joe Potenza, Section Chair has kindly agreed to permitted us to hold
- the meeting at his law firm in downtown Washington, DC. Please
- observe the hosts office's strict non-smoking rule. The meeting
- agenda and logistics are attached. I look forward to seeing you in
- Washington, DC.
-
-
- Sincerely,
-
- Michael S. Baum
- Chair, Information Security Committee
- and EDI/IT Division
-
-
- INFORMATION SECURITY COMMITTEE
- April 14-16, 1994
-
- Tentative Agenda
-
- Thurs., April 14 Major Theme: Outline, Scope and Purpose
-
- 8:30- 9:00 Continental breakfast and registration.
- 9:00- 9:30 Participant introductions, meeting logistics and questions.
- 9:30-10:30 Presentation of updated Guideline outline and contributions
- 10:30-10:45 Break.
- 10:45-12:30 Discussion of proposed Guideline outlines.
-
- 12:30-13:30 Lunch & informal presentation - TBD
- 13:30-15:00 Identifying outstanding issues re: outline, scope and purpose.
- 15:00-15:15 Break.
- 15:15-16:45 Survey and record points of agreement/disagreement.
- 16:45-17:00 Wrap-up.
-
- Friday, April 15 Major Theme: Tone, Style and Content
-
- 8:30- 9:00 Continental breakfast and registration.
- 9:00-10:30 Presentation of contributions by authors.
- 10:30-10:45 Break.
- 10:45-12:30 Discussion of purpose and style of various sections.
-
- 12:30-13:30 Lunch & informal presentation - TBD.
- 13:30-15:00 Break-out session on Guideline contributions.
- 15:00-15:45 Break.
- 15:15-16:15 Status report and discussion of Clipper Resolution;
- Discussion on digital signature legislation.
- 16:45-17:00 Wrap-up.
-
- Saturday, April 16 Major Theme: Work Product!; Notarial Matters
-
- 8:30- 9:00 Continental breakfast and registration.
- 9:00-10:30 Break-out sessions on Guideline.
- 10:30-10:45 Break.
- 10:45-12:30 Additional presentation by contributors to the Guideline;
- Review of outline and contributions; Discuss work assignments.
-
- 12:30-13:30 Lunch & informal presentation - Bertram Cottine, Esq.
- 13:30-15:00 Discussion of corporate form for the accredited certifying
- organization for attorney-notaries.
- 15:00-15:45 Break.
- 15:15-16:15 Resolve work assignments; meeting review; appointments.
- 16:45-17:00 Wrap-up.
-
- NOTARIZATION AND NONREPUDIATION WORK GROUP
- INFORMATION SECURITY COMMITTEE
- April 14-16, 1994
-
- Meeting Details
-
- Papers: All prior participants who plan to attend must submit their
- agreed upon contributions as soon as possible to:
-
- baum@hulaw1.harvard.edu and to sudiaf@panix.com.
-
- Please bring a copy of the contribution to the meeting in both paper
- form and on disk. First-time participants (who plan to attend the
- April meeting) must submit a brief paper (~3 pages in length) relevant
- to the subject matter; or discuss their planned contribution to the
- Committee (please contact Michael Baum for details). A binder of
- prior papers will be presented to new participants during registration.
- Prior participants are requested to bring their Work Group binders.
-
- Meeting Location: Banner, Birch, McKie & Beckett
- 1001 G. St., N.W. - 11th Floor
- "Floating Conference Room"
- Washington, DC 20001-4597
- Tel: 202-508-9100 (Attn. Lisa Jones)
- Fax: 202-508-9299
-
- SMOKING ANYWHERE IN THE BUILDING IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED
-
- Meals: Continental breakfast and refreshments during the breaks
- will be served as well as a light lunch (at cost).
-
- Hotel: The closest hotel to the meeting is the Grand Hyatt Washington,
- 1-202-582-1234. The next closest hotel is the Holiday Inn Crowne
- Plaza, 1-202-737-2200.
-
- RSVP: Please confirm your intention to participate to Ann Kowalski,
- Section Manager, Section of Science and Technology (ABA Chicago,
- Phone: 312-988-6281 or kowalskya@attmail.com) as soon as possible.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of TELECOM Digest V14 #139
- ******************************
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Area # 700 EMAIL 03-21-94 11:08 Message # 7208
- From : CHAOPSYC@MOOSE.UVM.EDU
- To : ELIOT GELWAN PVT RCVD
- Subj : Re: origins of conscious
-
- @SUBJECT:Re: origins of consciousness, cont'd
- From chaopsyc@moose.uvm.edu Mon Mar 21 11:10:04 1994
- Received: from moose.uvm.edu by uu9.psi.com (5.65b/4.0.061193-PSI/PSINet) via
- SMTP;
- id AA25151 for eliot.gelwan; Mon, 21 Mar 94 11:10:04 -0500
- Received: from localhost by moose.uvm.edu (AIX 3.2/UCB 5.64/4.03-UVM/CSO)
- id AA82182; Mon, 21 Mar 1994 11:08:05 -0500
- Date: Mon, 21 Mar 1994 11:08:05 -0500
- Message-Id: <01HA8ADD0UD48X4R31@jazz.ucc.uno.edu>
- Reply-To: chaopsyc@moose.uvm.edu
- Originator: chaopsyc@moose.uvm.edu
- Sender: chaopsyc@moose.uvm.edu
- Precedence: bulk
- From: RJPPS@jazz.ucc.uno.edu
- To: Multiple recipients of list <chaopsyc@moose.uvm.edu>
- Subject: Re: origins of consciousness, cont'd
- X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0b -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas
-
- Family IS the definition of chaos!
- -Bob
-
-
-
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