2258:
1694:
25:
2269:
1684:
449:
On the MSX, there could be more than one floppy disk controller in two or more cartridge slots, and MSX-DOS could boot from several different floppy disk drives. This meant that it was possible to have both, a 5¼" floppy disk drive and a 3½" disk drive, and the user could boot from either one of them
659:
ready to go, so he suggested a few other developers, but Allen said he had already asked. Allen was in a hurry to get it done and nobody else could meet his timeline. Allen and
Paterson finally agreed, and on August 17, they signed an agreement to do "Z80 MS-DOS 1.25" for US$ 100,000 and the rights
774:
file system over CP/M's filing methods. This ensured that MSX-DOS floppies could be used on an MS-DOS machine, and that only one single formatting and filing system would be used. This was an important decision, because CP/M disks were often not interchangeable between machines, incompatible disk
385:
file and loads it into memory. In that case, the BDOS bypassed the BASIC ROMs, so that the whole 64 KB of address space of the Z80 microprocessor inside the MSX computer could be used for the DOS or for other boot-able disks, for example disk based games. At the same time, the original BIOS
731:
ASCII was having problems getting MSX-DOS working on the actual MSX machine. They had not provided an actual MSX machine to
Paterson, and instead flew him to Tokyo on January 28, 1984, to help them. It turned out that ASCII had been modifying the code without telling Paterson, so they were not
761:
To be able to run (slightly modified) CP/M software
Microsoft decided to implement functionality similar to major parts of the CP/M BIOS, routines that CP/M systems used to do specific disk operating tasks, such as opening files, etc. Instead of basing the command processor on CP/M's
701:
layer, that interfaced directly to the I/O System layer of the MS-DOS machine, that was running the emulation. This gave MSX-DOS direct access and control of the disk format. Most of the core code was file management, so this was necessary to test it out.
724:, that printed Paterson's name. The name was encoded with FAT code, so it could not be found by simply searching the file. After delivery of the beta version, the code was sent to
339:
of an unexpanded MSX computer had no built-in disk support, but provided hooks for a disk extension, so the additional floppy disk expansion system came with its own BIOS extension
782:
system from MS-DOS to MSX-DOS. The resulting DOS was a system that was much user-friendlier than CP/M, but was (in principle) compatible with major CP/M software packages such as
327:
as a software and hardware standard for the MSX home computer standard, to add disk capabilities to BASIC and to give the system a cheaper software medium than Memory
394:
to control the hardware and other software mechanisms the main ROMs supplied. Also, due to the BDOS ROM, basic file access capabilities were available even without a
1395:
1238:
690:
and was able to run CP/M applications that had been source-level translated to 8086, that would mean, MSX-DOS would be able to run CP/M programs directly.
728:
in Japan. They created the I/O System for the MSX machine. That code was developed by Jay Suzuki. He figured out the easter egg and added his name to it.
716:
running under MSX-DOS. He finished coding COMMAND.COM a few days later. He worked out some bugs and demonstrated MSX-DOS to Paul Allen on
October 11. The
743:(ICE) for debugging. They got everything working and on April 23, 1984, Microsoft accepted delivery and made the final payment for MSX-DOS to Paterson.
739:
Chris Larson from
Microsoft and Jay Suzuki visited Paterson in Seattle at the end of February and early March 1984. They brought an MSX machine with an
2294:
1730:
778:
Microsoft also added a standard set of disk commands to MSX-DOS that were compatible with MS-DOS but not with CP/M. Finally they converted their
2133:
1270:
2273:
1388:
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that ran under MS-DOS, which would allow him to do the entire development project under MS-DOS. The MSX-DOS he was writing had an
373:, allowing the MSX computer to easily have access to its vast library of software available for a very small cost for the time.
758:
systems, because the Z80 used an extended 8080 architecture. Microsoft's own disk operating system was also inspired by CP/M.
1723:
1697:
1381:
1770:
1687:
655:
version of MS-DOS" for the MSX standard. At the time, Paterson was busy trying to get the first product of his startup
1356:
89:
1765:
108:
61:
1228:
686:). In this case, he was manually translating in the other direction. Because MS-DOS 1.x was modelled after CP/M's
2299:
2262:
1883:
1716:
1654:
68:
46:
717:
1634:
818:
Nextor: is an enhanced version of MSX-DOS2 developed by
Konamiman based on the original MSX-DOS2 source code.
687:
2093:
2178:
2128:
1572:
1214:
SVI MSX User Manual (M-246) 1985 (Spectravideo MSX DOS Disk
Operating System) Getting Started section 2.1
75:
2208:
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57:
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42:
2123:
2098:
35:
2314:
1908:
245:
1739:
1274:
721:
427:
277:
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At the time MSX-DOS was written, there was only one popular disk operating system for 8-bit
1775:
1669:
409:
and, if it exists, executes the commands specified in there. If MSX-DOS is not invoked and
265:
8:
2068:
1511:
779:
740:
736:. Paterson spent three days in Tokyo figuring out the problems and came back to Seattle.
698:
466:
395:
253:
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2043:
1888:
1780:
1013:
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770:(COMMAND.COM) based on its MS-DOS counterpart was used. Microsoft also chose its own
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starts, a BASIC program named "AUTOEXEC.BAS" will be carried out instead, if present.
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1541:
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For
Paterson, this was mostly a translation process. He had already written a Z80-to-
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MSX-DOS2: released in 1988, it featured many improvements such as subdirectories,
1938:
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2013:
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1421:
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1310:
1119:
853:
787:
644:
454:
406:
381:
Once MSX-DOS has been loaded, the system searches the MSX-DOS disk for the
720:
test version was officially delivered on
October 26, 1983. It included an
416:
362:
system, with which it was possible to boot a real disk operating system.
2203:
1868:
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24:
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316:
289:
1277:
Floppy Disk-Drive for PCjr to provide 256K of additional RAM
453:
Like MS-DOS 1.25, the first version of MSX-DOS did not have
2233:
2158:
2138:
2088:
2053:
1903:
1490:
1147:
1090:
1043:
827:
The following commands are supported by MSX-DOS version 2.
811:. Later versions of MSX computers (MSX2) added an internal
336:
1050:
In addition, ASCII provided the following MSX-DOS2 Tools.
1861:
1263:
652:
354:
This BIOS not only added floppy disk support commands to
296:
215:
147:
1279:- Infoworld Magazine p.15 vol.6 Issue 8, Framingham, MA"
390:" mechanism, so that DOS-based software could still use
1305:
1303:
1301:
1299:
1297:
1295:
1106:
417:
Similarities and differences between MSX-DOS and MS-DOS
323:
support were simultaneously developed by
Microsoft and
401:
At initial startup, COMMAND.COM looks for an optional
1222:
1220:
450:
depending on which drive had a bootable floppy in it.
1292:
1317:. Jorito, Maggoo, John Hassink, MSX Resource Center
49:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
1403:
1217:
815:, which MSX-DOS could use for time stamping files.
766:, which was known for some user unfriendliness, a
2286:
1738:
754:'s CP/M-80 system. It was also often used with
386:ROMs could still be accessed through a "memory
1339:
1724:
1389:
693:For this project, Paterson also wrote a Z80
1351:(User's Manual) (in Japanese and English).
775:formatting schemes being a factor in this.
2268:
1731:
1717:
1683:
1396:
1382:
1203:https://www.msx.org/The_History_of_MSX-DOS
422:MSX-DOS1, much like MS-DOS 1.25, used the
331:, and a more powerful storage system than
672:with a hardware product without royalty.
109:Learn how and when to remove this message
2295:Discontinued Microsoft operating systems
1309:
2287:
750:compatible microprocessors, which was
556:
1712:
1377:
660:for Paterson's company to distribute
1269:
797:
651:and MS-DOS 1.x, asking him to do a "
465:The following is a list of internal
47:adding citations to reliable sources
18:
16:8-bit operating system by Microsoft
13:
790:and the "M80" assembler and "L80"
398:by using extended BASIC commands.
376:
14:
2326:
426:value from the first byte of the
2267:
2257:
2256:
1693:
1692:
1682:
438:file system instead of from the
23:
1359:from the original on 2020-05-09
1241:from the original on 2019-09-28
34:needs additional citations for
1404:Operating systems by Microsoft
1328:
1252:
1208:
1196:
1:
1189:
822:
7:
1799:Multitasking MS-DOS 4.0/4.1
1573:Windows Embedded Automotive
1469:Multitasking MS-DOS 4.0/4.1
1162:
705:By October 2, 1983, he had
460:
434:parameter profiles for its
177:; 40 years ago
10:
2331:
2209:Technical Support SuperDOS
310:
218:home computer architecture
2252:
1986:
1859:
1756:
1747:
1678:
1622:
1596:
1583:Windows Embedded Industry
1550:
1504:
1409:
315:MSX-DOS and the extended
299:, and is a cross between
259:
237:
222:
211:
199:
189:
171:
161:
153:
143:
131:
1578:Windows Embedded Compact
1315:"The History of MSX-DOS"
768:command line interpreter
562:MSX-DOS version history
1259:MSX Technical Data Book
1230:MSX2 Technical Handbook
1227:"Chapter 3 - MSX-DOS".
2300:Disk operating systems
1909:Datapac System Manager
1740:Disk operating systems
1205:The History of MSX-DOS
732:working from the same
469:supported by MSX-DOS.
246:Command-line interface
682:translation program (
647:, original author of
278:disk operating system
1670:Xbox system software
639:On August 10, 1983,
440:BIOS Parameter Block
43:improve this article
2069:DEC BATCH-11/DOS-11
1748:MS-DOS, IBM PC DOS,
1512:Nokia Asha platform
809:environment strings
741:in-circuit emulator
563:
557:Development history
396:command interpreter
254:Text user interface
128:
2049:Concurrent DOS V60
2044:Concurrent DOS 68K
1889:Concurrent CP/M-86
1750:compatible systems
1558:Azure RTOS ThreadX
561:
276:is a discontinued
126:
2282:
2281:
1789:
1788:
1706:
1705:
1542:Windows 10 Mobile
1417:Microsoft Windows
1353:ASCII Corporation
1335:MSX-DOS version 2
1235:ASCII Corporation
805:memory management
798:Improved versions
680:assembly language
637:
636:
367:binary compatible
343:(built-in on the
325:ASCII Corporation
271:
270:
231:Monolithic kernel
119:
118:
111:
93:
2322:
2271:
2270:
2260:
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1754:
1753:
1733:
1726:
1719:
1710:
1709:
1696:
1695:
1686:
1685:
1517:Nokia X platform
1410:Desktop / Server
1398:
1391:
1384:
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1374:
1368:
1367:
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752:Digital Research
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286:Japan subsidiary
190:Marketing target
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123:Operating system
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1987:Other platforms
1982:
1939:NetWare PalmDOS
1855:
1785:
1749:
1743:
1737:
1707:
1702:
1674:
1618:
1592:
1568:Modular Windows
1546:
1500:
1405:
1402:
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1371:
1362:
1360:
1348:MSX-DOS 2 Tools
1345:
1344:
1340:
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1201:
1197:
1192:
1165:
1160:
1048:
825:
813:real-time clock
807:up to 16MB and
800:
714:macro assembler
707:Microsoft BASIC
559:
554:
463:
419:
379:
377:Boot processing
345:disk controller
335:. The standard
313:
240:
181:
179:
176:
172:Initial release
138:Microsoft Japan
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1896:
1894:Concurrent DOS
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1552:
1551:Embedded / IoT
1548:
1547:
1545:
1544:
1539:
1534:
1529:
1527:Windows Mobile
1524:
1519:
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1508:
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1327:
1313:(2014-02-17).
1291:
1273:(1984-04-30).
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657:Falcon Systems
635:
634:
633:December 1991
631:
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626:
625:November 1990
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455:subdirectories
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241:user interface
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197:
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194:Home computers
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31:
29:
22:
15:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
2327:
2316:
2315:1984 software
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2301:
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2200:
2197:
2195:
2192:
2190:
2187:
2185:
2184:Sinclair QDOS
2182:
2180:
2177:
2175:
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2170:
2167:
2165:
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2065:
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2057:
2055:
2052:
2050:
2047:
2045:
2042:
2040:
2039:Commodore DOS
2037:
2035:
2032:
2030:
2027:
2025:
2022:
2020:
2017:
2015:
2012:
2010:
2007:
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1532:Windows Phone
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1316:
1312:
1311:Paterson, Tim
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711:Microsoft M80
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456:
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442:(BPB) in the
441:
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397:
393:
389:
384:
374:
372:
368:
363:
361:
358:, but also a
357:
352:
350:
347:) called the
346:
342:
338:
334:
333:cassette tape
330:
326:
322:
319:with 3½-inch
318:
308:
306:
302:
298:
294:
293:home computer
291:
287:
283:
280:developed by
279:
275:
267:
264:
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207:
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202:
198:
195:
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188:
174:
170:
167:
166:Closed source
164:
160:
156:
154:Working state
152:
149:
146:
142:
139:
136:
134:
130:
121:
113:
110:
102:
91:
88:
84:
81:
77:
74:
70:
67:
63:
60: –
59:
55:
54:Find sources:
48:
44:
38:
37:
32:This article
30:
26:
21:
20:
2143:
2059:Cromemco DOS
2014:Apple ProDOS
1563:Azure Sphere
1463:
1361:. Retrieved
1347:
1341:
1330:
1319:. Retrieved
1283:. Retrieved
1276:
1265:
1254:
1243:. Retrieved
1229:
1210:
1198:
1049:
826:
788:Turbo Pascal
777:
760:
745:
738:
730:
704:
692:
674:
645:Tim Paterson
638:
602:August 1985
464:
407:AUTOEXEC.BAT
400:
380:
365:MSX-DOS was
364:
353:
314:
307: v2.2.
301:MS-DOS v1.25
273:
272:
201:Available in
162:Source model
120:
105:
96:
86:
79:
72:
65:
53:
41:Please help
36:verification
33:
2204:SpartaDOS X
1655:Singularity
1630:Azure Linux
1609:LAN Manager
1588:Windows IoT
1281:. Wernerkai
1271:Mace, Scott
586:March 1985
444:boot sector
432:file system
388:bank switch
383:COMMAND.COM
321:floppy disk
266:Proprietary
250:COMMAND.COM
2289:Categories
1954:PC-MOS/386
1944:Novell DOS
1841:SISNE plus
1831:Novell DOS
1811:IBM PC DOS
1771:Comparison
1635:Barrelfish
1363:2020-03-27
1321:2014-05-31
1285:2015-05-16
1245:2020-03-27
1190:References
780:pipelining
748:Intel 8080
722:easter egg
699:I/O System
662:MS-DOS 2.0
641:Paul Allen
610:July 1988
594:July 1985
578:June 1984
430:to select
411:Disk BASIC
403:batch file
392:BIOS calls
329:Cartridges
69:newspapers
2199:SpartaDOS
2154:NewDos/80
2029:Atari TOS
2024:Atari DOS
2019:Apple SOS
2009:Apple DOS
684:TRANS.COM
356:MSX BASIC
295:standard
282:Microsoft
212:Platforms
157:Abandoned
144:OS family
133:Developer
58:"MSX-DOS"
2263:Category
2229:TurboDOS
2194:SmartDOS
2134:MicroDOS
1994:AmigaDOS
1979:TurboDOS
1974:Towns OS
1919:K8918-OS
1914:DOS Plus
1804:MS-DOS 7
1776:Commands
1766:Timeline
1698:Category
1474:MS-DOS 7
1357:Archived
1355:. 1989.
1239:Archived
1237:. 1987.
1184:DOS Plus
1163:See also
900:DISKCOPY
873:COMMAND2
823:Commands
784:WordStar
734:codebase
695:emulator
467:commands
461:Commands
288:for the
229:IO.SYS (
99:May 2014
2310:MSX-DOS
2244:Z80-RIO
2214:Top-DOS
2169:RealDOS
2144:MSX-DOS
2079:DOS/360
2074:DIP DOS
2064:CSI-DOS
1969:SCP1700
1959:REAL/32
1949:OpenDOS
1929:MP/M-86
1899:CP/M-86
1874:4690 OS
1869:4680 OS
1851:FreeDOS
1846:PTS-DOS
1836:ROM-DOS
1597:Network
1464:MSX-DOS
971:RAMDISK
924:FIXDISK
850:BUFFERS
643:called
567:Version
371:CP/M-80
360:booting
311:MSX-DOS
305:CP/M-80
274:MSX-DOS
261:License
239:Default
206:English
180: (
127:MSX-DOS
83:scholar
2272:
2261:
2224:TRSDOS
2219:TR-DOS
2119:iS-DOS
2109:IDEDOS
2104:GEMDOS
2084:DOS XL
2034:BW-DOS
1999:AMSDOS
1924:FlexOS
1879:86-DOS
1860:Other
1821:DR-DOS
1794:MS-DOS
1650:Midori
1645:HomeOS
1623:Others
1604:MS-Net
1522:KIN OS
1505:Mobile
1459:MS-DOS
1174:86-DOS
1169:SymbOS
1087:EXPAND
1055:ADDAUX
1029:VERIFY
991:RENAME
928:FORMAT
876:CONCAT
864:CHKDSK
841:ATTRIB
833:ASSIGN
792:linker
668:, and
649:86-DOS
550:VERIFY
535:RENAME
510:FORMAT
495:DELETE
424:FAT ID
405:named
224:Kernel
85:
78:
71:
64:
56:
2239:Z-DOS
2174:SB-80
2164:PTDOS
2149:MyDOS
2114:IMDOS
2004:ANDOS
1964:SB-86
1826:H-DOS
1816:DOS/V
1781:Games
1742:(DOS)
1665:Verve
1660:Venus
1640:Cairo
1614:SONiC
1496:Xenix
1484:Z-DOS
1479:DOS/V
1179:MIDAS
1134:SPEED
1125:SLEEP
1120:PATCH
1070:BSAVE
1039:XCOPY
1019:UNDEL
1000:RNDIR
996:RMDIR
966:PAUSE
957:MVDIR
943:MKDIR
915:ERASE
859:CHDIR
846:BASIC
837:ATDIR
772:FAT12
726:ASCII
570:Date
520:PAUSE
505:ERASE
475:BASIC
436:FAT12
369:with
317:BASIC
290:8-bit
90:JSTOR
76:books
2305:CP/M
2274:List
2234:UDOS
2189:RDOS
2159:OS/M
2139:MP/M
2129:MDOS
2124:ISIS
2099:FLEX
2089:Edos
2054:CP/M
1904:CP/K
1884:ADOS
1688:List
1537:Zune
1491:OS/2
1442:3.1x
1432:2.1x
1427:2.0x
1422:1.0x
1152:VIEW
1148:UNIQ
1138:TAIL
1130:SORT
1115:MORE
1111:MENU
1103:LIST
1096:HEAD
1091:GREP
1083:DUMP
1079:CALC
1066:BODY
1059:BEEP
1044:XDIR
1014:TYPE
1009:TIME
961:PATH
953:MOVE
948:MODE
933:HELP
920:EXIT
905:ECHO
885:DATE
880:COPY
718:beta
709:and
677:8086
630:2.31
622:2.30
615:2.22
607:2.20
599:1.03
591:1.02
583:1.01
575:1.00
545:TYPE
540:TIME
515:MODE
485:DATE
480:COPY
349:BDOS
337:BIOS
303:and
226:type
182:1984
175:1984
62:news
2179:SCP
2094:EOS
1862:x86
1761:API
1437:3.0
1100:KEY
1075:CAL
1063:BIO
1034:VOL
1024:VER
1004:SET
986:REN
981:REM
910:ERA
895:DIR
890:DEL
869:CLS
764:CCP
756:Z80
688:API
670:3.0
666:2.5
653:Z80
530:REN
525:REM
500:DIR
490:DEL
428:FAT
341:ROM
297:MSX
284:'s
252:),
216:MSX
148:DOS
45:by
2291::
1452:NT
1447:9x
1294:^
1233:.
1219:^
1156:WC
1143:TR
1107:LS
976:RD
938:MD
854:CD
794:.
786:,
664:,
351:.
1732:e
1725:t
1718:v
1397:e
1390:t
1383:v
1366:.
1324:.
1288:.
1275:"
1248:.
446:.
248:(
233:)
184:)
112:)
106:(
101:)
97:(
87:·
80:·
73:·
66:·
39:.
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