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TUSR posted:All the ram is soldered in, and the batteries are glued. I read that iFixit said it will cost ~500$ to replace the batteries. Short answers: no, its all stuck in there. Have to pony up for Apple care, but even then, when your batteries are towards the end of their life Apple won't replace them for free. Battery replacement is US$200 (AUS$229.)
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 06:29 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 13:18 |
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~Coxy posted:Battery replacement is US$200 (AUS$229.) Ah sorry to mislead, I was working off information from: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2408290,00.asp quote:While many pieces can be replaced with screwdrivers, elbow grease, and maybe some willpower, some will inevitably need to be sent to a third party, which could cost upwards of $500 for something like a battery replacement, iFixit said.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 06:48 |
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Devian666 posted:What sort of condition is typical for what arrives. Roughly a ratio of clean-ish internals versus the clogged vents and full of mice laptops. To be honest, most of the MacBooks I work on are somewhat clean. Granted, I worked on one on Monday that was a veritable hairball radiating from the fan outlets. Even on a brand new MacBook, run something like Temperature Monitor and watch the core and GPU temps fly through the roof.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 06:54 |
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There are MBPs without soldered in ram and drives. The MBP retina and the Air are the only ones without. A normal 13 or 15" MBP will have replacable ram and drives. None of them have replacable batteries. However, replacing it will cost $129 (source) You can buy third party batteries as well, but I wouldn't trust them.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 08:10 |
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Chimp_On_Stilts posted:I remember the Time Capsule hard drive had a reputation for failing, but that was a few years ago. I think that issue was with power supplies. quote:An AE + external is upgradable and will save me some money, but might be a hassle. Unfortunately not supported for Time Machine.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 08:21 |
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x-virge posted:
Not supported, but does still work.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 13:48 |
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Wild EEPROM posted:There are MBPs without soldered in ram and drives. The MBP retina and the Air are the only ones without. A normal 13 or 15" MBP will have replacable ram and drives. The question was about MBPs with Retina screens, not just MBPs in general.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 13:51 |
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I can safely say that I'm worried about the future of personal computers if this is to become a thing. Integrated components will be the death of an entire industry. Imagine a world in which we can't swap parts out, upgrade components, and local repair shops are a thing of the past.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 16:24 |
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isomerc posted:I can safely say that I'm worried about the future of personal computers if this is to become a thing. Integrated components will be the death of an entire industry. Imagine a world in which we can't swap parts out, upgrade components, and local repair shops are a thing of the past. Luckily it's already blown up in Apple's face at least once with the energy requirements for governmental purchasing. It's dumb and bad and stupid all the way down, really.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 16:30 |
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isomerc posted:I can safely say that I'm worried about the future of personal computers if this is to become a thing. Integrated components will be the death of an entire industry. Imagine a world in which we can't swap parts out, upgrade components, and local repair shops are a thing of the past. The improvement in design, portability, and battery life are worth the trade.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 16:31 |
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Arivia posted:Luckily it's already blown up in Apple's face at least once with the energy requirements for governmental purchasing. It's dumb and bad and stupid all the way down, really. They're actually back on the EPEAT listings with all their products, including the rMBP.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 16:38 |
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TUSR posted:All the ram is soldered in, and the batteries are glued. I read that iFixit said it will cost ~500$ to replace the batteries. Short answers: no, its all stuck in there. Have to pony up for Apple care, but even then, when your batteries are towards the end of their life Apple won't replace them for free. I absolutely detest the fact that if this spreads to the whole line, I'll be forced to start using hackintoshes. The reality is I'm a clumsy oval office who's killed one laptop from beer (trip over cat, beer flies across room), and have an ongoing dispute with apple over the recent one (they claim liquid damage despite it being proved by two separate repair guys that there are no liquid sensors tripped and the damage was from a faulty ribbon cable, either way, warranty "cancelled" despite cancelling warranties being illegal under australian law). Either way, warranties haven't been worth the paper they have been If I can't hand repair my mac, I can't buy it, its as simple as that. This is a loving pigheaded and stupid way to treat loyal customers.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 16:44 |
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Jealous Cow posted:The improvement in design, portability, and battery life are worth the trade. Because none of these improve the design, portability or battery life (What is the battery sucking adhesive power from the glue and magicing it into power?. Does a 2mm clip really wreck portability? We can safely disregard design, its bad design, so .... uh what then?) , this is a fundamentally untrue assertion.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 16:46 |
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Yeast posted:Not supported, but does still work. It's a *lot* slower than the Time Machine, though.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 16:49 |
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Shmoogy posted:They're actually back on the EPEAT listings with all their products, including the rMBP. Oh god. duck monster: no, but clips do mean less space for the battery itself or other things. Compare a traditional SATA laptop interface to the vestigial connectors used in the rMBP and the current MBA; Apple engineers the hell out of their laptop (well, everything, really) interiors to try and make everything fit as best as possible, so I can see why they would want to cut down on as much inner cruft in the space to prefer greater performance overall. It's problematic for its side-effects, but the basic goal is understandably sane.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 16:54 |
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duck monster posted:Because none of these improve the design, portability or battery life (What is the battery sucking adhesive power from the glue and magicing it into power?. Does a 2mm clip really wreck portability? We can safely disregard design, its bad design, so .... uh what then?) , this is a fundamentally untrue assertion. To be fair, things like contacts and connectors that can make something user replacable adds both weight and girth to anything. When you're mashing stuff as close together as they're doing with those things, it adds up to make a difference. Personally, I think it's still bullshit and would be more than willing to trade the extra 2 mm thickness or whatever for being able to work on it, but that's the decision they made.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 16:58 |
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duck monster posted:Because none of these improve the design, portability or battery life (What is the battery sucking adhesive power from the glue and magicing it into power?. Does a 2mm clip really wreck portability? We can safely disregard design, its bad design, so .... uh what then?) , this is a fundamentally untrue assertion. Non-user serviceable parts enable the manufacturer to either reduce the size of the case or fill more of the case with battery. When engineers start asking questions like "Does a 2mm clip really wreck portability?" we end up with poo poo like this: "For just another 2mm we can add a parallel port!"
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 17:16 |
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isomerc posted:I can safely say that I'm worried about the future of personal computers if this is to become a thing. Integrated components will be the death of an entire industry. Imagine a world in which we can't swap parts out, upgrade components, and local repair shops are a thing of the past. I'm borrowing from John Siracusa here, but consider this: the same de-user-replacability process has been happening in vehicles for the last 20 years. Engines are becoming more and more sealed up, and hostile to the everyday repair process. Yet it's surely no coincidence that vehicles have become ever cheaper and ever more reliable as this has taken place.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 17:18 |
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2mm here, 2mm there...
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 17:20 |
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Lexicon posted:I'm borrowing from John Siracusa here, but consider this: the same de-user-replacability process has been happening in vehicles for the last 20 years. Engines are becoming more and more sealed up, and hostile to the everyday repair process. Yet it's surely no coincidence that vehicles have become ever cheaper and ever more reliable as this has taken place. Agree 100%.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 17:34 |
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I hate to do this, but on the last page I had a question that Id like people to look into, must have been glazed over because it was my first post or something.TUSR posted:I was wondering if anyone here has heard about using iTunes Connect VIP store for a discount. Ive seen one of my friends make a free iBooks publishing account and in about a months time he was given access to the VIP store in which he got ~20% off of items. (Including his new Retina Pro) Im about 22 days into the approval process for access to the VIP store.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 18:03 |
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TUSR posted:I hate to do this, but on the last page I had a question that Id like people to look into, must have been glazed over because it was my first post or something. I think Apple offers that to developers who are enriching their platform, as a thank you and to encourage use of their latest technologies. I don't think Apple offers that so freeloaders can save 20% without contributing anything back to the ecosystem. I doubt anyone ignored your question for any reason other than that.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 18:06 |
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Lexicon posted:I'm borrowing from John Siracusa here, but consider this: the same de-user-replacability process has been happening in vehicles for the last 20 years. Engines are becoming more and more sealed up, and hostile to the everyday repair process. Yet it's surely no coincidence that vehicles have become ever cheaper and ever more reliable as this has taken place. I have a MBA I got a few months ago. Prior to that, most of my life I had been a PC user. My first computers were desktops that I could as a teenager, geek out and read how to upgrade on the internet myself. At a fraction of the retail cost for those parts as the sum of their whole. I see what Apple is doing from a business standpoint, the Genius bar and proprietary information is in place to ensure consumers don't try and repair things themselves, and realize they don't need to pay $500 for some ram or an SSD upfront when buying the machine. They have the weight in the industry to experiment in a way that someone like Toshiba or Acer or Dell can't - not through a place like Best Buy. Soldering components in is sacrilegious to tech people, and upgradeability used to be a selling point on a lot of machines. Keep in mind, I never hosed around with trying to upgrade a laptop- since that is much more limited to just RAM or harrddrive or what have you. But I have to disagree with the assertion that the soldering was necessary for the design and compactness of the rMBP. Why? Mainly because they also did it to the MBA refresh, which gave their motive away. If they haven't already - they are moving towards an anti-DIY client base and want their customers depending on a Genius, buying high margin Applecare, and visiting their retail location repeatedly for help. It's a solid strategy and has been in place for a long time now, it is just more obvious with this soldering. Unless there is a giant backlash or outcry, it will continue down to all of their machines. Perhaps they will even have a dissolver for the glue, but only available at the Apple Store, much like the special screwdrivers they have now. The idea isn't to make it impossible to upgrade (although that is a nice selling point when buying your machine, in addition to the One-To-One, at least they are nice about giving you 1 year for Applecare, for now), it's to make it impossible to cut them out and use a less expensive SSD.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 18:16 |
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Jealous Cow posted:I think Apple offers that to developers who are enriching their platform, as a thank you and to encourage use of their latest technologies. No that was more so me passing my first post off as a joke. I had a friend who made a free iBooks account to publish free books. Then in about a months time he was approved for the VIP store in which he gets ~20% off of products. Ill ask him for a screenshot of the store and his account status to prove it.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 18:18 |
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ONEMANWOLFPACK posted:I have a MBA I got a few months ago. Prior to that, most of my life I had been a PC user. My first computers were desktops that I could as a teenager, geek out and read how to upgrade on the internet myself. At a fraction of the retail cost for those parts as the sum of their whole. I see what Apple is doing from a business standpoint, the Genius bar and proprietary information is in place to ensure consumers don't try and repair things themselves, and realize they don't need to pay $500 for some ram or an SSD upfront when buying the machine. They have the weight in the industry to experiment in a way that someone like Toshiba or Acer or Dell can't - not through a place like Best Buy. Soldering components in is sacrilegious to tech people, and upgradeability used to be a selling point on a lot of machines. This is a stretch, at best. I highly doubt Apple's design decisions are being driven by a desire to bolster AppleCare sales and force trips to see a Genius. That sounds totally paranoid.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 18:19 |
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TUSR posted:No that was more so me passing my first post off as a joke. Good for him. I hope his books do well. Are you a developer/publisher?
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 18:20 |
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Jealous Cow posted:Good for him. I hope his books do well. The thing is, he has provided no content to the store. Im actually working on a free book for university students being introduced to the Mac platform and the Apple ecosystem. http://www.tuaw.com/2012/04/12/apple-introduces-vip-discounts-for-ibooks-publishers/ quote:Apple appears to be offering rather hefty discounts to some (possibly all) iBooks publishers as part of a new iTunes VIP program. Information is still developing on this front.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 18:24 |
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ONEMANWOLFPACK, have you looked at a tear down of a rMBP/MBA/Mini? That glue over latches is that important because there is that little space in them. The tolerances are incredibly tight. If you compare the rMBP and the other 2012 MBP it makes sense to glue the batteries in because that gluing directly results in Apple being able to redesign and narrow the chassis. It's not money-grubbing paranoia, it's artifice in the best sense.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 18:29 |
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TUSR posted:The thing is, he has provided no content to the store. Well that's pretty cool. On that note, I don't know anything about the VIP program.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 18:30 |
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Arivia posted:ONEMANWOLFPACK, have you looked at a tear down of a rMBP/MBA/Mini? That glue over latches is that important because there is that little space in them. The tolerances are incredibly tight. If you compare the rMBP and the other 2012 MBP it makes sense to glue the batteries in because that gluing directly results in Apple being able to redesign and narrow the chassis. It's not money-grubbing paranoia, it's artifice in the best sense. Jealous Cow posted:On that note, I don't know anything about the VIP program.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 19:35 |
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I really wonder what's going to happen with the MacPro.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 19:37 |
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Jealous Cow posted:I really wonder what's going to happen with the MacPro. Tim did say there were going to be updates in 2013 at WWDC, IIRC. japtor: sure, the Mini has standard bays but you're still layering hard disks on top of each other and pulling the logic board out to get stuff to fit. It's not completely proprietary, but you can definitely see how the form factor influences the internals. It's a good example.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 19:58 |
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After its AppleCare recently expired, I've come to realize that it might be time to retire my mid-2009 13" MBP. It's still in good shape, just starting to show its age is all. Since I can't afford a rMBP and don't really need the fancy display, I'm considering a Macbook Air. I seldom have more than 20 tabs open in Google Chrome -- this is probably the most intensive thing I do -- but I'm thinking of installing Parallels and Windows 7 just so I can cut the umbilical cord from my crappy XP desktop. With that in mind, I'm considering the 13" high-end Macbook Air with 8 GB RAM, and I might throw in the 2.0GHz i7 since it's only $94 more. Advice on any of this is appreciated, but I'm most interested in hearing about the Air's SSDs. Is the Samsung SSD (256 GB) that much better than the Toshiba (128 GB)? Truthfully, if this isn't the case I'll probably just grab the 13" low-end Air with the RAM upgrade (unless someone vouches for the i7?). Thanks, goons. EDIT: Forgot to mention, the Air will act as my main (and only) computer. Thunder Bear fucked around with this message at 22:29 on Aug 10, 2012 |
# ? Aug 10, 2012 22:26 |
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Glenn posted:Advice on any of this is appreciated, but I'm most interested in hearing about the Air's SSDs. Is the Samsung SSD (256 GB) that much better than the Toshiba (128 GB)? Truthfully, if this isn't the case I'll probably just grab the 13" low-end Air with the RAM upgrade (unless someone vouches for the i7?). The benchmarks will show big differences between the drives, but will you notice? If I'm installing some huge program from a DMG I can tell my 2011 Air (with the slow Toshiba drive) The 2012 drives use new drives from both Toshiba (Sandforce) and Samsung (830). The Toshiba is faster in compressible data tests, and the Samsung is faster in non-compressible tests.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 22:35 |
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I feel pushed for space on a dedicated Windows laptop with a 128GB drive - if you want parallels then I'd want more space
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 22:37 |
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The 13" Air is an incredible machine. While the Toshiba drive has its quirks any modern SSD is going to blow the absolute poo poo out of any platter drive. I have the Toshiba drive (and the LG LCD, which is also something the Macrumors people go on about but I can't see anything wrong with it) and Photoshop cold launches in 4 seconds. It's pretty amazing.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 22:38 |
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If anyone is interested in the possibility of Retina across all Mac platforms, take a look at this. http://uk.hardware.info/news/29388/intel-haswell-gpu-chip-3x-faster-than-ivy-bridge-gpu quote:Sources of Fudzilla claim that Intel's upcoming Haswell processor will have an integrated GPU that is three times as fast as the current HD 4000 GPU, present in the Ivy Bridge chips. Confidential roadmaps have shown a comparison from which this conclusion was drawn. The fourth generation of the Core architecture and Intel's latest tick promises exceptionally fast 3D performance. Converting video material will allegedly also be twice to three times as fast. Sorry for the awful quality, but here is the prices using the iTunes Connect VIP Store. $1783 CAD for the base Retina. TUSR fucked around with this message at 23:17 on Aug 10, 2012 |
# ? Aug 10, 2012 23:06 |
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TUSR posted:If anyone is interested in the possibility of Retina across all Mac platforms, take a look at this.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 23:33 |
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Today is a good day.
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# ? Aug 10, 2012 23:37 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 13:18 |
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ChocNitty posted:Today is a good day. I wish my day was that good. On the upside getting AppleCare+ for my iPad was completely painless, even the hold music was nice. For once being more than 50 miles away from an Apple store pays off.
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# ? Aug 11, 2012 00:28 |