rfmcdonald: (cats)
In April 2010, I reported the the story of Tama, a cat who had become master of a railway station in the Japanese city in Kinokawa.

Station-Master Tama


In June of this year mentioned that Tama had died at the ripe old age of 16. Happily, as reported by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Tama has been officially replaced by deputy Nitama.





A Japanese railway station famous for its stationmaster cat has appointed another feline as its replacement.

The station's previous cat, Tama, was mourned at a lavish funeral after she died from heart failure in June having patrolled Kishi station, south-west of Osaka, for eight years.

Tama quietly patrolled the station dressed in a custom-made cap and uniform and became a popular mascot who attracted tourists from across Japan.

The new cat — reportedly named Nitama — will take over where its much-loved predecessor left off.

The station hopes the new cat will continue to bring more visitors to the struggling local railway.
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VanCityBuzz' Kenneth Chan notes that apparently China is considering funding a high-speed rail connection between Beijing and Vancouver (via Siberia and Alaska).

I'm impressed by the scope.

(Business in Vancouver suggests that the rail link could be a convenient way to export large amounts of Albertan oil to China.)

China is contemplating on building a high-speed railway that will link Beijing to Vancouver, a 13,000 kilometre route that will cross Siberia and reach Alaska through a 200 kilometres long tunnel under Bering Strait – the narrow point between the two continents.

It was reported on state-run television and the Beijing Times newspaper earlier this month. According to another report by the English language version of China Daily, “The project will be funded and constructed by China. The details of this project are yet to be finalized.”

From Vancouver, the line will branch on to continue to Eastern Canada before reaching its final destination on the American East Coast.

The line would be 3,000 kilometres longer than the epic Trans-Siberia railroad with trains traveling from end to end at an average of 350 km/h, completing a one-way trip in about 37 hours.

One estimate pegs the cost of building such a line at $2 trillion with the main engineering challenge revolving around the technology needed to construct the Bering Strait undersea tunnel – a length four times that of the Chunnel between the United Kingdom and France and an area known for its seismic activity. The economics behind constructing and maintaining such expensive infrastructure is also in question.

The ‘China-Siberia-Canada-America Line’ is among four international high-speed railway projects being contemplated by the Central People’s Government of China. The Beijing Times also lists three other lines that will connect China to London (through Paris, Berlin, Warsaw, Kiev and Moscow), Central Asian nations, and Southeast Asia.
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  • Centauri Dreams' Paul Gilster visits depictions of Europa in classic science fiction.

  • The Dragon's Gaze links to a paper claiming that whether a planet of Earth's mass becomes Earth-like or a mini-Neptune depends not so much on the planet as on the characteristics of its nebula.

  • The Dragon's Tales notes archeological analyses which suggest that Neanderthals were just as technologically capable of Homo sapiens.

  • Joe. My. God. quotes from ex-ex-gay John Paulk, who describes the factors that led him to flirt with the ex-gay movement.

  • Language Log's Victor Mair doesn't think Putonghua will become a world language because of its script. (Me, I think that's decidedly secondary.)

  • Lawyers, Guns and Money starts a discussion on nuclear waste that's a bit too panicky for my liking.

  • The Power and the Money notes that southern Brazil, like Argentina and Uruguay experienced sharp relative economic decline in the 20th century. This regional decline got missed in national statistics.

  • Strange Maps' Frank Jacobs wonders why so many towns in the American South--especially Georgia--seem to be circular.

  • Towleroad notes that prominent Russian homophobe and politician Vitaly Milonov is calling on Russia to abandon Eurovision on account of its queer associations.

  • Transit Toronto notes a proposal to connect Toronto to London and Kitchener-Waterloo via high-speed train.

  • Window on Eurasia suggests that the Russian private sector is being undermined and notes that Russians don't travel all that much.

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NOW Toronto's Cynthia McQueen writes about how the stretch of railroad in midtown Toronto--a stretch that roughly parallels Dupont Street and runs just behind my home, actually--is being used to transport processed oil. The potential for catastrophe is obvious, although I can say that going through my neighbourhood the trains move slowly, at least.

Ken Brown has lived near the Canadian Pacific stretch of tracks between Avenue and Yonge for 42 years.

Since the 72-railcar explosion in Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, that killed 47 people last summer, he’s noticed something unnerving: an increase in DOT-111 tankers carrying oil through the neighbourhood. In fact, those railcars that derailed in Lac-Mégantic, carrying highly volatile Bakken oil from North Dakota, came through Toronto en route to that disaster.

Brown has counted at least two trainloads of oil with 100 cars each passing through Toronto every day.

[. . .]

Keith Stewart, a climate and energy specialist with Greenpeace, sees security concerns as “largely manufactured to decrease transparency.”

The difficulty with rail, he says, is that constitutionally it was “granted all these extraordinary powers because at that time building the rail lines was about constructing the country, and so right now they’re still almost completely impervious to outside regulation apart from the federal government.”

Stewart, too, has noticed an increase in DOT-111 tanker traffic on the CP tracks running through his Dupont-and-Dufferin neighbourhood in the last five years.

“There’s been a huge increase, and that’s been done with no oversight,” he says. “All you have to do is watch the train tracks. If you see the cars are DOT-111 tankers, you know they’re filled with oil.”

For 20 years, the TSB has commented on the vulnerability of DOT-111s because of their thin hulls, among other things. But a phase-out plan currently under way means they’ll be in use for another 10 years.
rfmcdonald: (photo)
Charlottetown CNR Station (1)


The Charlottetown Canadian National Railroad station at 14 Weymouth Street, a Romanesque building built with Prince Edward Island sandstone, was once the hub of the Prince Edward Island Railway.

The original Charlottetown Railway Station was a wooden building located close to where the current station now stands. The wooden structure was one of six terminal stations across Prince Edward Island. These terminal stations had covered platforms, which created not only a fire hazard, but a great deal of smoke within the building each time an engine passed through the engine shed. The Station was 25 by 40 feet with a covered track and a 200-foot long platform.

By 1900, there was a need to construct a new railway station. A great deal of controversy ensued as a new site for the Station was being selected. According to newspapers of the day, city residents favored a site at the foot of Great George Street but ultimately it was decided to build the new building near the original wooden Station, in the east bog, on the edge of town. A pond had to be filled in before construction could begin on the new building. Controversy continued as the building was constructed. Allegations of political corruption and poor workmanship were reported. Finally, when the building was completed, project costs had exceeded 13 000 dollars.

Despite the problems with the project, the beautiful, Island sandstone building was opened on 8 July 1907. The contractor was EA Wallberg of Montreal and the Engineer who supervised the site was W. Frank Boggis. The building was Richardsonian Romanesque influenced, with its heavy Island sandstone construction, Nova Scotia Freestone trim and large, arched, deeply set windows. The building had three floors with the first containing a ticket sales area, as well as general and separate waiting rooms. The second floor housed offices and the third floor was dedicated to union meetings and storage.

The railway played an integral role in the transportation needs of Islanders throughout the 19th and a large portion of the 20th century. It was also one of the largest employers on the Island. However, due to declining passenger traffic in the 1960’s, the railway passenger service ceased, with only the freight service remaining. The railway’s freight service was finally terminated on 31 December 1989. Soon after, all railway tracks were removed and the land was turned over to the Province. The rail beds were eventually converted to a large trail system running throughout the entire Province known as the Confederation Trail. The former Charlottetown CNR Station is unique in Prince Edward Island and stands as a reminder of a bygone era. The building is a landmark and supports the Weymouth Street and Water Street streetscape.


Renovated in the 1990s, the building now houses the province's Workers Compensation Board.

Charlottetown CNR Station (2)


On the Weymouth Street side of the building, neat iron arches support the overhang.
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Hamutal Dotan's Torontoist post outlines today's events.

At a press conference this afternoon RCMP officials announced that two men have been arrested and face charges in conjunction with an attack they were allegedly planning against a particular VIA rail route (though the RCMP would not confirm which one). Chiheb Esseghaier (30, Montreal) and Raed Jaser (35, Toronto) face multiple charges for “activities related to terrorism”—including “conspiring to carry out an attack against, and conspiring to murder persons unknown for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with a terrorist group”—and will appear at Old City Hall for a bail hearing tomorrow.

RCMP Assistant Commissioner James Malizia emphasized that there was no imminent threat to the public, and that the significance of today’s arrest lies in the support the suspects received “from Al Qaeda elements located in Iran.”

The investigation, dubbed Project SMOOTH, began in August 2012 and was led by the RCMP. Multiple other agencies participated in the investigation, including the FBI, the Toronto Police Service, York and Peel region services, and the OPP. Officials today declined to comment on whether further arrests were expected, or on the details of the planned attack, as their investigation is ongoing. They did say that the support Al Qaeda provided “was in the form of direction and guidance” (rather than material support like the provision of money).


The National Post reported from Montréal.

Chiheb Esseghaier, the younger of two men charged in the al Qaeda train plot, is a Tunisian-born PhD student at a Université du Québec nanotechnology lab who was threatened with expulsion for his disruptive behaviour and strict religious views that alienated his colleagues.

One colleague at Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique (INRS) in Varennes, Que., described Mr. Esseghaier, 30, as “a brainwashed person, basically,” who tore down posters he did not approve of, and pestered the administration to install a prayer room.

“He had very strict religious behaviour that made many people frustrated,” said the colleague, who asked that his name be withheld. “He had problems with the administration.”

His co-accused, Raed Jaser, 35, is a Palestinian with citizenship in the United Arab Emirates, who has permanent resident status in Canada. Search warrants were being executed Monday at his home in a Toronto suburb, where neighbours said they have seen a group of young men in traditional Muslim garb weightlifting.

‘‘If I was outside, or getting into my car, he wouldn’t even say hello. He was a very reserved guy. They kept entirely to themselves,’’ said Sanjay Chaudhary, 47, who lives next door.


CBC Toronto reported from Scarborough.

The two accused — Chiheb Esseghaier, 30, of Montreal and Raed Jaser, 35, of Toronto — face charges that the RCMP say include conspiring to carry out an attack against, and conspiring to murder persons unknown for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with a terrorist group.

Tomorrow, the men are due to appear in a Toronto court for a bail hearing.

The RCMP gave few details about the accused, though they indicated that neither man was a Canadian citizen.

During the Monday afternoon press conference, the RCMP said that while they believed the accused had "the intent and capacity" to carry out attacks, the public did not face any imminent risks in advance of the men’s arrest.

When asked what search warrants had revealed to police, Chief Supt. Jennifer Strachan said that information was not available because the searches were still ongoing.

Hours later, RCMP officers could be seen in an eastern Toronto neighbourhood, near Victoria Park Avenue and Finch Avenue East, where two homes were taped off and a large RCMP truck was parked nearby.


The CBC, meanwhile, commented on the Iranian connection.

[Security expert Seth] Jones argues that "Iran is likely holding al-Qaeda leaders on its territory first as an act of defence. So long as Tehran has several leaders under its control, the group will likely refrain from attacking Iran," which is a Shia Muslim country, while al-Qaeda is Sunni Islamist group which has often targeted Shias.

On the other hand, should the U.S. or Israel attack Iran, "Tehran could employ al-Qaeda in a response," Jones has said.

If the Iranian government should be convinced that al-Qaeda in Iran was secretly involved in supporting a plot in Canada, Jones expects Tehran will detain or expel some of the individuals responsible. "I cannot imagine the Iranian government would be happy with al-Qaeda plotting from its soil," he told CBC News.
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The Toronto Star today carried Tess Kalinowski's article chronicling the contribution made by Canadian singer-songwriter Emm Gryner to the campaign to restore passenger train service to the small southwestern Ontario town of St. Mary.

The problem with the campaign, as noted in the article's comments and elsewhere, is that there really is very little passenger traffic on a daily basis to and from St. Mary's. The town is home to six thousand people, and the number of people regularly commuting into Toronto on the Via passenger service is suggested as being quite low. The once-daily service sounds like as much as can reasonably be hoped for.

Trains to many southwestern Ontario locations were cut last year in what Via called “right-sizing” of its service. But communities who depended on passenger trains say they haven’t given up on having those trips restored.

Gryner has lent her voice and her video from an upcoming album called Music for Scholars to the fight that continues months after cuts to Stratford, Sarnia and Niagara service as well as some national Via runs.

[. . .]

“The St. Marys rail station is very picturesque. So are those tracks and the huge train bridge. It’s something I really love, living in a town with the train. I thought of the video as writing a letter to these trains, as though they are lost loves,” she said.

Gryner, 37, who moved to St. Marys from Montreal about 10 years ago, lives with her partner and children, ages 3 and 9 months. She travels regularly to Toronto to work and perform, and she likes to take the kids with her since the performances occupy a brief interval in many of those trips.

[. . .]

“Before they cut the trains, there were two morning trains and two in the evening coming back. To be honest, it’s a huge selling point of why we moved here, to have that convenience,” she said.

“Everyone’s pretty much afraid they’re just going to phase it right out,” said Gryner.

The remaining train trip doesn’t leave until after 8 a.m. and arrives in Toronto too late for early morning meetings, she said.

The return trip doesn’t leave Toronto until 8:36 p.m.
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3 Quarks Daily's Gautam Pemmaraju has a wonderful essay exploring the influence of trains on popular music, starting--of course--with Kraftwerk and their Trans-Europe Express.

The influential electronic music artists Kraftwerk, saw their 1977 concept album Trans-Europe Express as a symbol of a unified Europe, a “sonic poem” enabling a moving away from the troubled legacy of the war, and particularly, of Nazi Germany. The spectre of the Reich and their militaristic high speed road construction was often linked to the band’s fourth studio album Autobahn, although the band saw it, in part, as a “European rejoinder to American ‘keep on trucking’” songs. The French journalist and friend to the band, Paul Alessandrini, had apparently suggested the idea of the train as a thematic base (See the wikipedia entry): “With the kind of music you do, which is kind of like an electronic blues, railway stations and trains are very important in your universe, you should do a song about the Trans-Europe Express”. Described as embodying “a new sense of European identity”, the album was destined to become a seminal work of the band, not just in fusing a qausi-utopian political idea with their sonic aura, at once popular, idiosyncratic and profoundly influential, but also in ‘reclaiming the train’, which chugs across “borders that had been fought over”. In response to Kraftwerk’s espousal of European integration, band member Karl Batos says here,

We were much more interested in it at that time than being Germans because we had been confronted by this German identity so much in the States, with everyone greeting us with the 'heil Hitler' salutes. They were just making fun and jokes and not being very serious but we'd had enough of this idea.


The chugging beat, “ripe with unlikely hooks, and hypnotic, minimalist arrangements” is in ways an ideological amplification of the idea of Autobahn, referencing the transport networks of Germany, and seeking in its “propulsive proto electro groove…a high speed velocity transit away from the horrors of Nazism and World War II”. There was, however, as Pascal Bussy writes in Kraftwerk: Man, Machine, Music (1993), a formidable nationalism underlying their somewhat nebulous politics. Kraftwerk believed, as Hütter is quoted saying to the American journalist Lester Bangs in 1975, that they were unlike other contemporary German bands which tended to be Anglo-American; they wanted instead to be known as German since the “the German mentality, which is more advanced, will always be part of our behaviour”.

Drawing quite a bit of inspiration from pioneering avant-garde artists such as Karl Heinz Stockhausen, the Italian composer Russolo & the Fluxus Group (which included La Monte Young, Jon Hassel & Tony Conrad), it was actually the Frenchman Pierre Schaeffer that they were directly indebted to, in some manner, with regard to their electronic transport music. As Karl Batos reveals in the aforementioned interview, they were ‘following his path’, since it was the Schaeffer’s Musique Concrète piece using only train sounds that they were referencing.

Musique Concrète was a Schaeffer’s way of ‘turning his back on music’. It was a method of empirically gathering environmental sounds and creating sonic envelopes using these sources. In doing so it was in “an opposition with the way musical work usually goes”, Schaeffer believed, and the process of collecting sounds, ‘concrete sounds’, whatever their origin be, was “to abstract the musical values they were potentially containing”. It was a way of ‘freeing’ composition from its formalist shackles and reformulating the process of composition, ‘a new mental framework’, which saw the shaping of music as a more ‘plastic’ process. In a 1986 interview (read here), the broadcast engineer who worked for the radio station ORTF, says that having successfully driven out the German invasion in the years after the war, music was still ‘under an occupying power’ – Austrian, 12 tone music of the Vienna School. It was this that he wished to reject and seek instead, “…salvation, liberation if possible”. He along with Pierre Henry, in contrast to purely electronic music, developed pioneering modes and techniques of electroacoustic improvisation, wherein naturally occurring and other environmental sounds, ‘any and all sounds’, were recorded and then manipulated to create musical compositions.
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  • The Burgh Diaspora's Jim Russell takes issue with an American conservative's criticism of an anti-fracking film as state propaganda for the United Arab Emirates. No, the oil/natural gas market doesn't work that way.

  • Crooked Timber's Corey Robin wonders why Matthew Yglesias sees state repression--state policies, more broadly--as key to the problems of independent unions in China but not so in the United States.

  • [livejournal.com profile] pauldrye's False Steps examines the abortive British effort in the late 1950s to build its own space launch vehicle.

  • GNXP's Razib Khan argues, in commenting on free speech laws outside of the United States, in that the repression of speech on grounds of potential harm to the community isn't done from a consistent philosophical position. Thoughts?

  • James Bow recounts his experience on the last trip of the Northlander train into northern Ontario. It does sound like it had a lot of potential for tourism and whatnot that went unexploited.

  • Robert Farley at Lawyers, Guns and Money shares links to commentary on China's launch of its first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning.

  • Maximos discusses Australia's seasonal, El Nino-dependent, Lake George.

  • Estonia as a Nordic nation, not that different from Sweden is the theme of the latest Itching for Eestimaa post.

  • Eugene Volokh notes rioting in Bangladesh inspired by a Facebook image of a desecrated Koran that led to attacks on that country's Buddhist minority.

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CBC reports that today is the last day of operations for the Northlander passenger train that ran between Toronto and the northern Ontario town of North Bay, providing a vital transport link for many northern Ontarians.

The problem for the line, as James Bow noted in his April 2012 post "The Fall of the Northlander?", is that the Northlander is an uneconomic route, with a per-passenger subsidy of between 200 and 400 dollars. Better promotion by the provincial government of travel opportunities could have changed this, Bow argues, but that's clearly an issue not up for discussion at this very late stage.

The final Northlander train departed Cochrane Friday morning — and many people are taking the opportunity for one last ride.

More than a century of rail history is not fading away without acknowledgement as the passenger service was cancelled with the provincial government’s decision to get out of the rail business. The last round trip train travelled from Toronto to Cochrane Thursday and was expected to return Friday morning.

Former Ontario Northland Rail workers like Lorne Fleece — who started with the railway in 1949 — hopped on board to reminisce.

“I would say I have over 20,000 miles in train travel,” he said.

[. . .]

Two MPPs also boarded the final northbound train from Toronto to Cochrane — not for medical reasons, but to protest the train's cancellation. Timiskaming-Cochrane MPP John Vanthof was joined at Union Station by Timmins-James Bay MPP Gilles Bisson.

“I’m still stunned at the short sightedness of this decision,” said Vanthof.

“The Liberal government is shuttering the ONTC to save a few dollars, while they waste millions of dollars buying seats in the GTA. Once again, northerners are being left out in the cold. The fact that they won’t even maintain service through the Thanksgiving weekend just speaks to their total indifference to the North.”

When the brakes are applied for the final time on the Northlander, it will mark the end of more than 100 years of passenger rail history on the route.

The province has committed to keeping the Polar Bear Express running, however, and says it plans to enhance bus service.
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I like the idea of high-speed rail. I'd love a high-speed rail route in Canada, connecting Toronto to Montréal, with a side-spur to Ottawa, preferably one linking the entire central Canadian urban corridor from Windsor to Québec City. I love the idea of cross-border rail links, too, the idea of a high-speed link between Canada and New York City that New York Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney talked about with the Globe and Mail's Konrad Yakabuski particularly appealing to me. There's just the non-trivial question of whether or not any of these high-speed rail links would be financially viable. I suspect not, at least judging by the projections for a similar mooted high-speed rail link between Toronto and Buffalo.

Is my gut feeling wrong?

[New York Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney] wants governments in her country and Canada to get moving on building a high-speed rail line that would link Manhattan, where her district lies, to cities north of the border.

“It would really help the economies of our countries dramatically,” Ms. Maloney insisted in an interview with The Globe and Mail, as she prepared to take the stage on Tuesday night at the Democratic National Convention here. “Both of our countries should get behind it, push it and make it happen.”

The dream of bringing European fast trains to North America has been around for decades without making much headway. But it got a powerful boost from President Barack Obama, whose stimulus bill allocated $8-billion for the development of high-speed rail projects. Most of that money is still waiting to be spent.

Only one cross-border link – between New York and Montreal – is mentioned in the U.S. Transportation Department’s 2010 list of “priority corridors.” But little progress has been made on advancing the project advocated by the Quebec government. Prime Minister Stephen Harper has expressed no enthusiasm for the idea.

California is currently the site of the biggest and most controversial high-speed rail project in North America, a $68-billion plan to link San Francisco and Los Angeles in less than three hours. Construction on the first leg of the project, through California’s Central Valley, is slated to begin next year.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is also championing fast trains in his state. He is plowing state and federal funding into speeding up train service to upstate cities including Albany, Syracuse and Buffalo. He snagged an extra $500-million in federal high-speed rail money that was refused by Republican governors in Wisconsin and Ohio, who feared the faster train projects would end up as financial sink holes.

Ms. Maloney, whose district covers most of Manhattan’s east side and parts of Queens, thinks expanding the scope of New York’s projects to include more populated Canadian cities makes economic sense and could be the key to their viability.
rfmcdonald: (photo)
I've taken photographs of the railway bridge north of Dovercourt Road and Dupont Street before, here and here and here.

This is one photo of three taken looking south, on the west side of Dovercourt Road, at night. Which of the three exposures do you prefer?

Under the Dovercourt/Dupont bridge (1)

Under the Dovercourt/Dupont bridge (2)

Under the Dovercourt/Dupont bridge (3)
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Derek Flack's blogTO post certainly got my attention--Geary Avenue lies literally on the other side of the railroad tracks from my apartment. And I've not taken it much notice, notiwthstanding my four years' residence a few dozen metres from it. Doing a quick Google search, the only explicitly Geary Avenue photos of mine I can find are three pictures of a then-abandoned grocery store at Geary and Dovercourt. It now houses a bike shop, I think.

Now vacant at Geary and Dovercourt (3)


Geary Avenue might be a candidate for Toronto's ugliest street. Running parallel to the CPR tracks north of Dupont, it starts at Ossington Avenue in the east and runs a short 1.4 kilometres before coming to an unceremonious end halfway between Dufferin Street and Lansdowne Avenue. A mix of commercial and residential properties, the street is defined by something of an identity crisis. Although its mixed use legacy goes back a hundred years, it remains remarkable to track just how many different types of businesses currently make Geary their home. Along with a variety of autoshops, here one finds a hydroponics outfit, a mixed martial arts training facility, a costume rental warehouse, a couple of Portuguese bakeries and a karaoke bar (to name only a few).


It's a bit ugly, it's certainly gawky, but its awkward transition from industrialism to something more complex if less aesthetic makes it photoworthy indeed, Flack argues convincingly.

Go, see the photos. And the abandoned grocery store photographed above is visible in its new form, the last photo in his essay.
rfmcdonald: (photo)
The "CN" in "CN Tower" once referred to its builder and owner, the Canadian National Railway. The ownership has gone, but the name remains, so too the tracks separating it from the main body of the city.

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