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What is the absolutely worst job interview question that you've been asked?
What did you answer? Did you get the job?

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77 Answers

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They asked me if I smoked pot in Amsterdam, and yes I got the job.

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You said "yes", right? Right?? I know I wouldn't hire anyone who'd been to Amsterdam and didn't smoke pot while there. – Sam Wessel Sep 22 '08 at 22:08
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Was the next question "Did you inhale?"? – Joe Skora Oct 13 '08 at 21:06
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I am a developer working in Amsterdam (yes, indeed right now) but I have never used any pot in Amsterdam. – tuinstoel Feb 24 at 16:40
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Nope, I just ate the brownies. :P – dotjoe Feb 26 at 20:55
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@lock, it's a good answer. I think that this is a poor interview question because your employer isn't entitled to pry into your personal life. What you do on your time is your business. – Nik Reiman Apr 6 at 18:35
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  1. Are you available to work overtime?
  2. Can you work on saturdays?

Yes, I truly believe that working less enhances productivity.

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If that's their expectations, I think it's good that they were up front about it. – kenj0418 Apr 10 at 4:11
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Can you work on caturdays? :) – Arnis L. Sep 28 at 17:47
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What is the syntax to create a database in SQL Server?

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Of course, a DBA creates alot of databases in a single day... – Luc M Jun 27 at 0:34
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Interviewer: Tell me about Collections (in Java).

Me: It's a framework for data structures.

Interviewer: Can you name them all?

Clearly, I failed to name all of the collections from memory. I still got the job anyways.

From the moment I heard that question, I should have known that it was a reverse interview.

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+1 for "Reverse Interview" – Adam Backstrom May 27 at 16:15
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About six months ago I interviewed at an online loan brokerage firm (software engineering department). The question that stumped me was "Why do you want to work in an industry that's obviously in so much trouble?" At the time it seemed like things might rebound, but in retrospect I'm glad I didn't get that job.

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My worst question asked ever:

What are the different types of encapsulation?

Nothing about how is encapsulation useful or how will I try to implement it in a particular problem but the theoretical definition and the types of encapsulation.

I believe that that was the end of the interview for me.

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Im guessing he meant to ask about public, private and protected... but still a very confusing turn of phrase. – metao Oct 30 '08 at 3:27
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"How would you determine how many gas stations a town needs?"

This was from a manager who asked several "creative-thinking-outside-the-box" puzzle questions during the interview. Once I heard this question, I knew I didn't want to work for him.

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I would invent something called "the free market". When there aren't enough, more will open. When there are too many, some will close. Tada. – Jon B Oct 29 '08 at 3:09
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What's wrong with that? It's a modeling and problem solving question. – TraumaPony Feb 17 at 3:48
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Got to disagree...it's not pointless or a brain teaser...it's a problem where they're trying to see how you approach a situation that isn't directly within your line of experience. They don't care that you get the "right" answer...they want to see how you approach solving it. – Beska Feb 26 at 21:08
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This is a great question to see if someone understands how to use Fermi estimations, which are incredibly useful when figuring out schedules for engineers, among many things. See the Wikipedia page on "Fermi problem." – Not Sure Apr 27 at 22:26
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I am a strong supporter of this kind of 'out of the box' or 'out of expertise' question. Which is the only way we can measure how smart one is. Because you can always by heart 'What is polymorphism in C++'? even though he might never done it in the real world. – Jobi Joy Apr 27 at 22:51
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It's the question they ask where you find out you've just been set up by the agency in a 'bait-and-switch' scam.

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The worst and most irrelevant question I have been asked is: Are you a vegan?

And after the interview, I was sure I didn't want to work there even if they offered me tha job.

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Yep. Discrimination is absolutely legal (in the US), provided it's not specifically made illegal. For instance, I can refuse to hire you because you wear only red ties. That's discrimination, but it's okay. Not okay to discriminate over religion, gender, age, etc... – Beska Feb 26 at 21:00
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You sure they didn't say "Virgin"? Could've been some strange ritualistic place... lucky you didn't take it! – Valerion Mar 10 at 10:46
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@Valerion, Steve Jobbs asked IBM guy if he was a virgin in "Pirates of Silicon Valley". – Daniyar Jun 5 at 17:45
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"How would you determine how many gas stations a town needs?"

That's a question Microsoft uses.

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This is Microsoft right? So...gas station home, gas station basic, gas station premium, gas station business, gas station professional, gas station ultimate. Six. The town will need six gas stations. – Mike Robinson Apr 10 at 4:27
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I used to ask questions like that at Microsoft. I never cared whether you got the answer "right" or not. I used questions like this to quickly find out a) whether you were willing to try to solve a problem that didn't immediately seem relevant or not, and b) could you explain your reasoning, and c) was your reasoning reasonably sound or completely made up, and d) did you know the different between sound reasonining and made up reasoning. I still think those are all things I'd want to know before I hired anyone. – Alan McBee Jun 3 at 17:34
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Interviewer: Can you start now?

Me: What like, NOW, now...

Interviewer: Yes

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I've had this before, although I didn't even receive an interview. I asked for the job and was given it there and then. I had to beg them to actually sign a contract before I started working. Nevertheless, I discovered that it was a hellhole, and I left soon after. – EnderMB Oct 13 '08 at 21:16
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Happened to me too. No interview, no worries. I've worked for the same company for 6 years now, happily. Amazingly, they flew me from Illinois to Florida a couple days after I called and inquired about the position. Perfect recipe for disaster, but turned out to be a miracle :) – Jonathan Sampson Feb 17 at 4:21
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I can't remember exactly, it was some time ago, but it went something like:

Interviewer: Can you tell me a little about variable naming conventions?

Me: Well there is Hungarian notation, and then there......

Interviewer: Huh! I've never heard of Hungarian, what's that?

In the end I declined the job.

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Maybe that's a GOOD thing. – JohnFx Apr 27 at 23:23
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I'd probably say that a strshop that had never heard of strHungarian would probably be a good place to strwork. – Rich Bradshaw Jun 26 at 19:27
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Or it could be a bad sign. They could use it, but don't know it's the Hungarian notation. – Ikke Jun 26 at 20:34
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My absolute worst was: Have you ever written code to bypass a pop-up blocker?

This was for a position at a web advertising agency, the job description was "Create an maintain applications for managing online marketing campaigns." I should have known better...

Needless to say, I didn't take that job when it was offered.

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What football team do you support ?

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"Football? That's the one with the funny shaped ball, right?" (USA answer) – James Curran Dec 3 '08 at 19:56
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What handegg team do you support ? – dalle Mar 10 at 6:59
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It's not the worst but I did get asked once:

What is the difference between the private and public keywords?

To which I answered the obvious solution, to which the interviewer sighed with relief and stated:

You know, out of the four people to come here today you're the first to get that question right!

OMG! WhoTF were the other applicants? Potential cleaners that had got wandered into the wrong interview room?

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I would not qualify this as a bad question, as it actually questions the applicants understanding of a very basic concept and helps weed out those who have clearly gone wrong. – Christian P. Sep 21 '08 at 21:35
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I agree. EVERY candidate we interview, we ask this question. It's at the phone interview stage, not face-to-face, but we still ask it. Not knowing is almost auto-fail. – Marcin Feb 18 at 1:24
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Similarly many candidates I get can't tell me (accurately) the difference between a struct and a class in C++. I do enjoy the strange theories they come up with sometimes though. – jeffamaphone Mar 10 at 7:00
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LOL @Quarrelsome
I must admit, I've been to several now where I've been asked fundamental questions and had a similar response. my favourite though was being asked in one interview what freebie defaults you get with a C++ compiler (i.e. don't have to be explicitly declared) and I couldn't answer fully (I got default constructor and destructor). and i didn't get the job (mainly due to thier 5 page long list of programming trivia Q's and I was too expensive - my friend got the job and said it was the worst place he's ever been....
Anyway, the next day I had another interview at another place, and got the same Question.... only this time i knew the answer....

along with getting a better design focused interview and a better rapport, I got the job, which I left after 9 months due to bad design practices overall! (they had none - cigarette pack specs would have been a dream...)

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I got asked the eight pool balls question (see below). I'm quite annoyed at these sorts of questions as they really don't really test your ability to solve real world problems in a reasonable time. The guy interviewing me got annoyed when I said I had heard it before, still insisting I answer the question. I was 45 at the time with over 25 years of solid experience. Look at my CV, don't ask me stupid puzzle questions,

The puzzle: You have eight pool balls, all identical looking, but one is slightly lighter. you have a balance scales that you can use twice only, how can you find the light ball?

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Put the balls on the scale one on each side, one at a time. When the scale tips and the numbers are even the last ball added on the heavy side is the big one. Decline the second use of the scale. – CAD bloke Oct 15 '08 at 5:56
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Pretty easy: Pick 6 balls, measure 3 and 3. If they are the same, measure the remaining two and find the lighter one. If not, take the lighter 3, and measure 2 out of them. Either again you found the lighter one, otherwise the lighter one is the only one remaining. – Yuval A Oct 27 '08 at 16:44
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I really feel so many jobs need real aptitude testing than the years of experience in the CV. If you got talent and aptitude you can solve real world problems in a totally different way than what people used to do it for last 20 years. – Jobi Joy Dec 22 '08 at 1:38
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Answer: Raise scale over head in threatening manner at interviewer. Scream: "TELL ME WHICH BALL IS THE LIGHTER ONE NOW OR I'LL CLOBBER YOU". Problem solved, still not getting the job though. – kenj0418 Apr 10 at 4:23
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@kenj0418 Let me guess, you went to business school? – Mike Robinson Apr 10 at 4:32
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Interviewer: How do you make Smarties?
Me: I guess you'd spray the candy shells onto cooled chocolate.
Interviewer: But the chocolate would melt.
Me: You could build it up in layers.
Interviewer: That still wouldn't work.
waste a few minutes in further suggestions, such as free fall, finally giving up
Interviewer: No, the chocolate is refrigerated first then the shell is sprayed on in layers.

They turned me down, as 'although I was technically very strong, I didn't answer the puzzle questions well enough'. A few weeks later, after I'd got another contract paying twice as much, they called back and offered the job after all. I declined.

(you have to cool chocolate production lines anyway, since the machinery generates heat)

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In Canada smarties are basically the same thing as M&Ms. What you call Smarties are called "Rockets" in Canada. – Eclipse Sep 22 '08 at 22:13
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In the U.S., Smarties are flavored sugar disks. Everywhere else they are same things as M&Ms. – Seamus Dec 22 '08 at 0:41
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I've always said that SO is the place to encounter Smarties. – Beska Feb 26 at 20:57
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Smarties != M&Ms! Smarties are superior in every way (proper British ones at least). – Valerion Mar 10 at 10:46
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What is my favorite TV show?

Seriously.

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Actually, that is a very good question... It tells the interviewer somehthing about the person being interviewed... There are a lot of psychology models at play here ;) – Arcturus Nov 26 '08 at 12:31
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"Show me how you would write a hash table in C#". It has been a while since I've ever had to roll my own so I asked what was wrong with the existing implementation. "It's too slow". So I asked if they were really worried about speed why use C# at all. I turned the job down.

As for "How do you move Mount Fuji" well that's simple, tell it a really heart wrenching story ....

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"Which was your favorite project?"

I was one of the interviewers on that panel... nearly choked!

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Totally a good question, in my mind. Asking "what are you most proud of?" gives the interviewee a chance to talk about the coolest thing they've done, and it lets the interviewer see that (and/or whether) the candidate ever cares about what they code. – ojrac Oct 29 '08 at 5:02
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This is the first question I always ask. If the person says "I worked on a video game" then I'll ask about the game loop, game state, and character AI. If they say they worked on a security product, I'll ask them about various encryption algorithms. It's a helluva lot better, in my book, to ask questions that will highlight the person's expertise and give them a chance to show their stuff than to ask a bunch of prefab questions off of a notecard. – benjismith Sep 19 at 20:47
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After running out of relevant questions within minutes, my (male) boss asked a (female) interviewee, "So, you're married? how many kids? what grades are they in?" and that continued for quite a few minutes...
I had to step in and ask more relevant questions, even though I'd already made up my mind (it was a no, but ABSOLUTELY nothing to do with his questions.... she was decent, but not quite brilliant.)

Lucky for me I was already on my way out... Getting to interview your replacement can actually be an interesting experience :D

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For an IT job I was asked how many knots I could tie, and which was my favorite, and why.

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"You're re-designing this floor of this building. How do you decide to equip the restrooms?"

The problem wasn't the question - as a test of how you a programmer thinks, it's fine.

The problem was this guy had a "right" answer in mind for this, and wasn't satisfied with anything else, even if it worked.

It turns out I know a lot about this exact problem, having supervised an office building build-out a few years before. In most places in the U.S., that's governed by the local building code. You get info like the square footage and expected occupancy, and look it up. The code gives you how many mens' rooms and how many women's rooms, and how many toilets and urinals and sinks to put in each. You can add more if you want. That is a definitive answer.

But he didn't like that. So I started doing the Feynman-esque estimation thing, but every time I came up with an assumption to base the estimate on (X people, Y square feet), or a resource to get valid information from (look at similar buildings), he told me to toss it out. As a programmer with academic and professional backgrounds in theoretical mathematics and chemistry, I tried the entire range of estimation schemes from airy-fairy to eminently-practical, but nothing I came up with made him satisfied. It was a profoundly unsatisfying experience for both of us.

There were other problems with other interviewers there, too. After multiple hours of interviews, they never even gave me the courtesy of a call to let me know they didn't want me. A current co-worker I esteem had worked there, and he said, "Bob, you are so lucky you didn't get that gig!"

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So did you find out what was the expected answer? Just curious.. :) – Marcel Tjandraatmadja Sep 21 '08 at 22:55
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Yeah, I would have taken your first answer, said, "wow, that's awesome". Sadly, it wouldn't have told me much about how you could program, but I'd know who to go to for a corporate bathroom redesign. – Beska Apr 20 at 14:35
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what was the right answer? – ykaganovich Apr 27 at 23:15
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It's not even a question, it's a command:

"So, tell me about yourself."

It was just the interviewer basically admitting they haven't prepared anything, and I'm going to be doing all the work.

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I disagree. I use that question solely to give candidates a free-form opportunity to sell me on their attributes. 1-2 minutes to put their best foot forward. I use it even when I hand-picked the candidate's resume myself. – JasonTrue Sep 22 '08 at 22:31
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I totally agree with Jason. May be the interviewer could ask it in a bit more polite manner. :) – Vijesh VP Sep 29 '08 at 19:01
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This is normally an ice-breaker question to get you talking at the start of the interview. – hwiechers Oct 13 '08 at 21:13
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This was for a high end C# position and I was asked what the "new kind of FOR loop" was in C#.

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Ahh...the answer to that would be "FOR...a second there I thought you were serious." – Beska Feb 26 at 21:04
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"Pulp Fiction or Reservoir Dogs?"

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I would simply answer "yes" – Chris Ballance Feb 20 at 5:58
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I like this question. They're deciding if you're a good personality fit for the team in a casual way. You don't necessarily have to like either one, but they're just looking for how you react. – Beska Feb 26 at 21:16
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Personally I hate the stupid questions you are expected to lie on such as "Why do you want to leave your current position?" Honestly, if you tell the truth on this one you have little chance of getting the job. What bothers me is that they expect you to lie and therefore they are giving preference to employees who lie well.

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Huh? I've always answered the "why are you leaving" question honestly. Hasn't affected the offers. Biggest fault, yeah, that one is stupid. – SquareCog Oct 15 '08 at 5:27
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it's all about how you answer. "My boss is an abusive jerk who treats me like his monkey and takes credit for my work" can easily be rephrased as "the environment there isn't the kind that I thrive in and I'm looking for a more rewarding atmosphere." – nerdabilly Oct 17 '08 at 17:55
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If you have any interaction with clients, the ability to put positive spin on things is definitely an important skill. – Eli Dec 21 '08 at 23:24
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The worst (I'm always asked): Where Do You See Yourself in N Years? (where N is variable).

I find it as the most annoying question that can be asked.

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answer: in a mirror, same as today! – Steven A. Lowe Sep 22 '08 at 22:09
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At performance review I did once answer this with "Your job looks alright." But I've long since left and that manager is still in the same position. – Andrew Kennan Oct 29 '08 at 3:58
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It may be a marker of enthusiasm or ambition (though I doubt that), but it's not relevant to success in any way. Look at Linus Torvalds' first email about Linux in 1991, and compare it with where it is today. Some very successful people just don't care about their personal future at all (which doesn't mean they don't plan). – J S May 27 at 14:12
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