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rsrc
A resource file contains data to be used by Mac OS programs and will typically accompany C or C++ source files. It is binary and specific to the Mac.
Mac OS Classic
The OS created by Apple and originally used by Macs is frequently (albeit slightly incorrectly) referred to as Mac OS Classic (officially Mac OS Classic is this original OS running under the modern Mac OS X in emulation. Mac OS combines the functionality of both an OS and a window manager and is often considered to be the easiest OS to use. It is partially multitasking but will still sometimes crash when dealing with a buggy program. It is probably the second most popular OS, next only to Windows 'XP (although it is quickly losing ground to Mac OS X) and has excellent driver support and boasts a fair selection of games. Mac OS will run on PowerPC and 68xx based machines.
AppleScript
A scripting language for Mac OS computers.
Aqua
The default window manager for Mac OS X.
AbiWord
AbiWord is a full-featured word processor that runs on most UNIX-like systems, BeOS, Windows '95 / '98, Windows NT / 2K / XP, Windows Vista, and Mac OS X.
See also: http://www.abisource.com/products.phtml
XFree86
X-Windows for UNIX, Mac OS X, and OS/2 users.
See also: http://www.xfree86.org/
MI/X
X-Windows for MS-Windows and Mac OS users.
See also: http://www.microimages.com/freestuf/mix/
XZip
A program that runs text adventures written in the Infocom Z-code game format. Available for UNIX-like machines with X-Windows and Mac OS. Note that the Mac OS version is actually called MaxZip rather than XZip.
See also: http://www.eblong.com/zarf/xzip.html
iCab
Currently available only for Mac OS (both PowerPC and 68K versions) and Mac OS X, iCab is a fairly solid browser that does many things well and a few things poorly. It has both free and commercial versions.
See also: http://www.icab.de/download.html
Mac OS Runtime for Java
The Java Runtime Environment for Mac OS (MRJ). It'll allow the running of Java programs.
See also: http://www.apple.com/java/
MikMod
A module player for MS-Windows, Mac OS (both classic and X), UNIX, AmigaOS, and OS/2.
See also: http://mikmod.raphnet.net/
Parsec
Network space combat for Mac OS (both X and classic), Windows '95 / '98, and x86 Linux.
See also: http://www.parsec.org/
Chess
The classic game Chess written for UNIX-like machines, Windows '95 / '98, and Mac OS.
See also: http://www.gnu.org/software/chess/
Safari
Safari runs on Mac OS X, Windows XP, and Windows Vista and is a solid standards-compliant browser known for quick rendering of pages.
See also: http://www.apple.com/safari/
Apple JDK
The Java Developer's Kit for Macintosh features everything required to develop Java programs under Mac OS.
See also: http://developer.apple.com/java/
GNU Go
The classic game Go written for UNIX-like machines, Mac OS, Windows '95 / '98, and JavaOS.
See also: http://www.gnu.org/software/gnugo/
Tcl/Tk Plug-in
Will allow the running of Tcl/Tk programs under UNIX, Mac OS, Windows '95 / '98, and Windows NT.
See also: http://www.scriptics.com/software/plugin/
Mac OS Open Source Software
A collection of Mac OS open source software from a large variety of different sources covering several categories.
See also: http://www.opensourcemac.org/
Mac OS X
Mac OS X (originally called Rhapsody) is the industrial strength OS produced by Apple to run on both PowerPC and x86 systems (replacing what is often referred to as Mac OS Classic. Mac OS X is at its heart a variant of UNIX and possesses its underlying power (and the ability to run many of the traditional UNIX tools, including the GNU tools). It also was designed to mimic other OSes on demand via what it originally refered to as "boxes" (actually high-performance emulators); it has the built-in capability to run programs written for older Mac OS (via its "BlueBox", officially called Mac OS Classic) and work was started on making it also run Windows '95 / '98 / ME software (via what was called its "YellowBox"). There are also a few rumors going around that future versions may even be able to run Newton software (via the "GreenBox"). It provides a selection of two window managers built-in: Aqua and X-Windows (with Aqua being the default).
RealPlayer
The RealPlayer Basic will run on Windows 95 / 98, Windows 2000, Windows NT, Mac OS, Linux, Solaris, IRIX, and AIX.
See also: http://www.real.com/player/
Yudit
The (Y)unicode editor is available for UNIX-like machines, Mac OS X, and some flavors of MS-Windows. It's a text editor with full Unicode support.
See also: http://www.yudit.org/
Windows Media Player
Windows Media Player will run on Windows 95 / 98, Windows NT, Windows 2000, some flavors of Windows CE, Mac OS, and Solaris.
See also: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia/players.asp
NEdit
The Nirvana Editor is another extremely popular text editor. NEdit is currently available only for UNIX-like machines, Mac OS X, and Windows NT.
See also: http://www.nedit.org/
fm
This indicates a FrameMaker native format document. Such a file may only be read with FrameMaker or FrameViewer or similar (currently only available for a price on UNIX, Mac, & WinTel platforms).
abw
An AbiWord word processing document; it can be read on any machine with AbiWord installed (available for WinTel boxes, Mac OS X, BeOS, and most UNIXes for free).
hqx
This indicates a BinHex file. It is similar in theory to a uuencoded file, but was developed originally for the Macintosh. Today decoders can be found for MS-Windows, MS-DOS, and UNIX in addition to the Mac.
NetHack
The classic NetHack game will run under most UNIX-like OSes, Mac OS, OS/2, MS-DOS, Win 3.1, Win '95/'98, Win NT, and Win 2000.
See also: http://www.nethack.org/
Xconq
A world conquest strategy game available for most UNIX-like machines, Mac OS, Windows '95 / '98, and Windows NT. It supports playing against opponents over a network.
See also: http://sources.redhat.com/xconq/,
http://xconq.sourceforge.net/
Ghostscript
Ghostscript is an interpreter for both PostScript and PDF files. Versions are available for OS/2, Windows 95 / 98, Windows NT, Mac OS, VMS, and most UNIX-like systems.
See also: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/
Ruby
Everything needed to develop Ruby applications is freely downloadable and available for most flavors of UNIX, some flavors of MS-Windows, both flavors of Mac OS, BeOS, Amiga, OS/2, and more.
See also: http://www.ruby-lang.org/
PowerPC
The PowerPC is a RISC processor developed in a collaborative effort between IBM, Apple, and Motorola. It is currently produced by a few different companies, of course including its original developers. A few different OSes run on PowerPC based machines, including Mac OS, AIX, Solaris, Windows NT, Linux, Mac OS X, BeOS, and AmigaOS. At any given time, the fastest processor in the world is usually either a PowerPC or an Alpha, but sometimes SPARCs and PA-RISCs make the list, too.
Inform
Everything needed to develop Inform applications is freely downloadable and available for most flavors of UNIX, most flavors of MS-Windows, Mac OS, OS/2, all flavors of DOS, Amiga, BeOS, and more.
See also: http://www.inform-fiction.org/,
http://www.inform-fiction.org/inform6.html
Perl
Everything needed to develop Perl applications is freely downloadable and available for most flavors of UNIX, most flavors of MS-Windows, both flavors of Mac OS, OS/2, DOS, Amiga, BeOS, and more.
See also: http://www.cpan.org/
Python
Everything needed to develop Python applications is freely downloadable and available for most flavors of UNIX, most flavors of MS-Windows, both flavors of Mac OS, OS/2, DOS, Amiga, BeOS, and more.
See also: http://www.python.org/
HotJava
HotJava runs on Windows '95 / '98, Windows NT, Mac OS, Solaris, and pretty much any other computer with a Java virtual machine. Prior to being end-of-lifed, it offered the most advanced Java support of all the browsers.
See also: http://java.sun.com/products/hotjava/
LyX
LyX is a WYSIWYM document processor; with it the author focuses on the structure of the documents, not their appearance. LyX currently runs on most UNIX-like systems, OS/2, Mac OS X, and Windows NT. It requires some form of TEX in order to work.
See also: http://www.lyx.org/
BBEdit Lite
BBEdit Lite is a free version of the popular BBEdit text editor. The BBEdit family of editors is often listed among the most frequently used tools for web page composition. It is available for Mac OS (both classic and X) only.
See also: http://www.bbedit.com/free/free.html
Acrobat Reader
Acrobat (PDF) is the current standard in portable documents; Adobe provides a free reader for Windows 95 / 98, Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows 3.1, Windows Vista, Mac OS (both classic and X), OS/2, and most UNIX-like systems.
See also: http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html
Cyberdog
Cyberdog has numerous interesting features but runs only under Mac OS. Although official Cyberdog development officially ended relatively recently, the user community has taken over and continues to expand its horizons.
See also: http://www.cyberdog.org/
Amaya
Amaya runs on Windows '95 / '98 / NT / 2K / XP / Vista, Solaris, Linux, Mac OS X, HP-UX, IRIX, Digital UNIX, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and more. It offers the most advanced HTML support of all the browsers.
See also: http://www.w3.org/Amaya/
ImageMagick
ImageMagick is similar to GraphicsMagick; it provides sophisticated image controls and impressive special effects capabilities for computer graphics work. It is available for pretty much every UNIX-like OS, Windows NT, Windows '95 / '98, and Mac OS.
See also: http://www.imagemagick.org/
Microsoft Internet Explorer
One of the two most popular browsers in use today, MSIE runs on fewer OSes than Netscape. It only supports Windows '95 / '98, Windows NT, Windows CE, Mac OS (both X and classic), Solaris, and HP-UX.
See also: http://www.microsoft.com/unix/ie/default.asp
Tar
The purpose of the tar program is to bind quantities of files together into a single file for easier transfer or archiving, and unbind them afterwards when needed. It will work on all flavors of UNIX, most flavors of MS-Windows, and both flavors of Mac OS.
See also: http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/
Crystal Space
Crystal Space is a 3D engine used primarily to build games, but can be used for any application needing 3D graphic manipulations. It supports UNIX-like machines, Windows NT, Windows '95 / '98, Mac OS, BeOS, OS/2, and more.
See also: http://crystal.linuxgames.com/
SDL
The Simple DirectMedia Layer is an engine used primarily to build games, but can be used for any application needing portable graphic manipulations. It supports UNIX-like machines, Windows NT, Windows '95 / '98, Mac OS, BeOS, OS/2, and more.
See also: http://www.devolution.com/~slouken/SDL/
Flash
Macromedia offers a free Flash Player application with relatively current versions for Linux, Mac OS, Windows '95 / '98, and Windows NT. It also offers Flash Player and Flash Generator source code to facilitate free porting to other platforms.
See also: http://www.macromedia.com/software/flash/open/licensing/,
http://www.macromedia.com/shockwave/download/
Mesa 3D
Mesa 3D is an OpenGL work-alike used primarily to build or support games, but can be used for any application needing 3D graphic manipulations. It supports UNIX-like machines, Windows NT, Windows '95 / '98, Mac OS, BeOS, OS/2, and more.
See also: http://www.mesa3d.org/
nbk
Probably a Newton backup. It is binary and not particularly portable, as in fact it could have been written by any one of a few different programs (such as Newton Connection Utilities or Newton Backup Utility on either Mac or MS-Windows) which are not guaranteed to work with the files generated by each other.
Tucows Downloads
A large collection of software for Mac OS, all flavors of MS-Windows, OS/2, BeOS, Linux, Newton, Palm, EPOC, and more. The downloader must be a little careful though as not all software on Tucows is freeware; shareware, crippleware, nagware, and commercial software demos also live on this site.
See also: http://www.tucows.com/
MPW
The Macintosh Programmer's Workshop features compilers for C, C++, and Pascal. They are all extremely high-quality compilers capable of being used for robust commercial development (with the exception of Pascal, which has been obsoleted). Apple itself uses the MPW for its own classic Mac OS software development.
See also: http://developer.apple.com/tools/mpw-tools/
Quesa
Quesa is a QuickDraw work-alike (a high-level 3D graphics library built to work on top of OpenGL, and can be used for any application needing 3D graphic manipulations. It supports UNIX-like machines, Windows NT, Windows '95 / '98, Mac OS (both classic and X), and BeOS.
See also: http://www.quesa.org/
CNET Downloads
A large collection of software for Mac OS, Windows '95/'98, Linux, Palm, Windows CE, and EPOC. This site is much like a less extensive version of Tucows -- the downloader must be a little careful as not all software on the site is freeware; shareware, crippleware, nagware, and commercial software demos also abound.
See also: http://download.cnet.com/
PostgreSQL
One of the most advanced database applications available today, PostgreSQL fuses the power of Postgres with standard SQL. PostgreSQL is currently available only for UNIX-like machines and Mac OS X, but numerous programs exist to help users with other machine types (MS-Windows, etc.) connect to PostgreSQL databases.
See also: http://www.postgresql.org/
Newton
Although Newton is officially the name of the lightweight OS developed by Apple to run on its MessagePad line of PDAs, it is often used to mean the MessagePads (and compatible PDAs) themselves and thus the term "Newton OS" is often used for clarity. The Newton OS is remarkably powerful; it is fully multitasking in spite of the fact that it was designed for small machines. It is optimized for hand-held use, but will readily transfer data to all manner of desktop machines. Historically it was the first PDA. Recently Apple announced that it will discontinue further development of the Newton platform, but will instead work to base future hand-held devices on either Mac OS or Mac OS X with some effort dedicated to making the new devices capable of running current Newton programs.
QuickTime
A full multimedia player that handles various types of movies, animations, loops, still images, sounds, and more. It's for display / playback only, not for editing. It is currently only available for Windows 95 / 98, Windows NT, Windows 2000, and Mac OS. Some UNIX versions in the near future have been rumored, but have yet to surface.
See also: http://www.apple.com/quicktime/download/
OpenOffice
OpenOffice (originally StarDivision's StarOffice but acquired and modified by Sun Microsystems) is completely free, offers 100% binary compatibility with MS-Office data files, and works on far more machines than MS-Office does. It currently runs on Windows '95 / '98, Windows NT / 2K, Windows XP, Windows Vista, Solaris, Mac OS X, Linux, JavaOS, OS/2, etc.
See also: http://www.openoffice.org/,
http://www.neooffice.org/
Tcl/Tk
The Tool Command Language and its GUI toolkit (Tcl/Tk) are widely used on all flavors of UNIX, all flavors of MS-Windows, and Mac OS. While Tcl is particularly used for integrating other programs, Tk is used everywhere as a general-purpose GUI library used for building all manner of programs in all manner of languages.
See also: http://www.scriptics.com/software/tcltk/
Stuffit Expander
Stuffit Expander is a program that is capable of undoing most of the encoding / packaging done for downloading / e-mailing. It will work on most flavors of MS-Windows, Mac OS (both X and classic), Linux, and Solaris. It has the ability to unzip, unstuff, ungzip, unbzip, uncompress, uncompact, unarc, unlharc, unrar, uudecode, untar, and disentangle several other processed formats besides.
See also: http://www.stuffit.com/expander/
POV-Ray
Want to try your hand at some complex 3D modeling or do you just want to make some simple 3D pictures? Either way, the "Persistence of Vision Raytracer" is the tool to get the job done. It is available for Windows '95 / '98, Windows NT / 2K / XP, Windows Vista, Mac OS, MS-DOS, Linux, Solaris, AmigaOS, and more.
See also: http://www.povray.org/
Mozilla
Arguably the most feature-rich and standards-compliant of all the browsers, Mozilla is essentially a more advanced version of Netscape. Mozilla will run on most OSes, including Windows '95 / '98, Windows NT, Windows XP, Windows 3.1, Mac OS (both classic and X), Linux, Solaris, HP-UX, IRIX, Digital UNIX, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, OS/2, and more.
See also: http://www.mozilla.org/,
http://www.mozilla.org/releases/,
http://www.mozilla.org/projects/seamonkey/,
http://www.mozilla.org/projects/calendar/,
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/seamonkey/
Netscape
One of the most popular browsers in use today, Netscape is also one of the most feature-rich and offers the most advanced JavaScript support of all the browsers. Be sure to also take a peek at Mozilla to learn about future Netscape directions and try out upcoming betas. Netscape will run on most OSes, including Windows '95 / '98, Windows NT, Windows 3.1, Mac OS (both classic and X), Linux, Solaris, HP-UX, IRIX, Digital UNIX, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, OS/2, and more. It can be used for both browsing the web and gopherspace.
See also: http://www.netscape.com/computing/download/
Gzip
Gzip is a compression program; it will take a single file and reduce the amount of space it requires to make for faster transfer or more efficient archiving. It is often used in conjunction with some flavor of tar. It includes software for both compressing and decompressing, and can handle its own native gzip format in addition to the older compress format. The gzip format is extremely popular online, and tends to be more efficient than the zip format but less efficient than the bzip2 format. Gzip is available for all flavors of UNIX, both flavors of Mac OS, most flavors of MS-Windows, and MS-DOS.
See also: http://www.gnu.org/software/gzip/
SCSI
Loosely speaking, a disk format sometimes used by MS-Windows, Mac OS, AmigaOS, and (almost always) UNIX. Generally SCSI is superior (but more expensive) to IDE, but it varies somewhat with system load and the individual SCSI and IDE components themselves. The quick rundown is that: SCSI-I and SCSI-II will almost always outperform IDE; EIDE will almost always outperform SCSI-I and SCSI-II; SCSI-III and UltraSCSI will almost always outperform EIDE; and heavy system loads give an advantage to SCSI. Note that although loosely speaking it is just a format difference, it is deep down a hardware difference.
IDE
Loosely speaking, a disk format sometimes used by MS-Windows, Mac OS, AmigaOS, and (rarely) UNIX. EIDE is enhanced IDE; it is much faster. Generally IDE is inferior (but less expensive) to SCSI, but it varies somewhat with system load and the individual IDE and SCSI components themselves. The quick rundown is that: SCSI-I and SCSI-II will almost always outperform IDE; EIDE will almost always outperform SCSI-I and SCSI-II; SCSI-III and UltraSCSI will almost always outperform EIDE; and heavy system loads give an advantage to SCSI. Note that although loosely speaking it is just a format difference, it is deep down a hardware difference.
Merced
The Merced is a RISC processor developed by Intel with help from Hewlett-Packard and possibly Sun. It is just starting to be released, but is intended to eventually replace both the x86 and PA-RISC processors. Curiously, HP is recommending that everyone hold off using the first release and instead wait for the second one. It is expected some day to be roughly as fast as an Alpha or PowerPC. It is expected to be supported by future versions of Solaris, Windows-NT, HP-UX, Mac OS X, and Linux. The current semi-available Merced processor is called the Itanium. Its overall schedule is way behind, and some analysts predict that it never will really be released in significant quanitities.
virus
A virus is a program that will seek to duplicate itself in memory and on disks, but in a subtle way that will not immediately be noticed. A computer on the same network as an infected computer or that uses an infected disk (even a floppy) or that downloads and runs an infected program can itself become infected. A virus can only spread to computers of the same platform. For example, on a network consisting of a WinTel box, a Mac, and a Linux box, if one machine acquires a virus the other two will probably still be safe. Note also that different platforms have different general levels of resistance; UNIX machines are almost immune, Win '95 / '98 / ME / XP is quite vulnerable, and most others lie somewhere in between.
x86
The x86 series of processors includes the Pentium, Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III, Celeron, and Athlon as well as the 786, 686, 586, 486, 386, 286, 8086, 8088, etc. It is an exceptionally popular design (by far the most popular CISC series) in spite of the fact that even its fastest model is significantly slower than the assorted RISC processors. Many different OSes run on machines built around x86 processors, including MS-DOS, Windows 3.1, Windows '95, Windows '98, Windows ME, Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows CE, Windows XP, GEOS, Linux, Solaris, OpenBSD, NetBSD, FreeBSD, Mac OS X, OS/2, BeOS, CP/M, etc. A couple different companies produce x86 processors, but the bulk of them are produced by Intel. It is expected that this processor will eventually be completely replaced by the Merced, but the Merced development schedule is somewhat behind. Also, it should be noted that the Pentium III processor has stirred some controversy by including a "fingerprint" that will enable individual computer usage of web pages etc. to be accurately tracked.
UNIX
UNIX is a family of OSes, each being made by a different company or organization but all offering a very similar look and feel. It can not quite be considered non-proprietary, however, as the differences between different vendor's versions can be significant (it is still generally possible to switch from one vendor's UNIX to another without too much effort; today the differences between different UNIXes are similar to the differences between the different MS-Windows; historically there were two different UNIX camps, Berkeley / BSD and AT&T / System V, but the assorted vendors have worked together to minimalize the differences). The free variant Linux is one of the closest things to a current, non-proprietary OS; its development is controlled by a non-profit organization and its distribution is provided by several companies. UNIX is powerful; it is fully multitasking and can do pretty much anything that any OS can do (look to the Hurd if you need a more powerful OS). With power comes complexity, however, and UNIX tends not to be overly friendly to beginners (although those who think UNIX is difficult or cryptic apparently have not used CP/M). Window managers are available for UNIX (running under X-Windows) and once properly configured common operations will be almost as simple on a UNIX machine as on a Mac. Out of all the OSes in current use, UNIX has the greatest range of hardware support. It will run on machines built around many different processors. Lightweight versions of UNIX have been made to run on PDAs, and in the other direction, full featured versions make full advantage of all the resources on large, multi-processor machines. Some different UNIX versions include Solaris, Linux, IRIX, AIX, SunOS, FreeBSD, Digital UNIX, HP-UX, NetBSD, OpenBSD, etc.
Y2K
The general class of problems resulting from the wrapping of computers' internal date timers is given this label in honor of the most obvious occurrence -- when the year changes from 1999 to 2000 (abbreviated in some programs as 99 to 00 indicating a backwards time movement). Contrary to popular belief, these problems will not all manifest themselves on the first day of 2000, but will in fact happen over a range of dates extending out beyond 2075. A computer that does not have problems prior to the beginning of 2001 is considered "Y2K compliant", and a computer that does not have problems within the next ten years or so is considered for all practical purposes to be "Y2K clean". Whether or not a given computer is "clean" depends upon both its OS and its applications (and in some unfortunate cases, its hardware). The quick rundown on common home / small business machines (roughly from best to worst) is that:
  • All Mac OS systems are okay until at least the year 2040. By that time a patch should be available.
  • All BeOS systems are okay until the year 2040 (2038?). By that time a patch should be available.
  • Most UNIX versions are either okay or currently have free fixes available (and typically would not have major problems until 2038 or later in any case).
  • NewtonOS has a problem with the year 2010, but has a free fix available.
  • Newer AmigaOS systems are okay; older ones have a problem with the year 2000 but have a free fix available. They also have a year 2077 problem that does not yet have a free fix.
  • Some OS/2 systems have a year 2000 problem, but free fixes are available.
  • All CP/M versions have a year 2000 problem, but free fixes are available.
  • PC-DOS has a year 2000 problem, but a free fix is available.
  • DR-DOS has a year 2000 problem, but a free fix is available.
  • Different versions of GEOS have different problems ranging from minor year 2000 problems (with fixes in the works) to larger year 2080 problems (that do not have fixes yet). The only problem that may not have a fix in time is the year 2000 problem on the Apple ][ version of GEOS; not only was that version discontinued, unlike the other GEOS versions it no longer has a parent company to take care of it.
  • All MS-Windows versions (except possibly Windows 2000 and Windows ME) have multiple problems with the year 2000 and/or 2001, most of which have free fixes but some of which still lack free fixes as of this writing. Even new machines off the shelf that are labelled "Y2K Compliant" usually are not unless additional software is purchased and installed. Basically WinNT and WinCE can be properly patched, Windows '98 can be patched to work properly through 2000 (possibly not 2001), Windows '95 can be at least partially patched for 2000 (but not 2001) but is not being guaranteed by Microsoft, and Windows 3.1 cannot be fully patched.
  • MS-DOS has problems with at least the year 2000 (and probably more). None of its problems have been addressed as of this writing. Possible fixes are to change over to either PC-DOS or DR-DOS.
Results vary wildly for common applications, so it is better to be safe than sorry and check out the ones that you use. It should also be noted that some of the biggest expected Y2K problems will be at the two ends of the computer spectrum with older legacy mainframes (such as power some large banks) and some of the various tiny embedded computers (such as power most burgler alarms and many assorted appliances). Finally, it should also be mentioned that some older WinTel boxes and Amigas may have Y2K problems in their hardware requiring a card addition or replacement.

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