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+0.13 My journey to the microwave alternate timeline (www.lesswrong.com)
377 points by jstanley 6 days ago | 189 comments on HN | Mild positive Mixed · vv3.4 · 2026-02-24
Article Heatmap
Preamble: +0.23 — Preamble P Article 1: +0.17 — Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood 1 Article 2: +0.18 — Non-Discrimination 2 Article 3: +0.15 — Life, Liberty, Security 3 Article 4: -0.10 — No Slavery 4 Article 5: -0.05 — No Torture 5 Article 6: +0.20 — Legal Personhood 6 Article 7: +0.23 — Equality Before Law 7 Article 8: +0.08 — Right to Remedy 8 Article 9: -0.08 — No Arbitrary Detention 9 Article 10: +0.06 — Fair Hearing 10 Article 11: +0.05 — Presumption of Innocence 11 Article 12: -0.33 — Privacy 12 Article 13: +0.30 — Freedom of Movement 13 Article 14: +0.08 — Asylum 14 Article 15: +0.05 — Nationality 15 Article 16: +0.02 — Marriage & Family 16 Article 17: +0.02 — Property 17 Article 18: +0.30 — Freedom of Thought 18 Article 19: +0.50 — Freedom of Expression 19 Article 20: +0.32 — Assembly & Association 20 Article 21: +0.20 — Political Participation 21 Article 22: +0.26 — Social Security 22 Article 23: -0.12 — Work & Equal Pay 23 Article 24: -0.10 — Rest & Leisure 24 Article 25: -0.07 — Standard of Living 25 Article 26: +0.18 — Education 26 Article 27: +0.05 — Cultural Participation 27 Article 28: -0.05 — Social & International Order 28 Article 29: +0.28 — Duties to Community 29 Article 30: +0.08 — No Destruction of Rights 30
Negative Neutral Positive No Data
Aggregates
Weighted Mean +0.13 Unweighted Mean +0.10
Max +0.50 Article 19 Min -0.33 Article 12
Signal 31 No Data 0
Confidence 42% Volatility 0.17 (Medium)
Negative 8 Channels E: 0.5 S: 0.5
SETL ND
Evidence: High: 2 Medium: 13 Low: 16 No Data: 0
Theme Radar
Foundation Security Legal Privacy & Movement Personal Expression Economic & Social Cultural Order & Duties Foundation: 0.19 (3 articles) Security: -0.00 (3 articles) Legal: 0.09 (6 articles) Privacy & Movement: 0.02 (4 articles) Personal: 0.11 (3 articles) Expression: 0.34 (3 articles) Economic & Social: -0.01 (4 articles) Cultural: 0.11 (2 articles) Order & Duties: 0.10 (3 articles)
Domain Context Profile
Element Modifier Affects Note
Privacy -0.05
Article 12
Site uses analytics, Sentry error tracking, LogRocket session replay (opt-in but default-enabled), Intercom, and Google Tag Manager. Recombee personalization engine. Algolia search. Multiple tracking services visible in config. Privacy practices not directly observable from provided content.
Terms of Service
Terms of service not provided in content sample. Cannot evaluate.
Accessibility +0.10
Article 2 Article 26
Site supports theme customization, has dark mode toggle, includes reCAPTCHA accessibility, responsive design evident. Supports multiple languages and locales. Some accessibility infrastructure present.
Mission +0.15
Article 19 Article 20
Mission statement: 'A community blog devoted to refining the art of rationality'. Tagline emphasizes collaborative knowledge-building and discussion. Community-oriented structure. Mission aligns with open discourse and intellectual freedom principles.
Editorial Code
No explicit editorial code observable in provided content.
Ownership
Admin account identified (team@lesswrong.com, LessWrong account). Lightcone Infrastructure mentioned. Ownership structure not fully transparent from config alone.
Access Model +0.20
Article 19 Article 25
Platform uses open, free-to-access discussion model. No paywall evident. Multiple content feeds (Recent, Recommended, Enriched) available. Community participation open. Low barrier to contribution.
Ad/Tracking -0.08
Article 12
Google Tag Manager, Stripe integration (commerce), Algolia search tracking, Recombee ML model tracking user engagement. Advertising/tracking infrastructure present though specific ad model unclear from provided data.
HN Discussion 20 top-level comments
crtasm 2026-02-23 03:38 UTC link
In the 1990s, the first microwave our family owned came with a small cookbook and I made an edible cake.
messe 2026-02-23 03:40 UTC link
Excellent article. "Tradwife futurism" is a brilliant term.

I'm worried I'm going to burn a hole in my wallet searching for a pyroceram skillet that I'll end up using for a week and then forget about it.

parpfish 2026-02-23 04:02 UTC link
> It’s about staring blankly at the buzzing white box, waiting for the four dreadful beeps that give you permission to eat.

I thought it was near universal that everybody staring at the microwave was engaged in a game of chicken where you try to open the door as close to zero as possible while preventing the beeps.

The beeps must not sound.

I have no idea why it’s important to prevent the beeps, but it feels like a deep primal compulsion. Our ancestors must have learned that the beeps attracted sabretooth tigers or something

Animats 2026-02-23 04:57 UTC link
Restaurants are doing more of this than most people think.

Here's an article from the head chef from a commercial microwave oven company, on how to get more done faster.[1] Commercial microwave ovens have about 2KW-3KW of power, and some of them have true variable power, not the on/off thing most home microwave ovens use. "I’ve shown teams how to make mug cakes, molten chocolate brownies, and steamed puddings with just a microwave. The reactions are always the same: "I had no idea a microwave could do that.”"

[1] https://totalfood.com/revolutionizing-microwave-cooking-comm...

ggm 2026-02-23 05:05 UTC link
In 1986 I briefly lived in a squat in North London, and the gas had been disconnected. We cooked everything in the Microwave, and we ate nutritious and completely unexpected (to me) normal meals, like Lasagne made with dried pasta, which uses cottage cheese to boost the moisture content so the sheets of Pasta soften. I appreciate at this point some people are saying "normal??" but truly, compared to the alternatives, using a more liquid cheese to make a meal which conforms in all other respects to your expectations, was huge.

(gas reconnection was hard. Electricity, for reasons I never entirely understood, was easy to get reconnected to squats, at the time)

My co-occupants had a lot more experience than I of this life on the edge. I learned a lot.

bronlund 2026-02-23 05:22 UTC link
Does anyone knows if using microwaves might possibly affect the nutritional value of the food? Or if radiation can leak and act upon your body if you stand very close to it. Heated plastic doesn’t sound too healthy either. And why do we never see commercials about microwaves?

I know nothing about these things, but I still only use it to heat my cold cup of coffee - and I’m standing way back while I do :) I even own a pyroceram skillet.

nandomrumber 2026-02-23 05:45 UTC link
I discovered a (lame) party trick some microwave ovens are capable of.

Many microwaves will let you set the power to 0% by pressing the power button then 0 or 00.

You can then put a cup of hot water from a kettle or the hot water tap in the microwave on 0% power for two minutes and it will come out colder.

Bonus points if you have a thermometer at hand.

niemandhier 2026-02-23 06:23 UTC link
My pet theory is that, humans have an inherent desire to spent a certain amount of time dealing with food.

If our lives are to efficient, say because we do not have to butcher a pig and cure it’s meat to get ham, we start to become obsessed with all kind of strange diets from cocovorism to paleo.

schiffern 2026-02-23 06:59 UTC link
I feel like 80% of the microwave's downfall was adopting VCR-like push button interfaces.

The two dial microwave was peak UX. Quick, painless, no wondering what sequence to press on a strange 'wave, zero time delay between input and cooking, and easy use of the (essential) power function.

It even lets you change time or power mid-cook. For maximum laziness it's possible to leave the door cracked with time on the dial, throw in the food, and adjust the dial while it's already on (slightly reducing the wait before eating). Using the microwave becomes forgiving instead of foreboding, because it's so easy to change your mind.

The only downside is that it's slightly less precise, but getting the exact time down to the second is probably less important than you think. It's also a mechanical part to fail, but I've had microwaves die because the push buttons failed too, whereas my dial unit is still going strong. YMMV

fzaninotto 2026-02-23 07:13 UTC link
Thanks Hacker News for surfacing such jewels, and kudos to the author for such a great piece.

Although I will never use anything of what I learned from this article, I feel a better person since I’ve read it.

In one of the alternate universe I like to imagine, AI slop doesn’t exist and the Internet is filled with gorgeous pieces like this one.

kleiba 2026-02-23 07:17 UTC link
> The actual recipe section starts with the recipe for a bowl of cereal, which I am 70% sure is a joke

For years, I would get up insanely early and be the first in the office, with no-one around other than the cleaners. My breakfast every day would be microwave-cooked oats - but it wasn't quite as easy as the recipe from the book makes it out to be, mostly because of the milk.

Unlike water, when you heat up milk to a high temperature in the microwave, it behaves just like it does on the stove top: it wants to crawl out of the container and nicely spread itself everywhere.

So, I developed sort of a technique that consisted of short bursts of microwaving at full blast, then stopping and stirring, and back in with bowl. I repeated that a few times, but after I had the technique down, it didn't require much attention any more, it worked quite reliably.

The oats got cooked nicely, and thanks to the pectin of an apple that I also added in, it also thickened. (And in case you wonder, the apple's acidity does sometimes split the milk somewhat, but in most cases it doesn't.) However, there's definitely a difference in smoothness between microwaved oat meal and one that's made slowly on the stove top - the latter being much nicer in texture.

But it was a quick breakfast that I really enjoyed (with a dash of cinnamon) at my desk every morning while I was going through my email from the night before.

mrighele 2026-02-23 07:57 UTC link
The microwave has two big related issues (both mentioned in the article).

The first is that it is not easy to make a mental model of how it works. The second is that since it takes little too cook the food, it is unforgiving and you have to be very careful with both timings and amounts.

This makes it hard to learn how to properly use it just by trial and error. Also since now we have inductive stoves there is even less reason to use it.

tambre 2026-02-23 09:18 UTC link
I'm surprised no one has mentioned inverter microwaves. Unlike plain old regular microwaves where power settings just adjust the time that the magnetron is running at full blast the inverter ones can actually change the power of the magnetron. Makes it tons easier to cook food evenly and calmly. Never am I buying again one without.

It's kinda hard to find them though. Most manufacturers hardly list this but Bosch seems to have inverters in most of their mid and higher-end ones. My favourite is the Bosch BFL634GB1. Bosch BFL7221B1 was a huge downgrade due to the shitty touch screen and wheel along with a multi-second boot time.

mgaunard 2026-02-23 09:53 UTC link
I do not have a microwave, but I remember having one, and never managed to intuitively use it to iterate on my cooking.

Meanwhile, throw stuff in the pan, move it around, adjust the temperature, add in some stuff as it goes, is a much more interactive type of cooking that is much more likely to take me where I want to go (tasty food).

OisinMoran 2026-02-23 12:33 UTC link
No mention of the Miele Dialog which gets as close as I've seen (though not quite there) to my dream of crispy fried eggs with runny yolk in the microwave. Their big example is being able to cook a fish while it remains in a block of ice. Pretty damn cool!

https://www.reviewed.com/ovens/features/we-tried-an-oven-tha...

alnwlsn 2026-02-23 16:59 UTC link
For whatever reason, I have an 8" floppy disk with one of these microwave cookbooks on it. Mine seems to be (part of?) one called "The Guaranteed Goof-Proof Microwave Cookbook" by Margie "Microwhiz" Kreschollek.

Sadly, I've never been able to read the book in the correct order as I don't know what system it came from - it's something that is single-sided, 77 tracks, FM (single density) encoded with 26 sectors/track, but the text is there in a hex editor.

It makes it pretty obvious that it isn't a joke or trick; someone saw it fit to fill up a 250kB disk with this, so somebody must have thought it was a good idea.

In an unrelated endeavour, my dad told me he once tried to cook an entire turkey in one of those huge 80's microwaves. He said it didn't turn out very good.

ufo 2026-02-23 18:57 UTC link
A microwave lifehack I recently learned:

If you're gonna brown some onions, microwave them for a bit before tossing them into the pan. The first step of browning onions is just boiling away the water, which microwaves are great at. You may find that it begins to brown sooner this way.

MarkusWandel 2026-02-23 19:04 UTC link
More recent alternate universe is where everyone cooks everything in an Instant Pot, and even more recent is where everyone cooks everything in an air fryer. Every new cooking appliance is a revolution, until it isn't, and only a handful of real use cases for it remain.
OkayPhysicist 2026-02-23 19:27 UTC link
The number one feature of modern microwaves that I appreciate is the humidity sensor. Figure out if your microwave has one, and it opens up a whole world of better solutions.

Know the popcorn button? Ever wondered why every popcorn manufacturer tells you not to use it, or, if you don't make a habit of taking orders from a paper bag, why it works on some microwaves, but fails miserably on others, either burning the popcorn to a crisp or, more often, leaving half the kernels unpopped? Humidity sensor. In microwaves with a humidity sensor, the microwave runs until the humidity stops rising, (which means the kernels stopped popping) then stops (well, actually mine sets ~30 second timer, then stops). This produces perfect popcorn every time. Doesn't matter the brand of popcorn, it just works.

Unfortunately, because this feature was so great, it got imitated on every microwave, regardless of whether it has a humidity sensor or not. On those microwaves, it just sets a flat timer, which cannot adapt to variations in popcorn. Since popcorn manufacturers have no idea which camp your microwave falls into, and can't assume you have any idea either, they just tell people to neglect a fantastic feature.

willlma 2026-02-24 22:15 UTC link
Surprised to see no mention of the Anyday: https://cookanyday.com/

I'm partially living in this alternative timeline as an accomplished microwave chef thanks to this thing. I mostly use it to steam veggies.

Didn't think the Maillard reaction was possible in the microwave (and that's what I miss the most). The tin-oxide pans are fascinating, though pre-heating them doesn't seem terribly convenient now that we have induction stove-tops.

Also, the number of paper towels used...

Score Breakdown
+0.23
Preamble Preamble
Medium P: Community governance structure promotes human dignity through collaborative discourse
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.15
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural observation: LessWrong's platform design enables collective reasoning about shared challenges and promotes dignity through open participation. No editorial content about Preamble themes provided.

+0.17
Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood
Medium P: Membership open regardless of background; no visible eligibility barriers
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.12
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Platform allows anyone to participate in discussions and contribute content without explicit exclusionary criteria observable in config. Equal dignity in participation structure.

+0.18
Article 2 Non-Discrimination
Medium P: Theme/accessibility customization available; multi-language support
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.08
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Accessibility features (theme customization, dark mode, responsive design) support non-discriminatory access. Locale settings indicate localization efforts. No discrimination observable in structural design.

+0.15
Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security
Low P: Community platform preserves user identity through accounts and profiles
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.10
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: User accounts preserve individual identity. No systematic violation observable. Limited data on how right to life/security is specifically engaged by forum structure.

-0.10
Article 4 No Slavery
Low P: Community moderation system exists but no transparency on slavery/servitude protections
Editorial
ND
Structural
-0.10
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Moderation tools and guidelines present. No specific observable structural signals regarding slavery protections. Neutral signal slightly negative due to absence of explicit safeguards documentation.

-0.05
Article 5 No Torture
Low P: Content moderation system present; no observable cruel punishment mechanisms
Editorial
ND
Structural
-0.05
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Moderation warning system and comment controls exist. No explicit torture/cruel treatment safeguards documented. Neutral-to-slightly-negative due to limited transparency on moderation standards.

+0.20
Article 6 Legal Personhood
Medium P: User profiles and accounts preserve legal personhood
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.12
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: User account system grants platform personhood. Username, displayName, profile fields support recognition as legal/social persons within the community.

+0.23
Article 7 Equality Before Law
Medium P: Equal application of platform rules; no observable privilege by user role
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.15
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Moderation guidelines and comment controls apply uniformly. Karma system creates hierarchy but no explicit discrimination by protected characteristics. Admin role noted but governance structure opaque.

+0.08
Article 8 Right to Remedy
Low P: User accounts provide remedy mechanism through platform tools
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.08
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Moderation system exists but limited visibility into effective remedy mechanisms for rights violations. No explicit justice/remedy infrastructure documented.

-0.08
Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention
Low P: Moderation system could restrict participation arbitrarily
Editorial
ND
Structural
-0.08
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: No observable transparent due-process protections for account restrictions, bans, or content removal. Platform reserves right to moderate but safeguards unclear. Mild negative signal.

+0.06
Article 10 Fair Hearing
Low P: Independent review process exists for user issues
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.06
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: No transparent independent adjudication mechanism visible. Moderation appears centralized to admin/moderators. Low confidence in fair hearing structures.

+0.05
Article 11 Presumption of Innocence
Low P: Community operates with presumption of innocence in discussion norms
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.05
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: No explicit presumption-of-innocence safeguards documented. Platform design does not foreground burden-of-proof protections. Minimal observable alignment.

-0.33
Article 12 Privacy
High P: Multiple tracking/analytics systems; limited privacy transparency
Editorial
ND
Structural
-0.25
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Extensive analytics (Google Tag Manager, LogRocket, Sentry, Intercom, Algolia, Recombee), ad tracking, and personalization engines documented in config. User data tracked extensively. Privacy notice/opt-out mechanisms not evident in provided content. Significant negative signal for privacy/confidentiality.

+0.30
Article 13 Freedom of Movement
Medium P: Platform enables free movement of ideas across geographies
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.20
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Global accessibility, multi-language support, no visible geographic restrictions. Users can freely access and contribute from any location. Open URL structure supports this.

+0.08
Article 14 Asylum
Low P: Community membership open to asylum/refuge seekers with privacy risk
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.08
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: No specific refuge/asylum protections observable. Tracking infrastructure could pose risk to vulnerable users. Mild positive for openness, negated by privacy risks.

+0.05
Article 15 Nationality
Low P: No nationality requirements for participation
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.05
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: No explicit nationality barriers. Cannot observe if nationality data is required or tracked. Minimal positive signal.

+0.02
Article 16 Marriage & Family
Low P: User profiles support family/relationship expression minimally
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.02
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: User profiles exist but no explicit family/marriage/relationship features documented. Very limited structural support for family formation.

+0.02
Article 17 Property
Medium P: User accounts own profile/content; S: Tracking/data collection without explicit consent
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.10
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural positive: Users control accounts and content. Structural negative: Extensive tracking (LogRocket, Sentry, etc.) without clear consent mechanism. Net neutral to slightly negative.

+0.30
Article 18 Freedom of Thought
Medium P: Platform enables freedom of thought and conscience
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.18
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Community blog dedicated to rationality, open discussion of diverse ideas. No loyalty oath or ideological requirement. Supports freedom of conscience through open discourse platform.

+0.50
Article 19 Freedom of Expression
High P: Platform core function is enabling freedom of expression/speech P: Open discussion forum with minimal content restrictions P: Users can receive and impart information freely
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.35
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: LessWrong is fundamentally designed for speech and idea exchange. Multiple content feeds, open commenting, post creation, tagging system all enable Article 19 freedoms. Mission statement emphasizes rationality discourse. Strong positive signal.

+0.32
Article 20 Assembly & Association
Medium P: Platform enables peaceful assembly of communities P: User groups and organizer roles documented
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.22
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Groups feature, organizer roles, event system, meetups infrastructure support peaceful assembly. Community formation is core platform function. No forced participation. Positive signal for Article 20.

+0.20
Article 21 Political Participation
Medium P: Governance structure enables participation in community affairs
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.12
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Moderation roles, organizer positions, tagging/wiki contributions enable participation in governance. However, central admin control limits democratic equality. Moderate positive.

+0.26
Article 22 Social Security
Medium P: Community provides social/cultural participation space
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.18
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Forum dedicated to rationality, social discussion, idea exchange supports cultural participation. Events, groups, dialogues enable social engagement. Positive signal.

-0.12
Article 23 Work & Equal Pay
Low P: Platform does not directly ensure work rights P: No labor protections documented
Editorial
ND
Structural
-0.12
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: No work conditions, employment protections, or fair wage infrastructure observable. Platform is discussion forum, not workplace. Mildly negative due to non-engagement with labor rights.

-0.10
Article 24 Rest & Leisure
Low P: Platform does not protect rest/leisure explicitly
Editorial
ND
Structural
-0.10
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: No time-limiting, rest-enforcement, or wellbeing protections. Platform enables unlimited engagement. Mildly negative for non-engagement with rest rights.

-0.07
Article 25 Standard of Living
Low P: Platform does not provide health/social services
Editorial
ND
Structural
-0.15
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: No health, food, clothing, housing, or medical services provided. Platform is discussion forum. However, social support communities can form. Slightly negative overall but context modifier for potential peer support.

+0.18
Article 26 Education
Medium P: Community education occurs through discourse and knowledge-sharing
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.08
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Platform enables education through open knowledge exchange, rationality training via discussion. Sequences feature supports structured learning. Accessibility/theme support aids equal education access.

+0.05
Article 27 Cultural Participation
Low P: User can participate in scientific/cultural community
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.05
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Platform enables scientific/rationality discussion and cultural participation. However, no copyright protections, attribution mechanisms, or IP structures documented. Minimal observable alignment.

-0.05
Article 28 Social & International Order
Low P: Platform structure does not guarantee international order for rights
Editorial
ND
Structural
-0.05
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Single-domain, nationally-hosted platform. No explicit international rights framework. Mildly negative due to limited engagement with international order requirements.

+0.28
Article 29 Duties to Community
Medium P: Community norms emphasize responsible discourse P: Moderation system constrains abuse/harm
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.20
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: Moderation guidelines, content policies, and community norms support responsible exercise of rights. Karma system and flagging support accountability. Positive signal for duty/responsibility balance.

+0.08
Article 30 No Destruction of Rights
Low P: Platform structure prevents UDHR-destroying activity by design
Editorial
ND
Structural
+0.08
SETL
ND
Combined
ND
Context Modifier
ND

Structural: No explicit safeguards against UDHR-destruction activities documented. Moderation system exists but scope/enforcement unclear. Minimal observable alignment with Article 30.

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