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Canon PIXMA iX4000 and Canon PIXMA iX5000

Mark Goldstein | PMA Show 2006, Printers | February 21, 2006 | 23 Comments

Canon PIXMA iX5000PMA 2006: The Canon PIXMA iX4000 and Canon PIXMA iX5000 A3+ printers are announced today. The PIXMA iX4000 and iX5000 are aimed at the SoHo market and will be available from April 2006, priced at around £249.00 / €360.00 and £329.00 / €475.00 respectively.

Canon UK Press Release

Canon targets small business market with new PIXMA iX4000 and iX5000 A3+ printers

Canon is pleased to announce the launch of two new A3+ printers aimed at the small business market: the PIXMA iX5000 and PIXMA iX4000. The new products are designed to meet office requirements – delivering rapid, high quality prints for documents and graphics, while also continuing in the PIXMA tradition of producing high speed lab-quality photo prints. These are achieved with Canon’s FINE (Full-photolithography Inkjet Nozzle Engineering) technology , which lies at the heart of PIXMA’s photolab performance. In addition to the new printers, Canon also launches two multifunctionals that also target the small business market: the PIXMA MP830 and PIXMA MP530. The new products strengthen the PIXMA range by bringing the sub-brand’s core values – designer styling and advanced technology for high quality, high speed photo printing – into the important small office and home office segment. “We are now strengthening the PIXMA sub-brand by focusing on the small business market,” said Mogens Jensen, Head of Canon Consumer Imaging Europe. “Canon’s strategy is to drive the market by providing class–leading business devices that excel at producing high quality image prints, fast.”

The PIXMA iX5000 and PIXMA iX4000 feature:
- Fast document print speeds – 25 ppm/17 ppm with the PIXMA iX5000 and 18 ppm/14 ppm with the PIXMA iX4000 for mono/colour A4 output
- Efficient single ink tanks for minimum ink wastage
- FINE print heads with 2pl droplets2 and 4800 x 1200 dpi resolution for photo lab quality, high-speed prints
- ChromaLife1002 system for long lasting, beautiful photos
- PictBridge2 for direct photo prints

The new models update and expand Canon’s range of A3+ business printers, with the PIXMA iX5000 replacing the i6500. The PIXMA iX4000 is a new model.

Crisp business documents in a flash
For professional business documents without delay, the new PIXMA models each benefit from the FINE print technology speed advantage. Sharp, crisp text printing is achieved with a pigment black ink.
Both printers’ USB 2.0 Hi-Speed connection ensures the high speed print engines are always at full productivity. 

Photolab quality, without the wait
Businesses are becoming increasingly reliant on digital images to provide instant global communication without the need for translating. Incorporating FINE technology the new PIXMA printers deliver photolab quality prints at exceptional speeds. Ink droplets of 2pl, together with the maximum 4800dpi x 1200dpi print resolution, provide virtually grain free photos with an image quality comparable to that of a conventional 6-colour photo printer.

Capable of printing on A3+ photo paper, the PIXMA iX5000 and PIXMA iX4000 take only 166 seconds3 to produce an A3+ photolab quality print (28 x 36cm photo on A3+ photo paper). Borderless 4 x 6” photo prints are generated in as little as 51 seconds by both printers.

Design for business
The new printers continue in the PIXMA tradition of advanced, contemporary designs – providing offices with a stylish yet robust device, light years away from the traditional ‘beige box’ office printer. Easy-access, large operation keys add to the printers’ locational freedom in the office.

Software
A comprehensive range of quality software is bundled with the PIXMA iX5000 and PIXMA iX4000, allowing users to make full use of the printers’ functionality. For details see Additional Information.

Media
Canon’s growing range of media extends the creative and practical applications of the printers. For details see Additional Information.

Pricing and availability
The PIXMA iX4000 and iX5000 will be available from April 2006, priced at around £249.00 inc. VAT/ €360.00 inc. VAT and £329.00 inc. VAT/ €475.00 inc. VAT respectively.

Reader enquiries
UK – 08705 143723 / http://www.canon.co.uk   
Eire – (01) 2052400 / http://www.canon.ie

Software
Each printer comes bundled with the following software:
- Easy-PhotoPrint – provides three easy steps to printing photos. Assisting with options such as media selection and scaling, it includes features such as Face Sharpening for out-of-focus face correction, Red Eye Correction and Digital Face Smoothing to reduce the appearance of wrinkles.
- Easy-WebPrint – (Windows only) sits on the Explorer toolbar and takes the frustration out of web page printing, saving time, ink and paper by correctly scaling output to prevent the common problem of having the right-hand side of web pages cut off.
- PhotoRecord – (Windows only) guides users through printing a personalised photo album, including assistance with printing on Canon’s double-sided media.
- Easy-Print Toolbox – (Windows only) Always-at-the-ready desktop menu bar used to instantly launch common applications such as PhotoRecord and Easy-Photo-Print.

Compatibility
All four products are compatible with Windows 98/Me/2000/XP, Mac OS X v10.2.8 or later.

Matching media
Canon’s competitive advantage in printer hardware technology is fully realised when genuine Canon photo grade media and inks are used. The diverse and growing range of Canon media is developed specifically to work in combination with Canon’s FINE ink jet print technology. Photo papers and media are available in a wide range of formats (including mini stickers), finishes (from matt to semi-gloss to super-high gloss) and sizes (from credit card to the new A3+ size). As well as A3+, other new sizes include 8 x 10” (20 x 25cm) and 10 x 12” (25 x 30 cm) SG-101 and PR-101. Photo Paper Pro (PR-101) is the flagship paper for the highest grade, ultimate durability professional results. A double-sided photo paper (PP-101D 5 x 7cm and PP-101D A4) is also available.

Technologies Explained

FINE
Canon’s patented FINE semi-conductor manufacturing technique creates extraordinary print speeds for both photo as well as document printing by producing exceptionally long print heads with exceptionally high nozzle count and density. These get more ink on the page in less time than is possible with traditional inkjet technology, delivering fast borderless photo prints up to A3+ size.
FINE also achieves virtually grain free photolab quality by delivering millions of microscopic 2 picolitre droplets each second with extremely high consistency and accuracy from 10 m diameter Micro-Nozzles.

ChromaLife100
For improved fade resistance, the printer supports Canon’s ChromaLife100: a system of genuine Canon dye-based inks, which deliver exceptionally broad colour gamut, and specialised photo paper designed to work together with FINE print heads. This technology ‘triangle’ of nozzle design, ink and media produces prints that rival silver halide quality and longevity. Prints resist fading for 100 years when album-stored, 30 years when displayed under glass and 10 years when exposed to the effects of the air .

Single Ink
The PIXMA iX5000 and PIXMA iX4000’s individual ink tanks ensure that only those inks which run out need to be replaced. They feature LEDs that only light when the tanks are installed correctly. To provide ink level monitoring information during stand-alone use that would normally be displayed on the computer screen, LEDs flash slowly to warn when the tank runs low, and more rapidly to indicate when the cartridge is empty.

PictBridge
Both the PIXMA iX5000 and PIXMA iX4000 support the vendor independent PictBridge standard for direct cable connection photo printing with contemporary digital cameras and digital video cameras, without the need for a PC.

About Canon (UK) Limited
Canon is a world-leading innovator and provider of imaging and information technology solutions for the home and office environments.

Canon has a global philosophy of Kyosei - living and working together for the common good, which clearly demonstrates commitment to customers, staff and the environment shared by all.

Canon (UK) Ltd is the UK marketing and sales operation for the US$33 billion global company based in Tokyo, Japan.  In the UK Canon employs over 2,000 people in various locations including Ireland and has achieved sales of £522m in 2004.

The main business focus for Canon (UK) Ltd, covers two clearly defined market segments: Business Solutions covering both the office and professional printing environments (including: multifunctional printers, IT consultation and peripherals: photocopiers, printers, fax machines, document management hardware & software, multimedia LCD projectors) and Consumer Imaging (input solutions: film and digital cameras, camcorders, binoculars and scanners; and output solutions: Ink Jet printers, fax machines, desktop multifunctionals and multimedia projectors).

PIXMA iX5000 Specifications

Up to 4800 x 1200 dpi 1
4-ink FINE print head with 2 pl Micro-Nozzles
ICM, ColorSync, Exif Print
“Borderless 10 x 15cm: Approx. 51 seconds (Std)
A3+: Approx. 166 seconds (Std)”
Up to 25ppm (Max.), 12.2ppm (Std)
Text & Graphics: Up to 17ppm (Max.), 9.5ppm (Std)
A4 Full Page: Approx. 97 seconds (Std)
See Media Compatibility Worksheet
Sheet feeder: 64 to 105 g/m2 and supported
Canon special media up to 273 g/m2
Sheet feeder: 150 sheets
Sheet feeder: A3+, A3, LDR+, LDR, A4, B5, A5, Letter, Legal, Envelopes (DL size or Commercial 10), 25 x 30cm, 20 x 25cm, 13 x 18cm, 10 x 15cm Credit Card size
Available using Photo Paper Pro (A3+, A3, A4 & 10 x 15cm), Photo Paper Plus Glossy (A3+, A3, A4, 13 x 18cm & 10 x 15cm), Photo Paper Plus Semi Gloss (A3+, A3, A4 & 10 x 15cm), Glossy Photo Paper (A3+, A3, A4, 10 x 15cm & Credit Card), Matte Photo Paper (A3, A4)
Available by manual operation only using Photo Paper Plus Double Sided, Super White Paper or plain paper in A3+, A3, A4, B5, A5, Letter & 13 x 18cm sizes
Single Ink technology – 4 separate ink tanks (PGI-5BK, CLI-8C, CLI-8M, CLI-8Y)
PGI-5BK: 380 pages at 5% coverage2 PGI-5BK: 1400 pages (Printing ISO/JIS-SCID N5) 3
400 pages at 5% coverage per ink tank 2 Cyan: 710 pages, Magenta: 470 pages, Yellow: 460 pages, (Printing ISO/JIS-SCID N5) 3
USB 2.0 Hi-Speed 5
Direct Print Port: Camera direct photo printing from PictBridge compliant digital cameras & camcorders
“Camera: PictBridge
Compatibility: Exif 2.2 or earlier, DPOF compliant”
Windows: PC with Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows Me or Windows 98, USB interface 4, CD-ROM Drive. Free hard disk space: TBC MB for Windows XP/2000 and Windows Me/98.
Mac: Macintosh computer with Mac OS X v10.2.8 or later, USB interface. Free hard disk space: TBC MB for Mac OS X v10.2.8 or later.
Windows: Photo Optimizer PRO, Image Optimizer, Photo Noise Reduction, Vivid Photo
Mac: Vivid Photo, Photo Noise Reduction
“Windows: Easy-WebPrint, Easy-PhotoPrint, PhotoRecord and Easy-PrintToolBox. 
Mac: Easy-PhotoPrint”
AC 100 – 240V
Approx. 0.8W (standby), approx. 17W (printing)
5° – 35° C
10 – 90% RH (no condensation)
Approx. 37dB (A) (best quality mode)
601 x 317.6 x 193.2mm
Approx. 9.3kg
Ink droplets can be placed with a minimum pitch of 1/4800 inch
Print volume figures may vary with the content of the document and the print mode. Black calculation based on an average of four printers run continuously until ink out printing 1500 characters per page, normal text, in default mode on plain paper using Windows XP and Word 2003.
Print volume figures may vary with the content of the document and the print mode. Colour calculation based on an average of four printers run continuously until ink out printing the ISO/JIS-SCID N5 pattern in default mode on plain paper using Windows XP and Word 2003.
Using recommended adapter - not supplied.
USB operation can only be guaranteed on a PC with pre-installed Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows Me, or Windows 98.  USB 2.0 Hi-Speed performance requires Windows XP Service Pack 1, Windows 2000 Service Pack 4 or Mac OS X version 10.2.7 or later with pre-installed USB 2.0 port.

PIXMA iX4000 Specifications

Up to 4800 x 1200 dpi 1
4-ink FINE print head with 2 pl Micro-Nozzles
ICM, ColorSync, Exif Print
“Borderless 10 x 15cm: Approx. 51 seconds (Std)
A3+: Approx. 166 seconds (Std)”
Up to 18ppm (Max.), 11.3ppm (Std)
Text & Graphics: Up to 14ppm (Max.), 8.9ppm (Std)
A4 Full Page: Approx. 97 seconds (Std)
See Media Compatibility Worksheet
Sheet feeder: 64 to 105 g/m2 and supported
Canon special media up to 273 g/m2
Sheet feeder: 150 sheets
Sheet feeder: A3+, A3, LDR+, LDR, A4, B5, A5, Letter, Legal, Envelopes (DL size or Commercial 10), 25 x 30cm, 20 x 25cm, 13 x 18cm, 10 x 15cm Credit Card size
Available using Photo Paper Pro (A3+, A3, A4 & 10 x 15cm), Photo Paper Plus Glossy (A3+, A3, A4, 13 x 18cm & 10 x 15cm), Photo Paper Plus Semi Gloss (A3+, A3, A4 & 10 x 15cm), Glossy Photo Paper (A3+, A3, A4, 10 x 15cm & Credit Card), Matte Photo Paper (A3, A4)
Available by manual operation only using Photo Paper Plus Double Sided, Super White Paper or plain paper in A3+, A3, A4, B5, A5, Letter & 13 x 18cm sizes
Single Ink technology – 4 separate ink tanks (PGI-5BK, CLI-8C, CLI-8M, CLI-8Y)
PGI-5BK: 380 pages at 5% coverage2 PGI-5BK: 1400 pages (Printing ISO/JIS-SCID N5) 3
400 pages at 5% coverage per ink tank 2 Cyan: 710 pages, Magenta: 470 pages, Yellow: 460 pages, (Printing ISO/JIS-SCID N5) 3
USB 2.0 Hi-Speed 5
Direct Print Port: Camera direct photo printing from PictBridge compliant digital cameras & camcorders
“Camera: PictBridge
Compatibility: Exif 2.2 or earlier, DPOF compliant”
Windows: PC with Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows Me or Windows 98, USB interface 4, CD-ROM Drive. Free hard disk space: TBC MB for Windows XP/2000 and Windows Me/98.
Mac: Macintosh computer with Mac OS X v10.2.8 or later, USB interface. Free hard disk space: TBC MB for Mac OS X v10.2.8 or later.
Windows: Photo Optimizer PRO, Image Optimizer, Photo Noise Reduction, Vivid Photo
Mac: Vivid Photo, Photo Noise Reduction
“Windows: Easy-WebPrint, Easy-PhotoPrint, PhotoRecord and Easy-PrintToolBox. 
Mac: Easy-PhotoPrint”
AC 100 – 240V
Approx. 0.8W (standby), approx. 17W (printing)
5° – 35° C
10 – 90% RH (no condensation)
Approx. 37dB (A) (best quality mode)
601 x 317.6 x 193.2mm
Approx. 9.3kg
Ink droplets can be placed with a minimum pitch of 1/4800 inch
Print volume figures may vary with the content of the document and the print mode. Black calculation based on an average of four printers run continuously until ink out printing 1500 characters per page, normal text, in default mode on plain paper using Windows XP and Word 2003.
Print volume figures may vary with the content of the document and the print mode. Colour calculation based on an average of four printers run continuously until ink out printing the ISO/JIS-SCID N5 pattern in default mode on plain paper using Windows XP and Word 2003.
Using recommended adapter - not supplied.
USB operation can only be guaranteed on a PC with pre-installed Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows Me, or Windows 98.  USB 2.0 Hi-Speed performance requires Windows XP Service Pack 1, Windows 2000 Service Pack 4 or Mac OS X version 10.2.7 or later with pre-installed USB 2.0 port.

Canon PIXMA iX5000

Canon PIXMA iX4000



 

Your Comments

23 Comments so far | Newest Oldest first | Post a comment

#1 Tom

Hi, i'm thinking of buying one of those 2 printers.
But the only difference I can find is the number of pages it can print per minute. But the IX5000 is quite a bit more expensive than the IX4000 for that to be the only differnce between the two. Can anybody tell me if there are any other differences?
Tom

6:04 pm - Tuesday, August 1, 2006

#2 Michelll

I am definately interested in purchasing the ix4000 as i do not care too much about the speed but it is not stated in the specifications of the printers if they print banners(longer than an a3 sheet) like other a3 printers do. does anyone know if it does?

6:42 pm - Thursday, October 19, 2006

#3 Geoff

Hi..........Canon's own website does a 'comparison test' on all of their products,so i think you'll find an answer to the 1st question there .......eg; the ix5000 is slightly faster etc.

Cheers Geoff

12:58 am - Saturday, November 25, 2006

#4 John

I've got an ix4000 and it says it does banners (though I've never done one)
Generally I'm happy -
GOOD it's so quick to print photos compared to my old epson :-o
GOOD it's printed text and graphics faultlessly on any old non-inkjet paper I've used
GOOD complete set of inks GBP 30
BAD the blacks are not very black and I'm having trouble getting them without a magenta cast (even in monochrome photos use colour inks)
BAD it uses ink twice as fast as my epson
BAD it won't do A5 borderless - my favourite size :-(

9:31 am - Tuesday, March 13, 2007

#5 conor

I'm trying to get it to print banners and i cant get it working. Does anyone know how?

7:23 pm - Sunday, April 1, 2007

#6 sarah

I am looking for a printer for art purposes. As a sutdent I'm interested in running costs and print quality.

Any update on the print quality for BLACK print?

How do photo images comeout?

And what are people's views about running costs i.e. ink usage and cartridge replacement costs?

10:14 am - Thursday, February 21, 2008

#7 Peter King

Is the software any good ? ie can you ajust the gamut to edge away from this reported magenta cast ect.

8:46 am - Thursday, March 6, 2008

#8 mike

HEY! this printer IS great, but the "no A5 borderless" thing is a total drag, considering the guy at the store said, "NOOOOO problem." i'm ordering everything over the internet from now on.

is there a solution?

1:27 pm - Saturday, March 29, 2008

#9 Peter

I am a digital photography enthusiast; I do take a hundred photographs every week and store them in my hard disk. Recently I brought cheapest A3 Canon Pixma ix4000 ink jet printer to print my photographs. I decision was based on price of ink, paper and quality of print. I could spend twice more money to buy expensive printer, but it is not practical for home use.

10:13 pm - Tuesday, April 15, 2008

#10 Veronica

Canon Pixma IX4000 is just not good on black and white prints. I do a lot of b/w photography and there is a horrible magenta or sepia cast. I am sending it back as it is new and I have tried so much paper it has been a waste. My old A4 canon IP 3000 is far better with b/w and has no colour cast. WHy is this does anyone know?!

6:44 pm - Tuesday, February 10, 2009

#11 Melody

I have the Canon Pixma IX4000. I am very unhappy about the quality of the prints as it seems incapable of printing a proper black. In fact from from what I can gather, it doesn't use the black cartridge at all (except for printing text) and instead makes a composite black out of cyan, yellow and magenta.
There also seems to be no option to print 'black ink only.' I feel like I must be missing something, as all reviews have been great for this printer. I have even tried using expensive epson paper but just feel that the quality is not as good as it should be. (colours are muted/ faded and not at all vibrant)

Any advice hugely appreciated!

10:44 pm - Monday, March 16, 2009

#12 Oldmanroo

We too are having loadsá trouble getting decent monochrome. I spent a bomb on different Canon papers, hoping that would resolve it. No luck.
If someone has an answer, that would make at least 3 happy bunnies who read this.

7:27 pm - Monday, April 6, 2009

#13 veronica

It seems that the Ix 4000 DOES NOT PRINT B/W....had to keep mine after all as they would not exchange - I think it is a bit of a cheat selling this printer and saying it is good for photographs - colour is OKish but that is it. Rather a waste of money but I have had the answer that it only uses the three colours to make b/w and the other black cartridge is for text. What a con....so don't waste paper trying to get a b/w print!

9:47 pm - Thursday, April 23, 2009

#14 trisha

Hi,
I am wanting to buy my husband an A3 photo printer and untill i read the above reviews thought I had found the right one for him. the ix 4000. He is just starting out, as a hobby and wants to print his photos, in colour aswell as B&W
Any ideas please !

12:26 pm - Tuesday, May 12, 2009

#15 Stefan

The black problem might be that the black you try to print isn't rich-black, meaning c:50 m:50 y:50 k:100. Which means that if you try to print something black, let's say out of illustrator, don't just make it black (k:100) but make it rich-black using also CMY. But than again, i don't own this printer, but since this printer is a bit more professional that other printers i can imagine you need a more professional approach.

10:13 am - Thursday, June 11, 2009

#16 Oldmanroo

Stefan, thanks for thought. Will give that a go.

Trisha,
cannot recommend 1x4000 - no good for B&W - admitted by a Canon Tech person.
Try Epson R2200 & R2400 (go 2ndhand first),BUT be aware, these too have some limitations.
A great source of info is Amazon.com reviews. There is a tremendous amount of feedback there.
There is no IDEAL printer & EVERYBODY has an opinion.
GOOD LUCK.

11:40 am - Thursday, June 11, 2009

#17 Phil

I spent a couple of days playing with the ix5000 printer with Photoshop and Illustrator on a Mac as our community artists complained of variable results, dark prints, magenta cast prints etc.

At low dpi greys have a slight pink cast and this is more noticeable if viewed under fluorescent light. If Photoshop is set to Photoshop controls color and the print dialog quality control is left at Composite Document the print driver is still altering colour - results are often dark and pink. This seems to be the most common user error.

To get pure grey its necessary to either
1) Let the Canon printer driver control the colour - the driver has a good idea of the limitations of the inks and mostly compensates for the effect regardless of the quality settings
2) or let Adobe control the colour and select a suitable profile, and make sure the print quality is high. I am using the matt photo paper profile MP1 for a good quality matt print, and the PR2 profile for a slightly darker higher ink content print. Illustrator does not make use of the Canon print dialog so no quality settings are available and the print quality it is adopting seems not optimal according to my tests. The output is okay, but can be improved by opening the document in Photoshop, setting photoshop controls print quality, Canon ix5000 PR2 profile, press PRINT button and in the print dialog box set: Quality Settings press the detailled button and pull the slider to maximum.

This produced pleasant results with standard office white paper. With various photo papers the result appears to still have a very slight pink cast, but we are not using Canon ink / paper so that is not a good test.

There is some very techy information on Illustrator and Canon printers here
http://www.innoparticularorder.com/getting-canon-inkjets-to-work-on-a-mac/
http://openprinting.org/show_printer.cgi?recnum=Canon-PIXMA-iX5000

2:06 pm - Saturday, June 13, 2009

#18 Val

I am giving up on the Canon Pixma IX4000 - It does not work well enough and the b/w are awful. Try telling Canon that though!. WIll be selling my IX4000 at a good reudction - it is fine for everyday work and great for charts but it is not right for me!

Anyone know the best A4 printer that produces excellent b/w. I can't afford another A3.

1:04 pm - Thursday, July 23, 2009

#19 Val

Well - I managed to get a good b/w! on the Canon IX4000- put a touch of a blue filter on the photography using Photoshop, flattened image of course and printed out - almost no cast at all!

11:56 am - Sunday, July 26, 2009

#20 isis

I am haveing trouble printing good black as well...( with the pixma ix4000)
If i print from photoshop it does great black but then cant do borderless....
Basically its just not such a good printer as if i use the easy print or i-photo it stripes badly..
Anyone god a borderless printing solution for photoshop?

1:05 pm - Wednesday, September 2, 2009

#21 lanny

mmm looks like i shall be buying an Epson r1800...

6:19 pm - Saturday, November 28, 2009

#22 Nick

Hi all,

I'm new here. Found this site after having ghastly results with the pixma ix4000. Only on dark photos. Rest were lovely.
Now one night shot of Sydney harbor bridge was the biggest disappointment. Much of the picture was covered in this muddy hazy effect which killed the detail and was frankly a waste of ink.
Now comes the bit I want to tell you. I dropped some water on it by accident and immediately I could see vivid black underneath the drop and the detail was all there!! So I sponged the whole sheet removing this
kind of cloudy film to reveal a nice picture underneath. Funnily enough the sponge was clean after so whatever this is its not ink.
Unfortunately the this is not permanent as the cloudiness comes back full force after a few minutes.
Is this down to poor paper or something? I'm not saying the black is true but there is a hell of an improvement, albeit temporary so far.
Any comments on this would be appreciated.

2:28 pm - Tuesday, December 15, 2009

#23 daisy

i had a pixma iX4000. i just try to install it but when am about to execute to print for the print head alignment the paper that i used will cram-fold. I followed the instruction already but i cant figure out what was the problem on this printer.

What will be the solutions in this problem. Hope you will respond on this matter coz i have deadlines to submit plans to be printed out. Thank you...


DJ

2:50 pm - Tuesday, January 19, 2010

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