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PREFACE
Coke vending machines are everywhere. They’re getting more and more like regular computers with LEDs that show little “ICE COLD” messages and whatnot. Well, there’s a lot more to those little built-in computers than you may think. Included in the low-level operating system that these babies run on is an actual debug menu that gives you access to all sorts of machine information and possibly gives you free cokes in older machines.

WHICH MACHINES WORK?
There’s a very strict list of vending machines that have the debug menu. First off, they’re all COCA-COLA product vending machines. This means the giant, un-missable picture on the front must show any of the following: Coke, Dasani (Water), Barq’s Root Beer, Vanilla Coke, Cherry Coke, Sprite, Evlan (water), Fanta, Fresca, Frutopia, Hi-C, Sprite Remix, Mad River, Mello Yello, Minute Maid, Nestea, Odwalla, Mr. Pibb/Pibb Xtra, Planet Java, Power Ade, Seagram’s Ginger Ale, Simply Orange, Sparkletts, or Tab. Of course anything Diet or Caffeine free works too.
The machine must have an LED screen. Some of the older ones just allow the LED to be set to a price amount and won’t have the debug menu. You’re safer if the little LED is telling you something. Usually it will scroll a little message like “Ice Cold Cokes”. Newer machines are more likely candidates.

ACCESSING THE MENU
To enter the menu, there’s a button combination. HERE’S THE ONLY THING YOU HAVE TO REALLY REMEMBER:

[4]-[2]-[3]-[1]

The buttons are numbered depending on how they are positioned. They will either be vertical (more likely), or in horizontal rows of 4 buttons per row. If it is vertical, the first button is #1, the one below it is #2, and so forth. If the buttons are in horizontal rows, the first button is #1, and the one to the right of it is #2. The numbers work like a type writer after that. In rows of 4, the first button of row 2 will be button #5. So, to review, getting in to the debug menu looks like this:

COKE MACHINE::::::
$1.00 ——-
————-
[ Coke ] <– Hit this button last
[ Coke ] <– Hit this button second
[ Diet Coke ] <– Hit this button third
[ Sprite ] <– Hit this button first
[ And so on ]
————-

Some text should show up on the LED (probably the word "Error", we'll explain what it means next sections). If nothing happens, your machine doesn't have the debug menu.

NAVIGATION
To navigate from option to option (What they are is next section), remember the numberings we gave the buttons. They work as follows:
Button [ 1 ] – Exit/Back
Button [ 2 ] – Up
Button [ 3 ] – Down
Button [ 4 ] – Select

OPTIONS
Depending on the age of the machine, you will get a varying amount of default options available.
On older machines: SALE, VER, EROR, and RTN
On newer machines: CASH, SALE, EROR, and RTN

CASH – Machine Earnings Display
The CASH option will display how much money is in the machine currently. It generally takes a second or two to load. From here, you can scroll up and down through 12 or 16 different options, depending on the machine age. These other options display how much money was spent on each individual item, classified through its button (or slot, as I like to call it) number.
A neat side note about the slot numbers is that there are more slot numbers than there are actual slot, so usually the last 4 buttons contain zero money. This could be so that the same OS could be used on bigger machines, but the newer machines have even more slot numbers.

SALE – Total Sale Count
The SALE option displays how many drinks have been sold out of the machine. This tends to be cumulative, but not on all machines. The stock guy is probably supposed to reset this each time he re-stocks. Also, this has the same sub-options as the CASH option, where you can scroll up and down and see how many drinks have been sold from each slot.

VER – System/Machine Version?
This option will cause a large alphanumeric string to scroll across the LCD. The number looks very much like a serial number, but doesn't vary from machine to machine. It is most likely the OS or machine version number, but of the older machines that have the option, I haven't seen one that doesn't have the same number.

EROR – Error Log
There are 8 different types of errors – COLJ (Column Jams), VEnd (Vend Mechanism), door (Door Switch), sels (Select Switch), CHAR (Changer Errors), acce (Acceptor Errors), StS (Space-to-sales errors), and bVal (Bill Validators). The separate types and actual errors are useless, as you assumably can't get inside the machine, BUT(!) you can clear the errors. Hold the enter (Number 4) button down for about 2 seconds, and it should clear the error.

RTN – Return
This is simply the return option. Selecting this will exit the debug menu. On newer machines, pressing the BACK button at the main menu will not exit, and RTN must be selected.
A side note: The menu can also be exited by pressing the coin return button.

EXTRAS
By holding in the coin return button and not releasing, on the newer "big-button" machines, this will display the internal temperature in Fahrenheit, as in "42F".

**Update**
There are many more menu options that are only accessible if they've either been enabled from the computer inside the machine, or on the internal computer behind the door (Probably not feasible for you to access).

CPO – Coin Payout Mode
You can can dump coins from the coin mechanism, and the various menu options allow you to choose which type of coins (Nickels, dimes, etc.) are dumped.

tVFL – Tube Fill Mode
This is useless to you. This allows you to load coins into the coin tubes, which you can't do from the outside.

TEST – Test Routines
This allows you to test the following various routines:
SE Allows you to test the buttons. Will give you number
of button when you press it
SP Sold-out paddle test. Not quite sure, most likely internal function.
Su Sold-out switch test. Same as paddle.
CO Motor test. Will run various column motors.
Cn Coin test. Put in a coin and it will tell you what kind of
coin it is.
nA Note acceptor test. Same as Cn, but for bills.
dSP Display test. Will illuminate various LEDs.
vErS Rattles off version number.

RELY – Relay test
This tests the relay electronic control of various parts. Do not do, as it will cause damage if various internal parts are not unplugged before usage.

PASS – Password
This is not normally accessible, but allows you to change the menu password from the 4-2-3-1. Whoo!

PrIC – Price Setting
Used to set the price for a drink. Not sure how to work it, but it seems simple enough.

StOS – Space-to-sales routine
Lets you change the STS routine and other options. This means that various buttons will all mean the same thing, i.e. the 6 coke buttons don't actually vend from 6 different columns, but vend from one (changing when one runs out of course).

COn – Machine Configuration/Permissions
This is the machine config menu that decides what of these options you are allowed to access through the outside panel. This is probably only accessible with the door open. I won't go into detail, but I'll list the Config numbers and what each do: C1 sets price menu on, C2 sets special (manufacturer) options on), C3 disables the "ICE COLD COKE" message. C4 is autoviewing of menu when door is opened, C5 is door switch status, C6 is mysteriously reserved for "future use", C7 determines whether your money credit stays in for 5 minutes or indefinitely, C8 is Force Vend, C9 allows multiple vends without putting in more money (i.e put in a 5 and get 3 cokes and then your change), and C10 is Escrow Inhibit.

CCoC – Correct Change Only Control
Adjusts Correct Change only rule to your liking.

TIME – Time Adjustment
Allows you to set the machine's local time.

LANG – Language Selection
Not sure how many languages are supported, but there are apparently more than just English.

USEFULNESS
Unless you can get behind the door, there's little you can do with this except impress your friends. However, if you're able to set the C-switches properly, you'll be able to manipulate the machine in any way you want, get free drinks, change the price, set up cool buy-one-get-one-free deals, etc, etc Smile. Not to forget, knowledge is power. One step closer to free sodas!

Machine

This Works With the old Coca Cola machine but i dont know the new one …

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The game is set 10 years after the Black Mesa incident with Gordon Freeman working for the shady ‘G-Man’ character you made a deal with in the original…
… as well as the G-Man you meet up with a lot of old friends from Black Mesa. There are many new people to meet too like Eli Vance’s daughter, Alyx and her home made robot curiously named ‘dog’.

You meet these characters over a large number of environments you travel through including a harbour, a prison, a dried up ocean, the suburbs, an icebreaker ship and an Eastern European city called City 17. Within these breathtaking landscapes are a mass of 50 different characters to battle and help.

The game has 14 chapters each taking roughly 2-3 hours to complete, which will add up to around some 36 hours worth of playing time. There are no cut scenes in Half-Life 2 meaning you will play every second of the game immersing yourself completely in the story.

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The following article was written by Lena as a part of her revision for the a-levels on English Language in 2005. I hope this will be handy for anyone having to revise for “English GK”

The given extract describes the American Dream as a complex, but also vague term, it is for this vagueness as the American Dream is partly a myth. Eventhough not every American can proclaim that he/she has lived the American Dream yet, they at last all share the same idea. The dream is a key element of the American society, its history, its past, present and future. The main idea that can be considered the myth is basicly, that if someone works hard enough, he/she will improve his/her life by achieving the set personal goal, may that be wealth, independance, freedom, success or whatsoever. Seen from the religious point of view, American and its American Dream can be seen as the “New Canaan”, a paradise where people from different origins, nationalities and religions are able to built up their new future without respect to their personal background, may that be financially or politically wise. Everyone is threated in the same way. This imagination of a equalitarian society is really a dream. California and especially the famous city of Hollywood are a representative of the American Dream as they reflect on a daily basis one of the major aspects of the American Dream: success. The movies that are produced in Hollywood western heros star another representative: mobility. The American Dream has many symbols, some of them are very well known, e.g. The Statue of Liberty and the American flag, as well as really big cars and and grilling burgers infront of your suburban residence in the green. Everyone wants to sucessfuylly, wealthy, independant and have the freedom of choice whatever to do whenever he/she wants to do whatever thing. Yet the word “American Dream” implies that it is -indeed- only a dream. The picture the American Dream casts on America is a truely victious one. It is all imagination, a dream. People like to dream, that is why the American Dream is so well liked all over the world. Welcome to America.

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I come for visit, get treated regal,
So I stay, who care I illegal?
I cross border, poor and broke,Take bus, see employment folk.
Nice man treat me good in there,
Say I need to see welfare.
Welfare say, “You come no more,
We send plenty cash right to your door.”
Welfare cheques, they make you wealthy,NHS, it keep you healthy!
By and by, I got plenty money,
Thanks to you, British dummy.
Write to friends in motherland,
Tell them come as fast as you can.
They come in rags on the back of trucks
I buy big house with welfare bucks.
They come here, we live together,
More welfare cheques, it gets better!
Fourteen families they moving in,
But neighbour’s patience wearing thin.
Finally, British guy moves away,
Now I buy his house, and then I say,
“Find more aliens for house to rent.”
And in the yard I put a tent.
Send for family (they just trash),
But they, too, draw the welfare cash!
Everything is mucho good,
And soon we own the neighbourhood.
We have hobby-it’s called breeding,
Welfare pay for baby feeding.
Kids need dentist? Wife need pills?
We get free! We got no bills!Britishman crazy!
He pay all year,
To keep us illegals in comfort here.
We think UK is very good place!
Much too good for the British race.
If they not like us, they can go,
There’s lots of room elsewhere you know….

Source: my english book

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