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Anonymous File :-(, x)
In before more bad advice.
Don't use a blower. Any piece of dust inside a blower will become a projectile that can scratch/damage your sensor.
What I recommend is using a liquid cleaner and a swab. The swabs come sealed so when you are ready to clean you open one up, put a few drops of liquid on it and then clean the sensor.
The swab is the exact height of the sensor, so you gently go across one way, flip it over and go across the other way. Then you are done.
The liquid I have is made by Photographic Solutions but I'm sure there are a lot of good ones out there. The swab looks more or less like the one in this photo.
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