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  • Carbonite Stores Up $20M More

    Wade Roush wrote:

    [Updated 5:00 p.m. 1/7/10 with information about the investors in the round] Boston-based Carbonite, which shares the market for online PC backup services with EMC’s Mozy, has raised an additional $20 million round of funding, according to a regulatory filing today. New investor Crosslink Capital of San Francisco led the round, and all of the company’s prior investors also participated, says David Friend, Carbonite’s founder and CEO. “This is a mezzanine round which we anticipate will accelerate our growth going into an IPO a year or so out,” Friend tells Xconomy. The company has previously raised about $47 million, including, most recently, a $20 million Series C round in September 2008 that included Menlo Ventures, 3i Group, Performance Equity, and CommonAngels.







  • Hands On: MSI’s Dual-Screen Tablet Concept [Tablets]

    So MSI apparently has no plans to actually release this dual-screen, Windows 7 tablet, but I stopped by the booth to play around with it anyway. It’s pretty impractical, but hey! Two screens!

    It’s clearly not meant for actual release—the touchscreen was very temperamental, the device as a whole was super slow and they hadn’t made enough changes to Windows 7 to make that dual-screen setup worthwhile. The standard Windows 7 soft keyboard is pretty mediocre, and if this was a real product I’d probably criticize it more. On a basic level, you can tell this is a mere proof of concept—they just slapped two screens together, with no thought as to what benefits that setup might give.

    The hardware, on the other hand, is surprisingly nice—it’s super thin and light, the two 10-inch screens definitely keep it netbook-sized, and the brushed metal finish is really nice. But it’s all kind of a moot point—MSI’s got no plans to bring this to market. Still, cool idea, even if it’s pointless so far. [MSI]







  • The Art of Life

    Back in Time
    Creative Commons License photo credit: h.koppdelaney

    “The doors we open and close each day decide the lives we live.” ~ Flora Whittemore

    Your life. 

    How would you describe it?

    Today, I have a guest post up with Evita Ochel, at her Evolving Beings site. 

    Evita has created a wonderful space for really delving deeper into our state of being, and providing guidance in evolving to whatever space we are ready for.  What I love about Evita and her work is how open she is to each of us being on our own paths, and that whatever path that is for each of us, it is the right place for us to be. 

    I'm there discussing life and the artistic beauty each of us bring to our lives.  Please join me as I talk about Life is Art.

    You can keep up with Evita by subscribing to Evolving Beings and by follower her on Twitter.

    Comments are closed.

  • Nissan Juke Crossover, una alternativa a los 5 puertas

    juketeaser.jpg

    El Juke Crossover de Nissan viene a llenar un hueco en el mercado europeo de coches de cinco puertas, cubriendo un segmento con coches poco originales y monótonos. Esta última frase no me la acabo de inventar, sino que es parte de la nota de prensa de la propia Nissan, en la presentación del Juke que se situará dentro de la gama Nissan entre el compacto familiar Note y el crossover Qashqai.

    El Juke nace sobre la plataforma del Qazana, un prototipo presentado en el salón de Ginebra. De hecho, si vemos el teaser comparado contra las imagenes del Qazana, comprobaremos que es el mismo coche.

    Digamos que el Qazana, al igual que el Juke, no es un coche muy atractivo que digamos. Sobre todo, el frente provoca… cierta repulsión. Si el Juke al menos puede evitar las tomas de aire inferiores que parecen dientes o suavizar un poco más las líneas… lo veremos otra vez como hace un año, para el próximo salón de Ginebra en su versión definitiva.

    El Juke se fabricará junto con el Qashqai, el Qashqai+2 y el Note en la fábrica de Nissan en Sunderland, Reino Unido, mientras que presentación oficial tendrá lugar el 10 de febrero, fecha en que tendremos más datos de este crossover.

    Fuente | Nissan Prensa



  • Biosphere is Abandoned and Beautifully Decrepit, Just Like Pauly Shore’s Career [Science]

    Biosphere 2 (the biosphere, not the non-existent movie sequel) was the largest sealed environment ever created. It cost $200 million to build and included a million-gallon fake ocean. Now, its wild interior has taken over.

    The Biosphere was a bit of a disaster, as detailed by the New York Times back in 1992:

    Scientists ridiculed it. Members of the support team resigned, charging publicly that the enterprise was awash in deception. And even some crew members living under the glass domes, gaunt after considerable loss of weight, tempers flaring, this winter threatened to mutiny if management did not repair a growing blot on the project’s reputation.

    Fast forward 15 years, and it was falling apart and sold to private developers. In the future, it might be home to a development called “Biosphere Estates.” Because who wouldn’t want to live in a run-down biosphere? [BLDGBLOG]







  • How The Web is Transforming Personal Finance

    money_wallet_logosized_jan09.jpgNot too long ago, personal finance tools like Quicken and Microsoft Money used to be bound to the desktop. Exchanging information with your banks used to be a hassle. Keeping track of credit card purchases was often a question of waiting for statements to arrive by mail and then entering data by hand. Today, free tools like Mint, moneyStrands and Wesabe make it easy to track all of this information. Thanks to this, you can now get a better overview of your personal finances than ever before.

    Sponsor

    Editor’s note: This story is part of ReadWriteWeb’s Personal Finance series, a weekly, three-month-long look at how the Internet has transformed personal finance. Up until April 15, which is the deadline for U.S. readers to file their taxes, we’ll be looking at how personal finance has evolved, analyzing top web tools and posting video of our conversations with the people who are shaping the online world of personal finance.

    If you are interested in sponsoring the rest of this Content Series on Personal Finance, please contact our COO Sean Ammirati.

    Mint: Leading the Charge

    Currently, the two most well-known online tools for personal finance management are arguably Mint and Intuit’s Quicken Online.

    mint_sshot_sep08.pngMint stood out from the pack early on because the company made it extremely easy to keep track of all your expenses. After giving Mint access to your bank and credit card account, the service simply downloads your financial information at regular intervals and organizes it. Mint can even track your 401(k) for you.

    Mint launched in September 2007 and quickly became the darling of the Web 2.0 world. Unlike most of its desktop-bound competitors, Mint managed to talk to virtually every bank and credit card issuer from day one. In October 2008, Mint came out of beta. Today, the company has more than 1.7 million registered users and sees roughly 700,000 active users every month. In October 2009, the company was signing up 30,000 new users per week.

    Mint’s success didn’t go unnoticed by the incumbent market leaders and Intuit acquired Mint in October 2009. In November 2009, Intuit announced that it would begin to phase out Quicken Online in favor of Mint. Microsoft suspended sales of Microsoft Money on June 30, 2009 and doesn’t plan to compete in the market anymore. Correction: In December, Microsoft actually announced a plan to enter the personal finance market again with a Mint-like tool it is developing in collaboration with Citi.

    Beyond Mint

    While Mint gets most of the mindshare on the web these days, it’s by no means the only player in this market. Indeed, the success of Mint has given rise to a plethora of similar tools and legitimizes the efforts of companies that tried to enter this market before Mint.

    ClearCheckbook.com, for example, launched in May 2006. The company focuses on bringing checkbook management online.

    wesabe_example.pngA number of other tools are competing more directly with Mint. Wesabe, for example, also focuses on giving users an overview of how they spend their money. Sadly, Wesabe makes downloading your information from your checking and credit card accounts a bit more difficult than Mint.

    Since acquiring Exepnsr, Strands now also offers its own personal finance tool for setting up and tracking personal budgets and staying on top of your finances. Geezeo – which was founded in 2006, and also looks a lot like Mint, has a very strong focus on budgeting.

    Most of these tools focus on the U.S. market, but more and more of them are also now available outside of the United States. Kublax, for example, offers a Mint-like service in the U.K.

    Going Mobile

    Just like almost every other category of online tools, personal finance tools are also making the move to mobile. Mint and Wesabe, for example, offer both an iPhone app and mobile-optimized websites. Most importantly, all of these services are also able to send out alerts to your phone – either through push alerts on the iPhone or as text messages. Whenever you run the risk of exceeding your credit card limit, for example, these services will send you an alert.

    mint_budgets_iphone_app.pngOf course, a number of banks have also gotten into this game and now offer their own mobile apps. The Bank of America, Chase Mobile and Wells Fargo apps are currently among the top 10 most downloaded free finance iPhone apps, for example.

    When it comes to paying your bills, apps like BillMinder and BillTracker make it easy to never forget when a bill is due.

    What’s Next?

    Over the last few years, the web has clearly transformed the way we use personal finance software. Over the next few months, we will have a closer look at the current generation of personal budgeting and finance tools on the web. We will also analyze the current trends around online finance software.

    This is the first post in our upcoming series about personal finance. If you are interested in sponsoring the rest of this Content Series on Personal Finance, please contact our COO Sean Ammirati.

    Discuss


  • ¡¡¡Delincuentes destruyen Chan-Chan!!!

    ¿Que opinan sobre este atentado al patrimonio de la humanidad y que castigo deberian recibir?

  • Palm Introduces 3D Games for webOS

    webos gamesPalm, Inc. today introduced several graphics-intensive 3D game titles for webOS, from leading game developers EA Mobile; Gameloft; Glu Mobile; and Laminar Research. Demonstrated at Palm’s CES event, the games will be available today in the Palm App Catalog for Palm Pre customers.

    “We are very excited about the potential of webOS as a platform for mobile 3D gaming,” said Katie Mitic, senior vice president, Product Marketing, Palm, Inc. “This is a key application category, and we’ve worked closely with some of the leading game developers to deliver a great game experience for our customers.”






  • webOS Video Recording & Editing Announced

    Video Recording demoIf you’ve been hanging out for video recording on your Pre or Pixi (without resorting to homebrew hackery), Palm have answered your prayers today: they’ve announced at CES that full video recording, editing and sharing capabilities will be available with the webOS 1.4 update on all models, due February.

    Director of Product Marketing Paul Cousineu demo’d the new feature by taking a video live onstage, and uploading it to Youtube in the background as he played one of the newly-announced 3D games (The Sims, to be exact). Pics after the break!






  • France’s Latest Plan: Tax Google, Microsoft And Yahoo To Fund Record Labels

    If you thought France had already gone off the deep end with its plan to kick file sharers off the internet, now comes the news of a government report that suggests a new plan: tax successful big internet companies, like Google, Yahoo and Microsoft and use that money to fund the “music and publishing” sectors (which basically means the record labels). We’ve been pointing out how all of these attempts to bolster copyright laws have really been about propping up businesses that haven’t been able to adapt, but is there any more blatant example of this than taxing the companies that have figured out how to use the internet to fund those that haven’t?? This is entitlement culture in the extreme.

    Apparently Nicolas Sarkozy will get “the last word” on whether or not to adopt this policy, which means that it’s pretty likely. Sarkozy — who has a long history of copyright infringement by his own party — seems to believe that stronger copyright means defending French culture, when it really just means handouts to a few failing businesses who haven’t wanted to adapt.

    Update: Really good point made by Andrew F in the comments:


    The Zelnick Report says the tax would kick in anytime an online ad or sponsored link is clicked in France. One of the most controversial items in the report is that it calls for a company to be taxed regardless of where it is based.

    If that’s legal, it’s rather frightening. Nearly any website with ads could be taxed if visited by the French. Just wait for sites to start setting up IP filtering that blocks all French users.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Dogs.

    Just watched the best horizon documentary ever. As you may have guessed the subject was dogs and their relationship with humans.

    I agreed with everything they said and found it fascinating to learn about how important dogs have been to humans and visa versa.

    Anyone else catch it/What’s your opinion on the human and dog relationship.

    Oh and if you didn’t catch it here’s the link for it on iplayer!

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode…fe_of_the_Dog/

  • Science confirms that blowing up mountains harms mountains

    by David Roberts

    Scientists would shout this from the mountaintops, but …Photo: farukahmet via Creative CommonsLet’s say you trundle a bunch of enormous industrial equipment into North America’s oldest mountains (an intact temperate ecosystem boasting rich biodiversity, including a number of endangered species), clear-cut the forests, blow millions of tons off the top of the mountains,  dump the rubble into the pristine streams below, and carry out the coal you find on enormous trucks, at high speeds, on narrow roads, through some of America’s oldest communities.

    Think that would cause any ecological or human damage? Hmm …

    It might seem obvious, but as the media will tell you, “opinions on shape of earth differ,” so it’s helpful that a group of scientists has come along to assess the existing body of research on the subject.

    And what does Science say? Yes, blowing up mountains causes environmental and health damage!  Who woulda thunk it? In fact, the evidence is so clear that the scientists have taken the extraordinary further step of calling for an immediate moratorium on mountaintop removal mining permits.

    The information is contained in a new paper being published today in the journal Science: “Mountaintop Mining Consequences.” From the press release:

    Based on a comprehensive analysis of the latest scientific findings and new data, a group of the nation’s leading environmental scientists are calling on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to stay all new mountaintop mining permits. In the January 8 edition of the journal Science, they argue that peer-reviewed research unequivocally documents irreversible environmental impacts from this form of mining which also exposes local residents to a higher risk of serious health problems.

    Co-author Dr. Emily Bernhardt, of Duke University, explains that “The chemicals released into streams from valley fills contain a variety of ions and trace metals which are toxic or debilitating for many organisms, which explains why biodiversity is reduced below valley fills.” The authors provide evidence that mine reclamation and mitigation practices have not prevented the contaminants from moving into downstream waters.

    The authors also describe human health impacts associated with surface mining for coal in the Appalachian region, including elevated rates of mortality, lung cancer, and chronic heart, lung and kidney disease in coal producing communities.

    “Over the last 30 years, there has been a global increase in surface mining, and it is now the dominant driver of land-use change in the Central Appalachian region,” says Dr. Keith Eshleman also of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science. “We now know that surface mining has extraordinary consequences for both aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. Notwithstanding recent attempts to improve reclamation, the immense scale of mountaintop mining makes it unrealistic to think that true restoration or mitigation is possible with current techniques.”

    Ironically, this comes on the heels of the Obama administration’s decision to approve a new MTR permit in West Virginia. Perhaps the EPA doesn’t believe that blowing up mountains harms mountains?

    UPDATE: I’m listening to a conference call with some of the scientists who wrote the paper. It’s a real horror show.

    The forests that get cleared store tons of carbon; the vegetation it’s replaced with doesn’t. So there’s a climate change connection (aside from the obvious coal connection).

    Blowing all this stuff destroys the landscapes ability to absorb rainfall, which leads to increased flooding downstream. And those effects are expected to persist for centuries.

    The industry claims it’s “replacing” headwater Appalachian streams, but you won’t be surprised to hear that hydrologists find that claim absurd. The hydrology ends up different and the streams end up polluted with trace metals (poisoning those downstream). These trace metals are also associated with decline in invertebrate biodiversity.

    Permits are considered individually, but multiple permits granted in the same watershed leads to additive effects that persist for decades after abandonment.

    Concentrations of selenium in the water bioaccumulate in the food chain and effects are magnified. The fish become poisonous.

    And of course the human toll: poisoned water leads to more deformities in babies and worse academic outcomes. Air quality is degraded, leading to respiratory diseases. And on and on.

    God this is depressing. I wonder how Don Blankenship feels about it.

    UPDATE 2: Now in Q&A with the scientists. One says, “this is the most heavily peer-reviewed paper I’ve ever published—one review was 18 pages long.”

    The scientists received no outside funding for this; they donated their time. One says the project was sparked by a request from NGOs.

    They’re calling for a moratorium on permits until there can be a “rational hearing” on the science. Many of them were new to the issue when they started this; all of them seem kind of shocked by how horrific it is and by how little attention it’s gotten.

    Asked about new permit just issued for Hobet 45 mine, Dr. Dennis Lemly says the water issue weren’t addressed. “This is just business as usual.”

    One problem with permits: they only address valley fill area. But pollutants escape and many of their cumulative effects are felt downstream.

    Asked: are there technological options available to deal with the water quality properly? Lemly: sure, it’s just a matter of cost. Dr. William Schlesinger adds: when you bury a stream, it’s gone. There’s no replicating it.

    Dr. Emily Bernhardt: part of impetus of the paper was to provide regulators with a comprehensive overview. Met with a small group from U.S. EPA to present findings.

    Bernhardt: all the data mining companies and the WV DEP collect information on surface water, but much of the pollution is found beneath the surface in water tables.

    To me, the most amazing part of all this—and clearly the scientists are amazed as well—is the fact that there’s never been a comprehensive assessment of MTR impacts before. We’re blowing up mountains and we have no idea what the consequences are! The mind boggles. It’s like the whole country is just discovering Appalachia.

    Related Links:

    Blair mountain scandal caps mountaintop removal mayhem

    Coal: Looking Back at 2009 & Ahead at 2010

    New Year’s resolution: Mountaintop removal ends in 2010






  • $15M for Salient Surgical

    Wade Roush wrote:

    Salient Surgical Technologies of Portsmouth, NH, has raised $15 million in equity-based financing from a group of 10 unnamed investors, according to a regulatory filing published online yesterday. Established in 1999 and formerly known as Tissuelink Medical, Salient makes devices that stop bleeding and seal wounds by allowing surgeons to apply focused radio-frequency energy and saline solution to collagen fibers in the body. Salient raised $17.9 million in Series F funding in October 2008, with backing from, Piper Jafray Ventures, Arnerich Messina & Associates, Medtronic, and Rivervest Venture Partners; the Series F round came shortly after Salient withdrew plans for an $86 million initial public offering.







  • ARTICLE: Palm at CES: Pre Plus and Pixi Plus hit Verizon Jan 25

    Palm just wrapped up their CES 2010 press conference. The big news: Lots of webOS enhancements and two new Verizon exclusive devices:

    – Pre Plus and Pixi Plus hit Verizon as exclusives on Jan 25. No pricing announced.

    – Pre Plus: 16GB internal memory, slight redesign including no more front-panel navigation button, and Touchstone-compatible back plate standard

    – Pixi Plus: Now with Wi-Fi

    – Pre Plus and Pixi Plus feature mobile hotspot app: Use the phone as a mobile WiFi router to tether up to 5 devices to your 3G data stream

    – Sprint users, you get none of the above 🙁

    – webOS 1.4 hits in Februrary, will feature video capture/share for all webOS devices

    – Flash 10 plug-in coming to webOS devices soon.

    – 3D gaming on Pre (only) shown off by EA Mobile. First 3D games available now in app catalog.

    – webOS development kit open today, plug-in development kit (PDK) coming soon

    – Pre and Pixi now on SFR France

    – NOTHING mentioned about webOS on AT&T. Hmm.

    – A new line of colorful backplates is available for Pixi.  Including an orange one just for me 😮

    Bad news for Sprint and Apple, but more for Sprint since we all know Apple’s just biding their time before the inevitable iPhone/iPhone OS version four announcement later this year, and they’ll find a way to deal with the Flash business. Sprint, on the other hand, now has last year’s webOS devices that don’t get the mobile hotspot app that the new Verizon phones get. Sprint’s Pre lacks the new design and double-up memory of Pre Plus, and Sprint’s Pixi lacks Wi-Fi while Pixi Plus on VZW has it. And the beat goes on … 

    We’ll have hands-on with the new Palm phones for you real soon. Stay tuned!

    in the meantime, what say you? Will Palm’s new Plus phones on Verizon spell the beginning of something big for webOS?

     


  • Rajd Dakar 2010

    To ja zacznę nieśmiało wątek, bo coś mi sercz nie wypluwa, tu na pierwsze oko nie widzę, a Sonik dziś czwarty, Przygoński siódmy, a Hołek awansował na piąte w generalce, cóż, można by to uczcić co najmniej postem w wątku, a że wątku nie ma… 😀

    Żal straszliwie chrzczonego paliwa, bo marzyła mi się trójka Polaków kończąca Dakar w dziesiątce, a Sonik w trójce, ale cóż. Jak pech, to pech.

  • Palm Fully Opens webOS Developer Program

    openThe Palm webOS developer program is now open, Palm, Inc. said today. Any developer can now go to the Palm Developer Center, sign up, and start developing and distributing applications for webOS devices. Palm showcased its developer program and tools at CES today, and announced a $1 million developer Hot Apps bonus program for the rapidly growing Palm webOS developer community.

    “We’re thrilled to open the doors of a program that offers mobile developers unparalleled freedom and choice in how they distribute and market applications,” said Katie Mitic, senior vice president, Product Marketing, Palm, Inc. “The combination of our highly accessible web-based platform, groundbreaking integration opportunities and open, flexible distribution program makes Palm webOS the best place for developers to create the next generation of innovative mobile applications.”






  • Swedbank office l VILNIUS l 60m l 16fl

    Swedbank office
    Vilnius, Lithuania

    HEIGHT: 60 m
    FLOORS: 16 floors
    COMPLETION: 2009
    ARCHITECT: Audrius Ambrasas architects
    USE: Office

    Images from archdaily.com

  • CES 2010: Gesture Control Software for Android

    GestureTek will announce at CES that its patented, award-winning software for gesture-based mobile device interaction now supports the Android operating system. The eyemo app uses the camera on a mobile device to sense and report device motion. The software is already enabled on multiple platforms, including the Symbian, Brew, Java, Windows Mobile and Linux platforms, enabling a “joystick”, “force of motion” and “menu selection” style of interaction.

    “Greater accessibility to GestureTek’s gesture recognition software is significant for developers in the mobile and consumer electronics space,” says Vincent John Vincent, President of GestureTek. “Developers now have the ability to create gesture-control games and applications for multiple platforms and to develop for multiple mobile devices, including those with hardware-based gesture control solutions (such as accelerometers) and software-based gesture control solutions.”

    GestureTek’s eyemo software can be delivered over the air or embedded directly into many camera-enabled devices, with no special hardware or design updates required. It is an easy to implement software solution that makes adding gesture control more cost-effective for manufacturers. Once the software is enabled, users can shake, rock or roll their phone to play games, answer calls, shuffle playlists, navigate maps, scroll, pan, zoom, turn pages and even browse the web – all without pressing a button or touching the screen.

    I can imagine fantastic games if GestureTek’s software is combined with augmented reality and multi-players. Any developers searching for new ideas reading this?


  • HDWobble updated for the HTC HD2, now with OpenGL ES and multi-touch

    hdwobble For this article, the less I say the better:

    From the developer elAlem

    Hi, folks! It’s me again with the latest version of the hdWobble app. Although it looks like the previous one, this version is done from scratch. It is based on the OpenGL ES library for Windows mobile.
    I recently got my self a new HTC HD2 phone, and since it is supporting multitouch technology I decided to see if I can use it in this app. As it is shown in the video, I managed to implement pinch-zooming and rotation of the loaded image as well as resizing of the wobbling area. There are lots of things that need to be polished and implemented, but I hope that this version will live to see it, unlike the previous one. There is no download available yet. At first it will be released only for the HTC HD2 device. As soon as it is completed I will release it for download. Not sure yet if it is going on the Marketplace or not.
    Anyway, enjoy the existing app and this clip, and stay tuned for the updates.

    See the demo video, which is mildly NSFW, depending on your boss.

    Keep an eye on this XDA-Developer thread for the release.

    Share/Bookmark

  • Video: We take Kia and Microsoft’s Uvo for a test drive at CES

    Filed under: , ,

    We Take Kia and Microsoft's UVO for a Test Drive [w/video]
    Kia’s UVO system hands-on – Click above to watch video after the jump

    Tucked in between Google’s hot new smartphone and a variety of other computer peripheral equipment at this year’s CES show is a crossover. Not the jacked-up, tricked-out, neon-dragging customized type that we typically see around the Consumer Electronics Show, but a bone-stock, 2011 Kia Sorento. Well, stock except for one option: UVO.

    We recently got a chance to try out the newly-announced system in the plastic, and while impressive in its own right, just hours after sitting down with Ford to check out the latest Sync and MyFord Touch, it’s somewhat less than stunning. But, ignoring that for now, Kia’s offering looks good and still ahead of the rest of the curve. It’s functionally comparable to early Sync, enabling easy access to media on 1GB of internal storage, on a USB-connected drive or even on a CD. You can rip from CD straight to internal memory or to a thumb drive, an interesting feature we’re not sure is particularly useful. The touchscreen display is a nice improvement over Ford’s two-line Sync readout, but remember that if you get this system, you’ll have to opt out of in-dash GPS. Good thing you splurged and got that Droid, right? Check out some screens in the gallery below, and there’s a quick video demo after the break.

    Continue reading Video: We take Kia and Microsoft’s Uvo for a test drive at CES

    Video: We take Kia and Microsoft’s Uvo for a test drive at CES originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 07 Jan 2010 14:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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