Digital Scanning and Photography (Eu-Independent)

April 18th, 2010 by pacapao

Digital Scanning and Photography (Eu-Independent) : Dan Gookin explains the latest consumer trend in personal computers in Digital Scanning and Photography: specifically, how to choose, buy, configure, and use scanners and digital cameras. The book addresses both Microsoft Windows and Mac OS, and general information (what resolution is) intermingles with specific instructions (how to resize an image under Adobe PhotoDeluxe). The illustrator of this book deserves great praise. The technical drawings, showcasing such details as where you plug cables into a scanner, are razor-sharp and almost photo-realistic. Maybe they are ink-enhanced photos–it’s hard to tell, but in any case they’re far better than the grainy photography that usually populates books with a hardware angle.

Gookin, a pioneer of the trend in light-hearted writing (DOS for Dummies), communicates lots of facts and well-reasoned opinions without being dull, and he’s often downright funny. But sometimes this goes a bit too far, as when he remarks that all scanners should come with some kind of software that makes them go. “If you haven’t found the scanner software,” Gookin writes, “search the scanner box again.” Okay, but less obvious advice would be to go to the scanner manufacturer’s Web site to see if they make the software available for download there. –David Wall, Amazon.com

Topics covered:

  • Digital imaging for home and small-office users of scanners and digital cameras
  • Consumer information on equipment features and pricing
  • Instructions on hooking up a scanner
  • Information on alternative image file formats
  • Tricks for getting the effects you want with image-editing software

Dan Gookin explains the latest consumer trend in PCs in Digital Scanning and Photography: specifically, how to choose, buy, configure, and use scanners and digital cameras. The book addresses both Microsoft Windows and the Mac OS, and general information (what resolution is) intermingles with specific instructions (how to resize an image in Adobe PhotoDeluxe). The illustrator of this book deserves great praise. The technical drawings, which showcase such details as where you plug cables into a scanner, are razor sharp and almost photo-realistic. Maybe they’re ink-enhanced photographs–it’s hard to tell; but, in any case, they’re far better than the grainy photos that usually populate books that have a hardware angle.

Gookin, a pioneer of the trend in lighthearted writing (as in DOS for Dummies), communicates lots of facts and well-reasoned opinions without being dull; often, he’s downright funny. But sometimes the flip shtick goes a bit too far, as when he remarks that all scanners should come with some kind of software that makes them go: “If you haven’t found the scanner software,” Gookin writes, “search the scanner box again.” Okay; but less obvious advice would be to go to the scanner manufacturer’s Web site to see if they have the software available for download there. –David Wall

Topics covered:

  • Digital imaging for home and small-office users of scanners and digital cameras
  • Consumer information on equipment features and pricing
  • Instructions on hooking up a scanner
  • Information on alternative image-file formats
  • Tricks for getting the effects you want by using image-editing software

Digital Scanning and Photography (Eu-Independent)

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KF-Ray Animation 2

April 17th, 2010 by pacapao

Video of KF-Ray 3D rendering. KF-Ray uses raytracing and includes parallel computing. The program is available on code.google.com

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If Cooks Could Kil (Angie Amalfi Mysteries)

April 15th, 2010 by pacapao

If Cooks Could Kil (Angie Amalfi Mysteries) The ethereal blue cover highlighting a plate of surreal spaghetti was a perfect indicator of the rich reading experience ahead.

This novel’s featuring of The Connie Character goes beyond conjuring praise, as her scene-one opens in a cozy Italian restaurant as Connie fidgets with uncomfortably tight, female-attraction-trappings, in anticipation of the arrival of a blind date, a nephew of one of the ex-con, geriatric café owners.

As I’ve written in other reviews of her Angie series, Pence does capturing character studies, of both male and female types. They often begin as colored-ink caricatures, conning the reader, cajoling smiles and chuckles. Then the cartoons flesh out and flit through pages, sometimes slipping off flat edges of print, landing on the arms of my easy chair. They sweat; they smell like roses. They strut and stumble. It’s mesmerizing to watch those transformations, the way the author accomplishes them with graceful, subtle touches. What a skill.

I wondered at one point if Pence was hiding a magic Frankenstein wand (or electrical jolt stick). I don’t mean to imply that her characters are like Frankenstein, just that they are brought a distance almost as far as from death to life.

This # 10 novel in the Angie series (see my Listmania) might be my favorite. As is obvious by now, I absolutely loved Connie’s stepping out in this one, and Max was a fantastic character. A previous financial advisor so far down on his heels his knees are beginning to worry, yet he keeps on walkin’; ya gotta love him.

Pence’s multifaceted talent is exposed well here, a complexity which I believe goes well beyond what she has been given credit for, even in her awards and in-depth editorials.

Maybe I should confess that I don’t just skim & hype books. After a slow read in which I wallow in the entertainment, I sweat to clarify a gem in each novel, of one type or another, though some novels are definitely more jeweled than others.

This may be one of the best in this series for drawing me in, from one heartbeat to the next. At first I had a whiff of a feeling that the Brooklyn Broad characterization was too much of a caricature, but, I thought, even if it is, it’s fun and well done. Then, after about the 2nd page, Connie’s personality began flickering, like having her step through a gateway from a comic book world into a classic mystery novel.

Each character was painted deftly and quickly in that scene-one, from the three ex-con owners of the café, to Max, and the light steam of breathing continued through the last page.

As I read into the smoothly developing relationship between Connie & Max, I began hoping that the interest growing around them, the warmth I felt and the curiosity about how their interaction would continue, and about the mystery beginning to brew so intriguingly but subtly from the base of their relishing a couple plates of spaghetti … I was hoping that ambiance would develop a while before the scene faded. Of course, I was wondering if Butch’s nephew (the blind date) was murdered, and like Connie, I wanted to know Max’s story.

All these “hopes” (all the “want-to-know”s) were fully developed; I wasn’t let down. The slip from scene to scene was seamless. This one deserves multiple awards; it may be the keystone of Pence’s talent which is so cohesively complex it melts like butter over croissant pages.

Slurp the twisting, tangy noodles!

Linda G. Shelnutt :

With another failed business behind her, dilettante chef Angie Amalfi is cooking up a new scheme: Pairing up her best friend Connie with a handsome professional football player who just happens to be related to the owner of her favorite Italian restaurant. Soon Connie takes more interest in a suspicious loner than Angie’s “dream man” and her despondent friend decides to recreate herself as a restaurant consultant. But when police begin to suspect that Connie and her new love interest are connected with a brutal murder and robbery, Angie and her homicide detective fiance Paavo must try to track down the real killer. And when the trail of clues begins to lead back to Angie’s favorite restaurant, it’s up to Angie to set things right — or the only recipe on the menu may be one for disaster. If Cooks Could Kil (Angie Amalfi Mysteries)

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FUCircles130AS Lightweight Satin and Sheer Stripe Circles Fashion Scarf / Sash / Wrap / Belt – Gray / White / Red

April 14th, 2010 by pacapao

FUCircles130AS Lightweight Satin and Sheer Stripe Circles Fashion Scarf / Sash / Wrap / Belt – Gray / White / Red Sakas Scarves: Satin scarves are the perfect way to dress up an outfit from the office to a special night on the town. Lightweight fabric makes them perfect for spring, summer or when you need just a little extra warmth. These scarves also work well as an accent belt or hair scarf.

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Odilon Redon (Anemones & Lilacs in a Blue Vase) Art Poster Print – 24″ X 36″

April 13th, 2010 by pacapao

Odilon Redon (Anemones & Lilacs in a Blue Vase) Art Poster Print – 24″ X 36″ Poster Revolution: You are looking at a great poster. It is perfect for framing or hanging on the wall — and it makes a great gift. This poster measures approx. 24″ x 36″ and is perfect, unused, and rolled in a protective tube. Odilon Redon (Anemones & Lilacs in a Blue Vase) Art Poster Print – 24″ X 36″

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Google I/O 2008 – Painless Python Part 2 of 2

April 12th, 2010 by pacapao

Painless Python for Proficient Programmers Part II Alex Martelli (Google) Python is a popular very-high-level programming language, with a clean and spare syntax, simple and regular semantics, a large standard library and a wealth of third-party extensions, libraries and tools. With several production-quality open-source implementations available, many excellent books, and growing acceptance in both industry and academia, Python can play some useful role within a huge variety of software development projects. Moreover, Python is really easy to learn, particularly (though not exclusively) for programmers who are skilled at such languages as Java, C++ and C. This talk addresses software developers who are experienced in other languages but have had limited or no exposure to Python yet, and offers a rapid overview of the main characteristics of the language, plus a brief synopsis of its main implementations, its standard library, and Python’s use with Google App Engine.

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Sparrows [VHS]

April 11th, 2010 by pacapao

Sparrows [VHS] fine Mary Pickford vehicle – Matthew G. Sherwin – last seen screaming at Amazon customer service
Sparrows is a great Mary Pickford vehicle that keeps your attention throughout. The superb acting, the very well constructed sets, and the excellent cinematography all combine to create this motion picture masterpiece.

The action begins on a “baby farm” run by the evil Mr. Grimes (Gustave von Seyffertitz) and his wife Mrs. Grimes (Charlotte Mineau). The Grimes use very young children to labor in their rundown fields planting and harvesting vegetables. The eldest child, Molly (Mary Pickford) works hard and also looks out for the rest of the children who seem several years younger than she. Mr. Grimes has no heart–he sends them to bed without supper after they spend all day toiling in his fields; and he rings a bell whenever visitors come so that the kids of the baby farm know to hide. Grimes doesn’t want it known that it is he running the baby farm.

Eventually, there is a new addition to the baby farm. Mr. Grimes gets the very young little girl of a wealthy family; her name is Doris Wayne (Mary Louise Miller). When Doris’s father (Roy Stewart) finds out she’s been kidnapped, he contacts the police and they quickly organize a manhunt for the men who kidnapped little Doris and took her to Grimes’s baby farm.

Meanwhile, Grimes want to bury the evidence–literally. He decides to throw little baby Doris in the quicksand of the nearby swamp so that the police can never find her and so that he will never be charged with any crime. When Molly hears of this she quickly concocts a plan for her and the smaller children to escape through the swamp, across a small creek filled with live alligators and eventually to safety and better homes.

Of course the plot can go anywhere from here. As Mr. Grimes knows, escape is nearly impossible through the quicksand of the swamp. How will Molly guide the children through that? How will they avoid the alligators of the swamp? Will they be successful at escaping the baby farm? What will happen to Mr. and Mrs. Grimes if they do escape from the farm? Watch and find out!

The choreography works well in scenes on the farm. Molly and the son of Mr. Grimes, Ambrose (Spec O’Donnell) fight it out once or twice and the choreography really enhances these scenes. The cinematography impresses me: They made it seem that Molly and the children really were very, very close to the live alligators. However, as one reviewer correctly notes, the alligators were filmed separately and the film was patched together to create the illusion that the alligators were very close.

The DVD comes with two extras; both are shorts from 1910 when D. W. Griffith directed Mary Pickford in a number of films. On this DVD we get Wilful Peggy and The Mender of Nets. These two films let us see a rather young Mary Pickford already acting every bit of the pro that she always was. Great! The prints are in excellent condition for their age, too. Amazon notes above that there is a documentary with Whoopi Goldberg; but there was no such extra on the disc that I received.

Overall, Sparrows is an excellent film starring the immortal Mary Pickford; her acting impresses me every step of the way. Look for a fine, convincing performance by Gustave von Seyffertitz as the evil Mr. Grimes; and Spec O’Donnell does a great job playing the son of Mr. and Mrs. Grimes as well.

Enjoy!
True heroism never ages. – Richard M. Hinz – San Jose, CA USA
Sparrows is a timeless silent movie about a young girl (Mary Pickford) and her devotion to a small group of orphaned children. They are under the control of the evil Grimes family, and the physical and emotional abuse they suffer is pitiful. The children are helpless with no one capable of liberating them except Mollie the oldest. When the abuse leads to the death of the youngest child, Mollie is moved to an act of courage and manly heroism that any generation can learn from. Excellent movie.
My first Mary Pickford Movie – Jahlaune Hunt – Brooklyn, NY
I found this a great movie. It was really good. It held my intrest and contrary to some other reviewers that shall remain nameless. So what if the alligators aren’t real it’s the 20’s and a silent pic for christ sake not the terminator!!!
I highly reccomend this movie to any one who is new to silents.
United Artists in the mid-1920’s stood outside the motion picture industry’s block booking system. It owned no theaters and did not have enough films to offer them in blocks. This meant each of the UA producers (Griffith, Fairbanks, Chaplin, and Pickford) had to finance each film individually; not an easy thing with the rising costs of producing long features. While Griffith was digging himself into a big hole (which would ultimately cost him his production company) making epic films and trying to top his early successes, Pickford prudently operated on a smaller scale. The irony being that she produced the type of folksy stuff that Griffith had once done so well and so profitably.

“Sparrows” was her last appearance playing a teenager and even though in her thirties she probably would have been physically believable in these roles for a couple more years. Most often described as “Dickensian” because of its gloomy feel and slightly off-kilter production design, “Sparrows” is the original “Series of Unfortunate Events”. It is regarded as the least dated of her pictures (maybe of all silents), fitting because it does not seem at all dated. Even the humor seems contemporary with little Molly misquoting bible verses with stuff like: “Let not thy right cheek know what thy left cheek is getting”.

“Sparrows” is also more perennially appealing than any silent film but it deals with a serious subject as baby farms are a historical fact and wealthy parents had reasons to fear kidnapping. The kidnapping in “Sparrows” has an eerie similarity to that of the Lindbergh baby, which would not take place until seven years “after” the film.

The “look” of the film reflects the German expressionist style and should delight Lemony Snicket fans and anyone who gets off on creepy-strange beauty. Set designer Harry Oliver “aged the tree stumps with blowtorches, and the entire picture has that netherworld quality of a slightly stylized environment that could only be created in a movie studio”. Watch for the early scene where the baby farm operator crushes the little doll and drops it into the quicksand where it slowly disappears.

You also see a lot of Pickford’s technique in Hal Roach’s “Little Rascals”. Check out the sequence when Little Splutters is leaving and his imprisoned friends are waving goodbye from inside the barn, by passing their hands through the slats. In fact Spec O’Donnell, who plays nasty stepson Ambrose, would later be a Roach regular. He is responsible for the film’s first big laugh when he beans Molly with a turnip while she is trying to get the baby to stop crying. It is totally unexpected and even the baby finds it funny.

Also of note is the dream sequence where Jesus comes to take the baby to heaven. Modern special effects could not improve on what they got using a simple matte exposure process. A similar technique worked so well with the swamp scenes that a legend grew up that Pickford and the children were actually at risk from the live alligators used in the scenes. Probably no silent managed a more genuinely suspenseful sequence that when they are crossing a rotting tree limb which is slowly cracking and dipping toward the water full of hungry alligators.

Gustav von Seyffertitz does great as the evil Mr. Grimes (an early Snidley Whiplash) and is one of the best bad guys to come out of the silent era.

Then again, what do I know? I’m only a child. : Mary Pickford is the cinema’s true Peter Pan. She played spunky waifs and adolescent spitfires well into adulthood and remains best remembered as the crusading orphan raging against ruthless villains and natural disasters with pluck, courage, and hope. Sparrows is quintessential Pickford, the tale of a ragtag collection of orphans made virtual slaves by a gnarled, swamp-dwelling Simon Legree. As the big sister/mother hen of the grimy brood, she takes it upon herself to lead them out of this fetid hell through the alligator-infested swamp, with their vicious master in hot pursuit. It’s Oliver Twist as a mustache-twirling melodrama, pure sentimental pulp that verges on mawkish but for Pickford’s innocence and sincerity and William Beaudine’s rousing direction. He turns the climactic chase into a thrilling escape, dodging alligators and leaping across muddy bogs (according to Pickford, who used no stunt double, those are real alligators in the water) but transcends his entire career in one astounding scene. As Pickford cradles a dead child in her arms, Jesus steps forth from a painting and carries his lamb into Heaven, transforming death into a soaring moment of salvation. The restored prints, from the Mary Pickford Foundation, is beautiful and features an organ score by the great Gaylord Carter. The DVD also features a short documentary narrated by Whoopi Goldberg and two early D.W. Griffith shorts starring Pickford: Wilful Peggy (1910) and The Mender of Nets (1912). –Sean Axmaker Sparrows [VHS]

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Grid Computing and its Advantages

April 9th, 2010 by pacapao

Grid computing has been around for a few years now and its advantages are many. Grid computing can be defined in many ways but for these discussions let’s simply call it a way to execute compute jobs (e.g. perl scripts, database queries, etc.) across a distributed set of resources instead of one central resource. In the past most computing was done in silos or large SMP like boxes. Even today you’ll still see companies perform calculations on large SMP boxes (e.g. E10K’s, HP Superdomes). But this model can be quite expensive and doesn’t scale well.

Along comes grid computing and now we have the ability to distribute jobs to many smaller server components using load sharing software that distributes the load evenly based on resources and policies. Now instead of having one heavily burdened server the load is spread evenly across many smaller computer which can be spread around various locations.

Some advantages are quite obvious.

1) No need to buy large SMP servers for applications that can be split up and farmed out to smaller servers (which cost far less than SMP servers). Results can then be concatenated and analyzed upon job(s) completion.

2) Much more efficient use of idle resources. Jobs can be farmed out to idle server or even idle desktops. Many of these resources sit idle especially during off business hours.

3) Grid environments are much more modular and don’t have single points of failure. If one of the servers/desktops within the grid fail there are plenty of other resources able to pick the load. Jobs can automatically restart if a failure occurs.

4) Policies can be managed by the grid software. Some of the most popular grid enabling software include Platform LSF, Sun Grid Engine, Data Synapse, PBS, Condor, UnivaUD, among others. Each do a good job of monitoring resources and managing job submissions based upon internal policy engines.

5) This model scales very well. Need more compute resources just plug them in by installing grid client on additional desktops or servers. They can be removed just as easily on the fly.

6) Upgrading can be done on the fly without scheduling downtime. Since there are so many resources some can be taken offline while leaving enough for work to continue. This way upgrades can be cascaded as to not effect ongoing projects.

7) Jobs can be executed in parallel speeding performance. Using things like MPI will allow message passing to occur among compute resources.

Some disadvatages:

1) For memory hungry applications that can’t take advantage of MPI you may be forced to run on a large SMP

2) You may need to have a fast interconnect between compute resources (gigabit ethernet at a minimum). Infiband for MPI intense applications

3) Some applications may need to be tweaked to take full advantage of the new model.

4) Licensing across many servers may make it prohibitive for some apps. Vendors are starting to be more flexible with environment like this.

Areas that already are taking good advantage of grid computing include bioinformatics, cheminformatics, oil & drilling, and financial applications.

With the advantages listed above you’ll start to see much larger adoption of Grids which should benefit everyone involved. I believe the biggest barrier right now is education.

Vassilios — http://www.outervillage.com

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Cook’s Night Out: An Angie Amalfi Mystery (Angie Amalfi Mysteries)

April 8th, 2010 by pacapao

Cook’s Night Out: An Angie Amalfi Mystery (Angie Amalfi Mysteries) Even if there were nothing else in the book, the evolving intrigue in the character of the reverend would surge my interest through the book. Is he a good guy; is he a con artist? Is he a comical, off-brand, visiting deity, a spinnoff of little guy in the movie, with the cigar and the Brooklyn accent? Pence must have been giggling as she was typing, tweaking this character’s fun fluctuations. I relished every flicker of sunlight and shadow, all the way to the end of the story, which sizzled with a more creative resolution of Reverend Hodge than many writers could have conjured.

In this plot, Paavo was forced to dredge the depths of his self-esteem sludge, plummeting to the hairy roots of his professional position, fighting like Serpico against internal corruption, presenting a foil against Angie’s continued dedication to his soul balance. I particularly liked the scene around this quote from Paavo, on page 105 of this mass market paperback version:

“I’m foul-tempered, I have a season in hell for a job, I don’t have the time to give you what you deserve or the money to spend on you that I’d like to. Now I’m even losing my good name around the hall-for whatever that was worth.”

The tempering prose surrounding that quote is exquisitely touching. It’s worth taking time to note the wholeness of that scene when you read this novel. The scene exposes how a true author dramatizes sensitivity and charges emotions without being too gooey or too superficial.

Returning to the reverend and his Random Acts of Kindness mission, I’ll note that I enjoyed the unique way Pence dealt with charity, and religious fads and foibles. Similarly to her sensitive exposure of various angles of New Age guru-ery in COOKING UP TROUBLE, she exposes here not only the preponderance of phoney cover-ups and criminally self-serving “charitable” acts; she also dramatizes how easy it can be for very normal people to want to be part of a soup kitchen type of giving.

Angie’s continued all-out support of Paavo, without losing a Quantum or Quark of her personal integrity, develops further in this plot as she chooses to remain within a bad situation in Hodge’s program, going against Paavo’s repeated demands that she stay away from there. The way both Angie and Paavo deal with this conflict and its resulting tension is creatively realistic.

If you want the cozy “same ole routine” which we all look for in genre expectations, you’ll get satisfaction from Pence’s series. But you’ll get more than you hoped for, because Pence’s talent pushes her to take the “norm,” do justice to it, then spin it around in a fast circle in her mind until something uniquely, honestly refreshing takes shape in a slightly shifting surprise. This # 5 in the series does that slight surprise a bit more than the other books, especially in resolutions of ongoing questions about, is it/he/she “this way” or “that way” … a good or bad guy or deal?

The twists are so numerous they become entertaining labyrinths, and sometimes the points become circles rather than zigs and zags.

In one of these twists Pence solved a problem which I gave one of my characters in my mystery pilot, which my character couldn’t solve without breaking through paranormal barriers between life and death. Pence’s ingenious solution required and used the dark essence in her character; my solution, limited by my character’s bright old soul, had no way out (or in) but to stretch & borrow time, by a means which I believe we’ll all achieve, in time.

The problem was:

How does one fake one’s own murder without presenting one’s dead body as proof. And, WHOM does one set up falsely for the fall?

“Regular” type death is easier to fake than murder, as has been done many times and ways in works of fiction as well as in reality. But, in order to do this, a person has to break at least a few moral and spiritual codes, has to hurt a few innocents, has to have a certain amount of darkness in his character. My character, Ruth, a ninety-year-old sprite, couldn’t accomplish her goal in any normal, “right” way, so she broke a metaphysical barrier most New Age gurus don’t know about, though Carlos Castaneda’s Don Juan exposed a Way of Knowledge which came close.

Given this info, possibly it will be more clear why I’m in awe of the resolutions in this novel, especially the way Axel Klaw had planned his “final” exit, to the “T” … bone.

But … what about the numerous varieties of ultimates in gourmet chocolate slathering this plot? They made me hungry for the exPENSIVE, freshly original, leading-edge types of confection! “Chocolates are us” will never be the same.

Lifting my goblet, swirling a dark red Merlo, please allow me to toast a master of gently stepping the toe of a high-heeled sandal through the ultimate barriers of intrigue,

Linda G. Shelnutt

P.S. I also appreciated the way Pence’s characters were sorted so cleanly by their responses to the tarnishing onslaughts to Paavo’s professional integrity.
: Foodie Angie Amalfi has decided to make her culinary name by creating the perfect chocolate confection: angelinas.Donating her delicious rejects to the Random Acts of Kindness Mission in San Francisco, Angie meets the jittery minister in charge. Soon she volunteers to help organize their first fund-raiser, despite the fact that her beau, police detective Paavo Smith, has warned her away from the place. Before Paavo can stop her, he finds himself facing charges that he’s a murderous cop on the take. He suspects a “reformed” sinner at the mission is setting him up but Angie refuses to believe it. Then, faster than you can beat egg whites to a peak, she discovers that the mission harbors more than the needy, and that it’s up to her to save not only Paavo’s reputation–but his life, too. Cook’s Night Out: An Angie Amalfi Mystery (Angie Amalfi Mysteries)

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PDC09 Interview Rick Molloy Part 2.mpg

April 7th, 2010 by pacapao

PDC09 Interview Rick Molloy Part 2/2

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