koalie's contemplations in markup

"Lord, beer me strength" --Jim

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Attribution links to pasted content? - Something is wrong on the Internet!

Thursday, November 15, 2012 11:09:25 AM

i don't like, today I learnt

Some websites will transform, at the paste event, the content that you copy. This isn't recent, and it was a mild annoyance until it made its début in Opera, the browser I use the most (I installed 12.11 beta RC last last week).

What happens is that when you select text from some web pages, the site uses JavaScript to report what you’ve copied to an analytics server and append an attribution URL to the text that you paste.

What a terrible idea.

As John Gruber put it in a 2010 article on the subject:

It’s a bunch of user-hostile SEO bullshit.



I looked at the Tynt website, and soon found that users can opt out. \o/ www.tynt.com/opt_out.php


If you don't want Tynt tracking copy activity or adding attribution links, 
you can disable Tynt, by clicking the Opt Out button below. 
You will need to Opt Out for each browser you use, and have cookies enabled.


It appears that there aren't any other competitor. I hope it stays that way.

But what I wish even more, is that Websites would just NOT do this. It's not privacy that concerns me, it's the fact that in many cases, what I want to paste is lost.
In all cases, what I want to paste is what I select.

I don't want to need any work-around. Yes, I can view the source of a page and select from there. It's tedious. Yes, I can paste in a text editor, strip to what I need, copy again and paste what I want. It's also tedious.

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Last week's scribing performance

Wednesday, November 7, 2012 11:30:07 AM

IRC, work

One of the things I did a lot last week was minuting meetings, that is capturing a record of what people talk about. At W3C we typically do that via IRC and then a handful of bots and scripts generate HTML minutes.

So I scribed. Friday was particularly intense, being the second day of the Advisory Boad face-to-face meeting, the agenda for the day still being pretty full, and people's heads being quite full of long talking points on what I consider complex topics.

I cleaned up the minutes the same evening, as I usually do, while things were still fresh in my memory. And what surprised my was the small amount of typos and spelling mistakes I had to fix.

Thanks to grep and wc, I found that of the 949 lines in the IRC log of the Friday meeting, 687 were my scribings (amounting to 8835 words). And the number of typos and spelling mistakes I find so low is: 32. That is all. I performed significantly better on that day than I usually do.

Of course, the worst part is now; I need to synthesize 2350 lines (15K words) of minutes into a summary. And "again, the Advisory Board saved the Consortium" isn't enough (nor is it true just yet!).

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Quick, a computer exorcist!

Tuesday, September 25, 2012 12:32:47 PM

silly, work, IRC

The fact that I find this irrationally funny is worrisome. Don't worry; I already do.
Someone's computer (Rigo's) goes berserk and gives darobin concerns. So, this made me laugh out loud:
[...]
2012-09-25T10:59:04Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:06Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:10Z <rigo>     
2012-09-25T10:59:11Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:15Z <rigo>   
2012-09-25T10:59:17Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:19Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:21Z <rigo>          
2012-09-25T10:59:24Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:25Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:27Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:29Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:31Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:33Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:35Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:37Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:40Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:41Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:43Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:45Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:47Z <rigo>   
2012-09-25T10:59:49Z <rigo>   
2012-09-25T10:59:52Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:53Z <rigo>   
2012-09-25T10:59:55Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T10:59:57Z <rigo>   
2012-09-25T10:59:59Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T11:00:01Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T11:00:03Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T11:00:05Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T11:00:07Z <rigo>   
2012-09-25T11:00:08Z <darobin> mmmmm WTF?
2012-09-25T11:00:09Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T11:00:11Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T11:00:13Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T11:00:15Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T11:00:17Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T11:00:19Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T11:00:20Z <darobin> rigo?
2012-09-25T11:00:21Z <rigo>  
2012-09-25T11:00:23Z <rigo>
[...] 
2012-09-25T11:58:24Z -!- rigo [rigo@128.30.52.169] has quit [Excess Flood]

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The sound of things

Monday, September 24, 2012 10:17:16 AM

silly

Sound that things make and their levels, as analysed on my smart phone with Decibel Ultra:

Light rain under the porch: 60 - 70 dB
Heavy rain under the porch: 90 dB
Thunder striking a couple kilometers away: 100 dB
Downpour under the porch: 100 dB

This is usually when I give up staying out under the porch, because it means ricocheting water will soak me soon. And my computer too. [User relocates] Here, let me wipe a few drops from my screen and trackpad. Done. You should see the cat --having migrated indoor against her will, she sits under the table in front of the French window and looks dismally at the curtains of rain.

I like to measure the sound of things. Not all things, only things which sound level I find notable. Here are a few additional examples:

Loud snoring: 86 dB (peak)
MIT machine room: 83 dB? I haven't committed that one to memory, I was too busy being impressed.
Meadhall nearby Stata Center: 103 dB! I lasted throughout dinner once, kept only by the fine company of two people I like.









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Chatting with a bot

Friday, July 27, 2012 5:48:08 PM

IRC, funny, work

We use several IRC bots at work, and this is what happens when sometimes they interrupt a conversation, out of the blue (we, humans, usually invoke them with triggers, none of which I knew I typed). This bit has only my side of the conversation, and I chose to leave out all context as it entertains me better this way:
2012-07-27T15:02:23Z <koalie> so I'll do it by hand
2012-07-27T15:02:23Z  * Zakim koalie, you typed too many words without
commas; I suspect you forgot to start with 'to ...'
2012-07-27T15:02:40Z <koalie> ok, Zakim 
2012-07-27T15:02:57Z <koalie> to ... have it with both, so I'll do it by hand
2012-07-27T15:02:57Z  * Zakim sees koalie on the speaker queue
2012-07-27T15:03:05Z <koalie> silly bot
2012-07-27T15:03:10Z <koalie> ack me
2012-07-27T15:03:10Z <Zakim> koalie, you wanted to ... have it with both,
so I'll do it by 

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Opera 12: new version, new esoteric bug

Thursday, June 21, 2012 11:18:56 AM

opera 12, bug, opera, odd

I'm taking the time to document the obscure bug that I often experience with Opera 12 (like every other day since I installed version 12 on the day it was released).

It is a surprising bug to say the least, not too annoying (as you'll understand, Opera quickly recovers from it), but still, I reported it (DSK-367824).

[Update 2012-06-26: This is a duplicate of DSK-365797]

For no good reason that I can see or that console logs can explain, Opera actions are suddenly mapped to others, regardless that I use their keyboard shortcuts or that I click commands in the menus. When this happen, I feel like Opera is in play mode (like it's a software thing to replace commands with other actions!).

For example, I want a new tab but get the window to "Open...". The first time that occurred, I thought "aha! so I need to press cmd-o if I want to get a new tab." Nope, all I got was the "Save As..." window. In play mode, it's "Save As...", or cmd-s, that will open a new tab. Consistently. Except that I don't know what triggers play mode.

I played as long as I could, it was entertaining. The play-mode key-combos I found are:
cmd-t (for new tab) == open file
cmd-n (for new window) == save-as
cmd-s (to save) == new tab
cmd-c (to copy selection) == fullscreen
cmd-v (to paste selection) == right click
cmd-w (to close tab) == game over, it does cmd-q (to quit).

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Odd encounter with an old woman

Sunday, June 10, 2012 5:04:15 PM

odd

I had a strange encounter with a little old woman today. I stood outside a restaurant smoking and she stood nearby, observing me. At some point she said "You're pretty tall. You're 190 cm tall, aren't you?" I replied I'm 177 cm tall. She kept observing, looking sulky and then pointed a finger at me and seemed to count in a low voice, her finger moving up one notch at a time toward my head. I suppose she counted how many heads taller than her I was. She looked me in the eyes, I smiled, she started counting again! Then she added, almost to herself "young ones these days are way taller than us." I put out my cigarette and slipped away.

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Last day in Costa Rica

Sunday, May 13, 2012 1:30:35 AM

Costa Rica, holiday, travel

Saturday 5 May, 2012. We're touring one last time in Alajuela, and leaving Costa Rica in the afternoon. We'll be home Sunday evening.

We were drawn to the square near our hotel, that faces the Alajuela Cathedral.
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We spotted a man who looked typical under his bright white hat.
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And we crossed the square and there was a little girl with a pink polo shirt and her abuelo who were busy feeding pigeons. Hundreds of pigeons. People were gathering around them and watching. She was so happy and he was so proud. The grand-father poured a few crumbs on the little girl's head and soon both of them were assailed by birds.
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Attracted by the commotion, squirrels crept down a tree nearby. I didn't think so many squirrels could populate a single tree. They wanted their fair share, of course. And children and adults were happy to deliver.
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Vlad was close to one, extended his hand and the squirrel sniffed the empty hand before trying someone else.
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Each squirrel would snatch the food and hop back on the tree trunk and climb someplace to eat, wary of other hungry squirrels.
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Back to the little girl with the pink polo shirt. She decided the pigeons were more rewarding and got back to them. This is her, holding a plastic bag full or crumbs, proudly leading hundreds of pigeons. Such a happy face.
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But we wanted to explore Alajuela again, since it had been raining the day before and there was sun on that fine morning. We walked for two hours and a half, not very fast, and spotted six churches and four soccer fields. And we explored only a fraction of the city!
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We followed a man who was pushing his cart on the road. We had seen several of them already. He seemed to sell drinks and snacks. What we had also seen in other places through the country, are people at street lights selling bagged fruit or vegetables that they hold in both hands, and even shrimps in a bucket.
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Another thing that striked me compared to where we live, was how prettier their advertising posters and paintings are. Except in San José and Cartago, cities have modest posters and advertising paintings that appeal to me far more than the industrial, gigantic printed ones. Here's the advertisement, painted on corrugated iron, for a car wash and parking, and much more, it appears.
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We got back to our hotel, via a part of town that was more spacious and nearly deserted. Maybe it was that people were eating lunch. I had the feeling we had the streets all to ourselves. Here is a bright blue minivan parked in front of a house where people sold pineapple, 3 for 1000 colones ($2).
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And here is the outside of the fruteria Las Delicias.
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Soon after, we checked out and hopped in a taxi. The fare was supposed to be around $6, but when I asked the driver, at the airport, what he said in Spanish sounded like 13,000.00 colones. I realized, but too late, that he had probably said 3,000. Ahem... I gave him 11,000.00 and was looking for more when he gestured it was enough. Then he seemed to be looking in his wallet either for change or for a receipt, and we were getting our backpacks. Since he wasn't handing us anything we said good bye and left. He followed us with his eyes. This is when I realized he had let us give him nearly twice what he wanted. Oh well. He had been a decent and friendly driver.

And before 5 p.m., we left Costa Rica, relaxed although tired, and our heads full of extraordinary memories. We had wanted to visit that country for years and we were not disappointed at all. Vlad did a wonderful job organising the trip, choosing the route, selecting places and lodges. It was such a great vacation.
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Costa Rica: Puerto Jiménez to Alajuela

Saturday, May 12, 2012 1:15:44 AM

Costa Rica, holiday, travel

Friday 4 May, 2012. We're leaving Lapa Rios lodge in the beautiful and preserved Osa Peninsula. José, who drove us there four days ago, drove us back, as well as two other people from the lodge who needed to be in Puerto Jiménez. José spotted a caiman on the way; we had told them how foolish we had felt the day before, standing only meters away from one and joking we had yet to see a caiman.

We were in Puerto Jiménez at 11 a.m. and had over an hour to spare till we needed to board our flight. It is a small city by the golfo dulce (because the ocean water is "sweetened" by much river water). We walked in streets, few of which were in asphalt concrete, circled towards the waterfront and back to the airfield.
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The plane was even smaller than the small one we took four days prior, however, the flight was devoid of any air pocket and I enjoyed it even more. We flew to Golfito where a few passengers got off and a few others boarded, and then we took off for San José. It was all so very lovely from above.
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We were going to spend a night, the last one, in Alajuela, which is the closest city next to the San José airport. It was raining but not a lot and we spent our time improvising a tour, taking pictures of what we found beautiful (and I took a lot of pictures).
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After sunset, we found ourselves near the Alajuela Cathedral and went inside. It was very pretty. Vivid colours, some parts painted as fake marble, a narrow but long vaulted ceiling with several biblical scenes painted in bright colours, rows of white neon lights. We were intrigued that there was a band inside, tuning their instruments and rehearsing. And there was a steady flow of people, all dressed up, who were coming in. Was it going to be mass or was there going to be a wedding, we wondered. After more than an hour, mass hadn't started, more people kept coming in, and the band had rehearsed tunes and songs a couple of times. We felt sort of out of place, not dressed up and while we were respectful of the place and people, it had been mostly curiosity that made us stay. So we left. We found a bar and had a drink (Imperial bier for Vlad, tequila sunrise for me). We walked by the cathedral again an hour or so afterwards and mass was taking place. The big cathedral was filled up. I don't know if they were celebrating something particular of this is their regular Friday mass, but I was impressed. I suspect the former, as there was a crew filming, a master of ceremony with a microphone, one cleric dressed in golden-coloured clothes and a dozen others dressed in white.
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Costa Rica: day tour in the Corcovado

Thursday, May 10, 2012 12:49:00 AM

Costa Rica, holiday, travel

Thursday 3 May, 2012. Third day at Lapa Rios in the Osa Peninsula. A day of adventure, like I wrote yesterday as a teaser. The helpful staff at Lapa Rios had asked whether they could help us make arrangements or provide information, so we told them we were keen on a day tour in the Corcovado and had heard there was a bus going to Carate and it would be helpful if they had more information. They said the bus in question was called "colectivo" (or camion) and wasn't a bus strictly speaking. It is a truck and behind the cab the passengers area is made of wooden planks as floor, two long benches and this is covered with a tarp. I think most of the lodge staff came to us over the two days prior to make sure this is how we really wanted to travel. One of them even said it could be a traumatic experience (sic). We thought we would live through it. We actually enjoyed it, being a one-time experiment.

We woke up at 5.45 a.m. to prepare ourselves, get an early breakfast (again, the staff was kind enough to accommodate us, as the kitchen normally opens at 7), and be by the country road before 7 a.m. with one of the staff members, Eli, who wanted to make sure we were on the right track and find out from the driver when and where we had to be to make it back to the lodge on the same day ;) We paid the flat fare ($8 per person for a single ticket), climbed inside and waved Eli good bye. With us were four or five locals and four other young tourists.
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It was a long trip, all in all, 1h30 for something like 20 km. It had been bumpy, some rough patches even hurt our back. The truck passed through water (either rivers, or puddles big as small ponds), climbed steep rocky hills at the speed of the sloth, but the driver was pretty good, I found. We arrived in Carate around 8:30 a.m.
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It was already hot outside and the weather was gorgeous on that day, with sun and big white clouds. We needed to walk on the beach forever to reach La Leona, where the entrance of the Corcovado National Park was. The beach was splendid. We wondered why nobody was either sunbathing or swimming. We later heard there were rip currents. And sharks.
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After an hour of walk along the beach we reached La Leona, gave our tickets to the guard and mumbled something about high-tide around noon, crossing the river, "walking two hours". We nodded and took off, it was nearly 10. We entered a forest by the beach but were walking on a trail in the woods. There was something peculiar about the light during the morning. I think it had to do with the very fine mist created by the breaking waves which crept inside the forest and was visible when met by the sun. I saw beautiful sunbeams through the trees. We soon saw capuchin monkeys, at eye level and only a few meters away from us. This appears to be a favourite position:
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We found ourselves at the river the guard had mentioned. It wasn't noon already but the waves met the water of the river. We took off our walking shoes and socks, rolled up our trousers and waded in waters that weren't too deep (mid-sheen) but reached our knees when a wave was breaking. We met a couple of trekkers who tipped us that there was a Baird's tapir near the Cementerio Madrigal and they explained how to find the place, not far from where we were. We were looking for a smaller animal than it actually was (my idea of a tapir was that it was as big as a cat, and Vlad thought it was the size of a dog). Then I saw it. Huge. The height of a poney, the bulk of pot-bellied pig, the feet of an elephant and a dinosaur, the ears of a hippo and that snout which is so distinctive.
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We came a little too close to the tapir who went away. We followed. Then Vlad spotted an anteater in a tree. This too, was larger, longer, and bigger than we thought. It was really beautiful. Alas, it was pretty active, moved a lot and at some point we couldn't keep up.
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We were near the beach and walked to it. Perfect place to picnic. The Lapa Rios staff prepared sandwiches, crips and cakes.
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At 1 p.m. we resolved to turn back and take our time. We had to be in Carate where the colectivo had dropped us by 4 p.m. (or spend the night and catch the next one on the next morning). The light has changed. Less over-exposed. But the mist and sunbeams were gone. We crossed the Rio Madrigal again.
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The spider webs in the forest were beautiful, strong, small, tightly woven, and there were many of them. Some bare branches even looked like a whole dream catcher with the amount of spider webs they bore. We saw several golden orb spiders (they're the length of my index finger):
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Vlad spotted a squirrel for the second time on that day. This one was reasonably close to us. It was busy munching wood (isn't there good acorn in Corcovado, I ask?), checking on us from a distance every now and then.
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Then I spotted a black-throated male trogon on a low branch. It was splendid!
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We resumed our walk but stopped almost immediately; I had spotted a black and green dart frog:
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Again, we resumed walking but soon stopped under a group of capuchin monkeys with their young. One appeared to smile at me. And then I wondered, was it a smile or was it baring its teeth at me. The latter, most likely. I went from "awww, look, it's smiling at us!" to "wait, this isn't a pretty smile". So here's a non-threatening monkey, looking up at a young one (the baby isn't in the photo):
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We exited the forest (and the boundary of the Corcovado) after 2 p.m. and braced for the long walk along the beach, under the sun. We stopped mid-way next to a pond to watch the Jesus Christ lizards run on the water. What a singular spectacle. The spot was lovely. With no wind, there were palm trees reflected in the water. We took a little break. Vlad joked that the one thing we hadn't seen was the caiman. The next instant, there was a swift movement and a splash --a caiman was there, not 3 meters away from us! We were so certain there wouldn't be one (we had inspected the pond edges on the way to the park in the morning), that we didn't think to check again. Oh, the idiots. On the photo I took of the spot, we can see a dark shape by the water, behind a log, it is the caiman (I have increased the contrast in post-processing to make it a little bit more obvious, but still it is a fraction of the photo, and this made me think of where is Waldo).
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We laughed at ourselves for a while, and kept walking back to Carate. At the end of the beach, there was one last beautiful animal in plain view. A yellow-headed caracara was perched on a low bare branch not far from us:
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We reached Carate at 3.40 p.m., with ample time for drinks and reflection. What a great day. It was as though every animal we had seen had been planted there for us to admire. The colectivo was a little late and we were back at the Lapa Rios lodge shortly after sunset, 5.45 p.m.
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We were greeted, like a couple days prior, with wet hand towels and fruit cocktails. And then it made sense. Both were totally welcome and highly appropriate. The staff asked us how it was, they looked worried but not for long, we looked and were delighted.

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coralie mercier

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    anish shastri
    2012-05-12 01:37:51

    hi sweetheart

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    coralie mercier

    Thanks for chiming in, hallvors! [...]Now, it is my expec ...

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    Hallvord R. M. Steen

    Hm.. Speaking as "clipboard events" spec editor and (at O ...

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    Don't get me wrong, this is wrong and user hostile. Opting o ...

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    coralie mercier

    Thanks, Steven, for providing an example. I figured people * ...

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