Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Uncovered Bluetooth Keyboard Case Will Turn iPads into Netbooks [Ipad Accessories]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5620381/uncovered-bluetooth-keyboard-case-will-turn-ipads-into-netbooks

Uncovered Bluetooth Keyboard Case Will Turn iPads into NetbooksSure, the official Apple keyboard peripheral and iPad case are cute, but wouldn't they be nicer if they were combined? A Chinese company aims to beat Apple to it, with this Bluetooth keyboard case showing up on FCC.

Shenzhen Paoluy Silicone Technology Co's BL-BKB76 case appeared on FCC due to the Bluetooth connectivity it would use to link up to an iPad, minimizing cables and excess accessories—though unfortunately it doesn't dock and charge the iPad like Apple's keyboard does.

Apparently the keyboard gives 90 hours' use, or 100 days of standby time—which seems like more than enough, when you look at the iPad's roughly 10hr battery life when watching video or browsing the internet.

The only other case we've seen for the iPad which has an inbuilt keyboard is ClamCase's forthcoming one, which turns the iPad into something resembling more a laptop than anything else. Really, I'm surprised we haven't seen anything before today's Chinese case. [Wireless Goodness via SlashGear]

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AMD Announces 8-Core Bulldozer CPU [Guts]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5620423/amd-announces-8+core-bulldozer-cpu

AMD Announces 8-Core Bulldozer CPUYou can't say that AMD is ever boring. The company says its next-generation Bulldozer CPU core will take a unique approach to computing that goes beyond Hyper-Threading, which some believe could offer phenomenal performance.

Bulldozer makes a fairly big break from how today's multicores are constructed. Today's dual-, quad-, and hexa-cores are based on single-cores strung together. They can share L2 or L3 cache, but generally are partitioned off from each other. With Bulldozer, the basic building block of a multi-core chip changes from a walled off single core to more of a duplex. Two cores are tightly intertwined and share fetch, decode, floating-point scheduler, and dual 128-bit fused-multiply-accumulate units, or FPUs. AMD says each module includes dedicated integer schedulers, pipelines, and L1 cache.

AMD Announces 8-Core Bulldozer CPU
This, AMD says, is far superior to Intel's Hyper-Threading, which can bog down when the same resources are under load.

Hyper-Theading was introduced by Intel in 2002 and takes a single-core and shares its resources by creating a virtual core. In the Pentium 4 days, HT added a 10 to 15 percent performance increase, and in Core i7 chips, performance can be boosted 20 to 25 percent depending on the application.

Just adding dedicated, partitioned cores is a "brute force" approach that wastes resources, AMD says. With its shared resources, Bulldozer can reduce power consumption and shrink the die size, which in turn lowers the cost to produce the chip. AMD says the server version of its Bulldozer chip should deliver 33 percent more cores and a 50 percent increase in "throughput" in the same power envelope as a 12-core Magny-Cours Opteron chip.

"One of the important things here is that Bulldozer is one of the first all-new designs from AMD in a decade," says analyst Nathan Brookwood of Insight 64. Brookwood says one of the more exciting design changes in Bulldozer is its ability to dynamically reallocate resources on single-threaded tasks. On a traditional dual-core, the resources for each walled off core cannot be combined. In Bulldozer, all of the resources of the module can be thrown at it a thread.

AMD Announces 8-Core Bulldozer CPU
"The single-core performance on some floating-point applications is going to be mind-boggling," Brookewood says.

AMD officials say Bulldozer is being targeted at servers and performance desktop machines. The good news is that Bulldozer will be drop-in compatible with most current high-end servers. The bad news is that it won't be compatible with existing AM3 boards. Instead, AMD says it will introduce a new AM3+ socket. These sockets will be backward compatible with older chips so you could drop a Phenom II X6 in it. According to AMD, Bulldozer will be built on a new 32nm process at Global Foundries.

AMD Announces 8-Core Bulldozer CPUMaximum PC brings you the latest in PC news, reviews, and how-tos.

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Open source Qbo bot makes the jump to ROS, the open source robot OS

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/23/open-source-qbo-bot-makes-the-jump-to-ros-the-open-source-robot/

While the Willow Garage-initiated ROS is designed to consolidate and accelerate robotics innovation for the long term, it's still a long ways from powering your robotic butler / life coach / best friend, so it's exciting to see it put to use in the here and now. The folks at Thecorpora, responsible for the Qbo open source robot project, have been busy converting Qbo's original Java API into ROS, and just announced they're at 99.9 percent completion of that task. That means the Qbo gets instant access to some of the fun development going on in ROS, like stacking all its cameras and ultrasonic sensors into a system for machine vision, or controlling the bot with a Wiimote or a PS3 controller. (There's a video after the break of the Wiimote in action). Don't think Qbo will be powerful enough for you? Willow Garage just announced that it's about to put its own ROS-powered PR2 bot on sale soon, after a few months of its (highly successful) PR2 Beta Program.

Continue reading Open source Qbo bot makes the jump to ROS, the open source robot OS

Open source Qbo bot makes the jump to ROS, the open source robot OS originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Aug 2010 22:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink ROS.org  |  sourceWillow Garage, Qbo blog  | Email this | Comments

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AMD's Bobcat and Bulldozer, 2011 flagship CPU cores, detailed today

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/24/amds-bobcat-and-bulldozer-2011-flagship-cpu-cores-detailed-to/

One of these days AMD is gonna have to stop talking about its Atom-killing Bobcat and Xeon-ending Bulldozer cores and finally release them. But, until that happy moment arrives in 2011 (fingers crossed), we'll have to content ourselves with more presentation slides. First up, the Bobcat core is AMD's long overdue play for the netbook/ultrathin market. Pitched as having 90 percent of the performance of current-gen, K8-based mainstream chips, AMD's new mobility core will require "less than half the area and a fraction of the power" of its predecessors. That sounds like just the recipe to make the company relevant in laptop purchasing decisions again, while a touted ability for the core to run on less than one watt of power (by lowering operating frequencies and voltages, and therefore performance) could see it appear in even smaller form factors, such as MIDs. The Bobcat's now all set to become the centerpiece of the Ontario APU -- AMD's first Fusion chip, ahead of Llano -- which will be ramping up production late this year, in time for an early 2011 arrival.

The Bulldozer also has a future in the Fusion line, but it's earliest role will be as a standalone CPU product for servers and high-end consumer markets. The crafty thing about its architecture is that every one Bulldozer module will be counted as two cores. This is because AMD has split its internal processing pipelines into two (while sharing as many internal components as possible), resulting in a sort of multicore-within-the-core arrangement. The way the company puts it, it's multithreading done right. Interlagos is the codename of the first Opteron chips to sport this new core, showing up at some point next year in a 16-core arrangement (that's 8 Bulldozers, if you're keeping score at home) and promising 50 percent better performance than the current Magny-Cours flagship. Big words, AMD. Now let's see you stick to a schedule for once.

Continue reading AMD's Bobcat and Bulldozer, 2011 flagship CPU cores, detailed today

AMD's Bobcat and Bulldozer, 2011 flagship CPU cores, detailed today originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia and Intel build a joint research lab, plan to create the mobile 3D future

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/24/nokia-and-intel-build-a-joint-research-lab-plan-to-create-the-m/

Thought Nokia and Intel's partnership was just some fleeting MeeGo fling? Just a carefree hookup in their times of mobile panic? Not quite. The companies are certainly in this thing for the long haul and today's announcement of their new research lab in Oulu, Finland is all the evidence you'll need. The Intel and Nokia Joint Innovation Center -- as it's been dubbed -- is part of the University of Oulu and will now be home to about two-dozen researchers. What exactly will the white coats be working on? Well, the 3D mobile internet, of course, technology that Nokia's been dabling with for awhile. The focus of the initial work will be on three-dimensional virtual reality platforms as well as on mapping. Sounds pretty neat and futuristic, but for some reason all we can keep thinking about is the immediate future of getting our hands on Nokia's MeeGo-running N9. Hit the break for the full press release and a few more details on the lab itself.

Continue reading Nokia and Intel build a joint research lab, plan to create the mobile 3D future

Nokia and Intel build a joint research lab, plan to create the mobile 3D future originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 02:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba reportedly prepping glasses-free 3DTV for Q4 launch

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/24/toshiba-reportedly-prepping-glasses-free-3dtv-for-q4-launch/

Hot news out of Japan if you're an eager 3D beaver: a report from Toshiba's home nation indicates that the company has three models of glasses-free 3D displays in the pipeline, which are being prepared for launch "before Christmas" at prices of "several thousand dollars" each. As you might recall, we got our first inkling about Toshiba Mobile Display's multi-parallax technique back in April, which is when the above 21-inch panel was being touted along with promises of eliminating eye strain and widening 3D viewing angles. We suspect that by now Toshiba has put a slinky bezel on the thing and started thinking up alphanumeric product names for it, though do bear in mind that queries to its press office were deflected with the boilerplate "no comment" response.

Toshiba reportedly prepping glasses-free 3DTV for Q4 launch originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 05:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAFP  | Email this | Comm! ents

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JVC intros Picsio GC-WP10 and GC-FM2 1080p pocket camcorders

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/24/jvc-intros-picsio-gc-wp10-and-gc-fm2-1080p-pocket-camcorders/

JVC's been a mainstay in the handheld camcorder realm, but along with Sony, Kodak, Sanyo, Samsung and just about every other consumer electronics company in operation today, it's recently decided to hop onboard the pocket camcorder bandwagon. Today, the firm is introducing a diminutive duo in the Picsio GC-WP10 and GC-FM2, both of which are capable of logging 1,920 x 1,080/30fps clips. There's also inbuilt image stabilization, an HDMI output, a 3-inch rear touchscreen, compatibility with EyeFi's WiFi-enabled SD cards and a time-lapse recording feature for speeding things up on the fly. The WP10 steps it up a notch by being encased in a waterproof enclosure, though the omission of an optical zoomer puts somewhat of a damper on things. Both units also boast a pop-out USB plug and an SD / SDHC / SDXC card slot, and the WP10 also adds an MP3 audio recorder for good measure. Check the FM2 early next month for $179.95 and the WP10 in late September for $20 more, but be sure to visit that More Coverage link first for a translated review.

Continue reading JVC intros Picsio GC-WP10 and GC-FM2 1080p pocket camcorders

JVC intros Picsio GC-WP10 and GC-FM2 1080p pocket camcorders originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 05:51:00 EDT.! Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Slashgear  |  sourceJVC  | Email this | Comments

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Canon proudly intros 120 megapixel CMOS sensor, probably won't hit a DSLR in your lifetime

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/24/canon-proudly-intros-120-megapixel-cmos-sensor-probably-wont-h/

Oh sure, household names like Pentax are already producing cameras with 40 megapixel sensors, and we've seen quite a few gigapixel images crafted with a pinch of black magic, but Canon's newest innovation may take the mainstream megapixel race to its next logical level. Or should we say... illogical level. There's no two ways about it -- just trying to comprehend an APS-H-sized CMOS sensor with 120 megapixels is downright painful, and we're inclined to believe the company's claim that it's the world's highest resolution for its size. This new concoction has a pixel count of around 7.5 times larger than the company's highest-resolution commercial CMOS sensor of the same size (which is pegged at 16.1 megapixels), yet it still supports burst shooting of up to 9.5fps. Furthermore, it's fully capable of capturing 1080p video, but the one detail we're all eager to ingest isn't listed. For now, though, the plan is to let you know about the first camera to ship with it inside at Photokina 2030.

Continue reading Canon proudly intros 120 megapixel CMOS sensor, probably won't hit a DSLR in your lifetime

Canon proudly intros 120 megapixel CMOS sensor, probably won't hit a DSLR in your lifetime originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 06:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New Google Earth for Android lets users tour New Kelp City, Mermalair, other underwater locales

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/24/new-google-earth-for-android-lets-users-tour-bikini-bottom-new/

http://www.engadget.com/2008/05/19/diyer-uses-mountain-bike-to-pedal-around-google-earth/When you're not spelling out Objectivist instructions or taking bicycle tours, Google Earth can be a little bit boring. Finally Android users have something new and fun to do: go for a dive. With the release of Google Earth for Android 1.1 (available to Android 2.1 and above devices), you can now zoom in below the surface of the waves and explore the majestic wonder of undersea trenches. The 1.1 release also brings in Flash support, so YouTube videos will play right within the app -- if you're running 2.2 and your device has been granted the appropriate plug-in. The new version is available now, and we have the big honkin' QR code you need right after the break.

Continue reading New Google Earth for Android lets users tour New Kelp City, Mermalair, other underwater locales

New Google Earth for Android lets users tour New Kelp City, Mermalair, other underwater locales originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 08:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gizmodo  |  sourceGoogle Mobile Blog  | Email this | Comments

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Dell Streak procures a hacked-up mini USB adapter, gets friendly with your dusty cables

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/24/dell-streak-procures-a-hacked-up-mini-usb-adapter-gets-friendly/

Even if you can look beyond the SIM lock and the aging Android 1.6 OS on the Dell Streak, there's still one irksome problem: the lack of a mini or micro-USB port (Dell clearly missed the USB party last summer). Dissatisfied with this state of affairs, John from Linux Slate decided to build an adapter for his tabletphone's dock connector, which he confirmed to be PDMI instead of a proprietary design. The procedure was simple: John cut up his Streak's cable plug, soldered a mini USB socket onto the board, and housed the new assembly within the Streak's cable clip. Voilà! Until third-party USB-to-PDMI cables start to show up in the stores, it's either this mod or cough up $20 for a spare cable from Dell. See the adapter in action after the break.

Continue reading Dell Streak procures a hacked-up mini USB adapter, gets friendly with your dusty cables

Dell Streak procures a hacked-up mini USB adapter, gets friendly with your dusty cables originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 09:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Monday, August 23, 2010

Draganflyer X8: The Dreamboat UAV [UAVs]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5619680/draganflyer-x8-the-dreamiest-uav

Draganflyer X8: The Dreamboat UAVAll respects to whatever UAV you've got on your pin-up calendar. The Draganflyer X8 has it beat in the beauty department. And wait until you see how flexible it is.

DraganFlyer X8 complete spec list is pretty ridiculous, so let's just gun through some of the highlights: GPS that can track up to 16 satellites simultaneously, can carry a payload of over two pounds, has a microSD black box data recorder, 3 gyros, accelerometers, and magnetometers on-board, and capable of carrying a remote-operated 10MP still camera and a 1080p video camera. Also: it's foldable.

Pretty slick, and a worthy addition to the Draganflyer lineage. It's also, presumably, very expensive, since you have to request a price quote. That's fine, though; this little monster's meant for professional photographers and/or amateur spy games. For now, I'm content just to focus my gadget lust on it. [DraganFly]

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Apple patent unearthed for touchscreen Macs that can flip between mouse and touch UIs with tilt of the screen

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/23/apple-patent-unearthed-for-touchscreen-macs-that-can-flip-betwee/

As far as we can tell, the general logic behind touchscreen iMac rumors goes something like this: "Apple is good at touch UIs, so it should build a touchscreen iMac." Unfortunately, the reality of a usable, desirable touchscreen desktop computers has yet to materialize (sorry, HP and Microsoft), and so far Apple has steered clear of those dangerous waters. An international patent recently unearthed at the World Intellectual Property Organization, however, shows just how Apple might go about a touch UI on a desktop computer.

Basically, the patent covers the method of transitioning from a traditional "high resolution" UI (best operated by a mouse) to a "low resolution" UI suitable to finger operation (like iOS). A myriad of sensors can be employed to detect the user moving the screen into touch mode, and as the user does this the difficult high res bits like cursors and scrollbars and drop down menus "slide off the screen," leaving only a touch UI at the end of the transition. It's all very broad and vague, naturally, being a patent, but it's an interesting idea, and makes more sense than ruining the good thing desktop UIs have going with a tacked-on touch UI in the style of Microsoft's Windows. Of course, stuffing two UIs into one device also seems rather un-Apple like, so we're not going to start expecting an Apple-built touchscreen iMac or MacBook to act exactly like this until Steve gets on stage and starts telling us how we magical and revolutionary it is.

Apple patent unearthed for touchscreen Macs that can flip between mouse and touch UIs with tilt of the screen originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Aug 2010 18:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Patently Apple  |  sourceWIPO  | Email this | Comments

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A Protein Killer Could Treat All Cancers, and Possibly All Illnesses

Source: http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2010-07/rx-every-disease

Since last April, 19 cancer patients whose liver tumors hadn't responded to chemotherapy have taken an experimental drug. Within weeks of the first dose, it appeared to work, by preventing tumors from making proteins they need to survive. The results are preliminary yet encouraging. With a slight redesign, the drug might work for hundreds of diseases, fulfilling the promise that wonder cures like stem cells and gene therapy have failed to deliver.

The biotech company Alnylam announced in June that its drug ALN-VSP cut off blood flow to 62 percent of liver-cancer tumors in those 19 patients, by triggering a rarely used defense mechanism in the body to silence cancerous genes. Whereas conventional drugs stop disease-causing proteins, ALN-VSP uses RNA interference (RNAi) therapy to stop cells from making proteins in the first place, a tactic that could work for just about any disease. "Imagine that your kitchen floods," says biochemist and Alnylam CEO John Maraganore. "Today's medicines mop it up. RNAi technology turns off the faucet."

Here's another analogy: If DNA is the blueprint for proteins, RNA is the contractor. It makes single-stranded copies of DNA's genes, called mRNA, which tell the cell to produce proteins. In 1998, scientists identified RNAi, a mechanism that primitive organisms use to detect and destroy virus's double-stranded RNA and any viral mRNA. Mammals' immune systems made RNAi's antiviral function irrelevant (although all vertebrates, including humans, still use RNAi to regulate mRNA activity), but researchers found that introducing small segments of double-stranded RNA to cells could trigger the ancient mechanism and selectively halt the production of specific proteins.

That ability makes RNAi a potential fix for many diseases, including cancer, that arise when abnormal cells produce excessive amounts of everyday proteins. In theory, manipulating RNAi to kill proteins is simple. ALN-VSP, for example, consists of synthetic double-stranded RNA designed to match tumor mRNA that codes for two proteins: VEGF, which cancers overproduce to help grow new blood vessels, and KSP, which sets off rapid cell division. The researchers send the synthetic RNA into liver cells, and the body's RNAi system kills both the synthetic RNA and any matching tumor-grown mRNA. Knock out the mRNAs coding for those proteins—which in the liver are produced only by cancer cells—and the tumor stops growing.

"We can turn off any one of 20,000 genes with RNAi," says Bruce Sullenger, a molecular biologist researching RNAi at Duke University. "The challenge has been to get a drug into only the desired cells and not harm others." Researchers have worried that a drug might disrupt normal protein production in a healthy cell, or that the immune system will destroy the drug before it reaches its target.

Alnylam overcame both concerns by packaging the drug in a fatty envelope that is absorbed primarily by the liver. This allowed doctors to administer the drug through the blood, rather than by an injection to one spot, which improves results by ensuring that the entire liver receives an even dose.

The technique's ability to attack single genes could lead to drugs for the 75 percent of cancer genes that lack any specific treatment, as well as for other illnesses. Alnylam is already testing RNAi therapy for Huntington's disease and high cholesterol in cell cultures; other researchers are tackling macular degeneration, muscular dystrophy and HIV. The potential has driven nearly every major pharmaceutical company to start an RNAi program.

Because the approach is fundamentally simple, RNAi therapy could be ready within two years, say experts including John Rossi, a molecular geneticist at City of Hope National Medical Center in California. Alnylam plans to enroll an additional 36 patients in the ALN-VSP trial and increase the dosage, but the early results are good enough to suggest that it could be among the first RNAi therapies to hit the market. "I think RNAi could work for anything," Rossi says. "But even if it only works for liver cancer, it would be pretty good." For liver-cancer patients who have been failed by chemotherapy and radiation and felt their harsh side effects, that would be wonder drug enough.

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Sensor Networks in Buildings Could Use AC Ducts as Huge, Building-Wide Antennas

Source: http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2010-08/rfid-sensor-networks-buildings-would-use-ac-ducts-huge-building-wide-antennas

Turning HVAC into RFID

Wiring large building for fire safety systems, climate control mechanisms, and other public safety monitoring schemes consumes a lot of wire -- imagine how much feet of copper connects every room, corridor, stairwell and broom closet in a building like the Empire State. So researchers figured out a far more simplified scheme for creating wireless sensor networks within buildings -- why not use the heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) ducts that are already connecting the entire building as a big antenna that relays data via radio frequency identification (RFID)?

The scheme is rather simple but it could amount to huge cost savings for builders, as it saves the materials and time needed to physically connect sensors within a structure. Take the climate control system for instance. In order to function properly, temperature sensors have to be wired throughout the building to tell the central heating and cooling unit when and where to pipe conditioned air.

But the researchers -- all of whom are current or former students of Dr. Dean Stancil, formerly of Carnegie Mellon and now at NC State -- figured out that an array of RFID-enabled temperature sensors spread throughout a building could beam climate information back to the central unit using the HVAC ducts as a big building-wide antenna.

The researchers demonstrated their technology working across sections of HVAC ductwork about 100 feet long, and they are unsure how much further an RFID tag can be away from the central unit and still send and receive signals. But in concept, the system works for anything you can create a sensor for, eliminating all the wiring from fire alarms systems, security systems, air conditioning infrastructure and even public health and safety sensor schemes that monitor for threats like carbon monoxide. From a materials standpoint, that cuts down on a lot of wiring. From a construction standpoint, that's working smarter rather than harder.

[Eurekalert]

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Eating berries may activate the brain's natural housekeeper for healthy aging

Source: http://www.physorg.com/news201789781.html

Scientists today reported the first evidence that eating blueberries, strawberries, and acai berries may help the aging brain stay healthy in a crucial but previously unrecognized way. Their study, presented at the 240th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS), concluded that berries, and possibly walnuts, activate the brain's natural "housekeeper" mechanism, which cleans up and recycles toxic proteins linked to age-related memory loss and other mental decline.

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