Footenotes

building CUNY Communities since 2009

Category: Weekly Round Up!

Round Up!

Things are back in full swing on the Commons.  The last few weeks alone have brought a couple hundred (!) new faces to the site — Hello!

The 11th anniversary of 9/11 passed this week.  Adam Wandt snapped a beautiful photo of the “Towers of Light” tribute down at Ground Zero and shared his thoughts on what we remember each year.  I still think the light installations this time each year are a really poignant tribute and I hope they continue after the new towers are finished.  Unfortunately the week was marred by violence around the globe; starting in Libya and wrapping up in China.  There isn’t much I have to offer on either front.  Both protests in Libya and China, though clearly different, are each rooted in historical context so thick that trying to talk about them in this often silly and tertiary space wouldn’t help at all.  I will offer, in all earnestness, the thought that everyone in this community should remember that your work is both the salve and the antidote.

Elsewhere in the news Tony Picciano shared with us the latest from Chicago.  As many of you know Chicago’s teachers are on strike this week to protest pay cuts and changes to benefits.  There was much speculation as to whether the strike would happen at all and now, a week in, it looks as though Chicago will go a second week with no class.  Here’s hoping CTU is able to strike a deal soon.

Two tech pieces showed up in the blogs this week.  Will Fenton spent some time reviewing GoodReader for the iPad while Aaron Knoll talks to us about choice and technology.  Both posts are great reads and point to a trend on the Commons of folks sharing reviews and advice with the community and the world at large.  Maybe it’s time for a tech column on the Commons?

Finally this week we had something of a surprise on the Commons.  CUNY’s own Chancellor Matthew Goldstein wrote an engrossing post on the Ubiquitous Normal Law.  From there a discussion kicked up and the math crew tossed around examples and limits.  It was a little beyond me, as most math is (Sorry Chancellor and CUNYMath folks!) but it was a pleasure to see the Chancellor drop by the Commons.

Till next week!

Round Up!

A tornado! In Brooklyn! Again!

I grew up in Texas where we have “tornado season” which is actually about as terrifying as it sounds.  There’s a whole swath of the year in which it is totally possible, likely even, that a giant funnel is going to come down from the sky and rock ‘n roll.  The “training” you get for this is pretty simple: If you can, get in a bathtub and put your mattress over it, if that’s not possible sit down in a door frame, and if that’s not possible sit under your desk.  Because nothing is more awesome then sitting under your desk while your 4th grade teacher is both crying and singing.  Sorry, was that a little dark for Footenotes?  In any event — I feel totally prepared for the New New York.

Speaking of rock ‘n rolling —  Bill Clinton brought the house down in North Carolina this week.  Tony Picciano weighed in and was impressed from the sounds of it.  Hell, it really was a barn burner.  Regardless of where you fall on the political spectrum, you’ve got to admit that nobody holds court like Bill.  The guy’s a total peacock.  Even if you tried to ignore what he was saying he still gets you with his magisterial use of hand gestures.

Speaking of presence, the start of the new year has brought in a crop of fresh bloggers.  New blog ‘In Between’ chimed in this week with some thoughts on positioning.  I love it when CUNY gets meta and it’s interesting to think along with a new PhD candidate getting their feet wet at CUNY.  It’ll be great to check in with this blog over years and see how much changes.  Thanks for making a home here on the Commons!

Not to eavesdrop but the Digital Fellows blog posted some awesome tips for doing a WordPress install locally with your Mac using MAMP.  I know there are a ton of Mac users on the Commons and this post is an invaluable resource.  Thanks so much new Digital Fellows!

Finally this week there are a couple of big events coming up at CUNY that you should mark your calenders for.  First up is Open Access Week here at CUNY.  If you’re new to CUNY or new to the Commons then you should know we’re big Open Access supporters here and we have a ton of resources for you to study up in the issues and get involved.

Also coming up is the 11th annual CUNY IT Conference.  If you haven’t made it to one of the IT conferences you really should try to catch it this year.  I know, I know — it sounds like a lot of dudes running around in cargo pants being chased by sales reps from Microsoft.  It is not like that at all.  It’s actually a lot of really creative folks at CUNY showing off some fantastic work they’re doing across the university.  Come say hello!

Till next week!

 

Labor Day Round Up!

The last big hurrah of the summer and I’m wrapped up in a sheet with a cold.  It’s pathetic.  I was thinking Fire Island and instead wound up pacing around my apartment like a wraith, trying to figure out if the mystery pills in the cabinet were Tylenol or sleeping pills.  I took both of them.  This may become the incoherent Round Up.  (Because that would be a real break in style.) 

The week opened with Clint Eastwood talking to furniture.  I think I’ve said all I can there.

Actually, no.  There’s one  little morsel of news there that I would never forgive myself for if I didn’t mention it: The premiere of TLC’s “Here Comes Honey Boo-Boo” had better ratings than the Republican National Convention.

Ok, moving on…

Schools back in.  Already the Commons has started to see some new life.  A ton of new faces and new blogs have popped up on the site.  For starters a Feminist Studies group has landed and looks set to make a big impact at the GC.  I’m looking forward to their programming this year.

The CUNY Math blog always has stellar writing on it, but this week was a knock out.  Frank Wang took on the question of ‘Why are so many Harvard student’s first born’ and basically beat it around the head with some serious math.  Later in the week Roman Kossak posted a insightful piece about the need for better communication between math faculty and asked the community to make the Commons their place.  I hope to see more discussions grow from this insightful piece.

I suuuuck at Twitter.  I’m terrible at it.  I go on there and see Boone and Luke and all of the cool kids making witty RT’s and ### and I can’t for the life of me figure it out.  Fortunately The CUNY Games network posted a great ’50 Best Twitter Feeds for Educational Gaming’ so if you’re like me and still dipping your toes in the Twitter waters this is a great place to start.  Thanks so much for posting!

Adam Wandt posted a photo of the Imagine mosaic in Central park this week.  If you’re new to the Commons one of the things you’ll notice is that we share photos in a lot of places here.  Feel free to post your own.  Adam also reached out to the community to try and start a discussion about what it means to be an American.  I’d really love to see how the Commons responds to questions of identity and citizenship.

I’ll end the week on a high note.  The Common’s own Raymond Hoh has been promoted to the BuddyPress core team.  Congrats Raymond!

Til next week.

Round Up!

cc photo "untitled" by flickr user KevinGessner

cc photo “untitled” by flickr user KevinGessner

Earlier last week Matt Gold and I were having a conversation about Branch, an outfit that bills itself as a “new way to talk to each other” on the web.  The team over at Branch is on to something.  Communicating around the web has many perils; meandering discussions, trolls, lack of engagement…  Branch looks to solve these problems by allowing you to tailor your audience.  I think.  From what I gather it’s like Pinterest for dialogue.  You grab something off of Twitter or a blog and move it to a new environment to talk about it.  About the time I learned about Branch, Twitter released Medium.  Medium isn’t immediately obvious in its purpose.  Twitter founders Biz Stone and Evan Williams describe it as a new way of communicating with the “burden” of becoming a blogger.  From what I can make of it, it’s like Twitter, Tumblr and Pinterest kind of mixed up.  The Awl wrote a great piece about this change in direction for online communicating platforms and was wise to mention that they have as much to do with rethinking ad revenue as they do with “reinventing” communication.  It strikes me that two moves are happening here: We seem to be looking for a way to tailor the web precisely to our interests and we want to do it eloquently.  Corina Chocano handled the first part of this move nicely and I have little to say otherwise so I’ll simply point you towards her article in the Times.  Eloquence deserves a little more thought.

Twitter’s 140 cap headlines took everybody’s favorite part of Facebook and made it a “thing.”  It’s like that Seinfeld episode where they just sell the muffin tops.  Tumblr took it a step further;  easy to use, beautifully designed themes, it’s  social media that frequently transcends language in favor of a visual dialogue as prophesied by John Berger in the BBC’s 1972 series “Ways of Seeing.”  Even the idea of the Commons, or BuddyPress at large, relates here.  People want the best of the web without the hoi polloi.  Why use the group and blogging features of places like Facebook or Google and sift through the advertising wasteland (to say nothing of privacy issues) when you can create your own private, beautiful environment.

Why rent when you can buy?

Meanwhile on the Commons…

Frank Wang over at CUNYMath had a great post this week about math and music.  He explores the human preference for music with predictability and symmetry, and it’s mathematical roots.  There’s an interesting conversation about aesthetics and math waiting to happen there.  In the comments Mari Watanabe-Rose found a great quote about rhythm in Murakami’s latest.  It’d be interesting to get a collection going of great literature on great math.

Roberto Duncan had a ton of posts up this week over at Transformative Games about his work this summer with high school students.  As Roberto’s summer with his students winds down, each of the projects have an epilogue looking back at how the games and learning went.  Thank you for bringing this work to the Commons community!

Jessica Yood stopped in after some late summer reflection.  As always, this blog is a treasure to read.  Be sure to check it out and prepare to add the word crodje to your vocabulary.  You grok?

Speaking of the end of summer, the Welcome New Students blog posted some important info for the GC’s incoming class.  While many of us are past our new student days you should check out this gem from the post: Thinking Like a Creator.

Till next week.

 

The Muggy Round Up

 

Hello  Commons,

The week opened with Curiosity landing on Mars and quickly streaming images of the red planet back home to Earth.  An optimistic wave of interest in the program took over the news cycle and in the dust of the story’s impact a few interesting and unexpected  bits surfaced.  My favorite of the tertiary stories was the unearthing of a prepared speech President Nixon would have given if Armstrong and Aldrin had been stranded on the moon.  The speech is painfully eloquent and though we are all grateful that there was no occasion for it’s use, it’s impossible to not try and imagine Nixon’s delivery.   On a lighter note, its been amazing to watch the Mohawk sporting NASA scientist and flight controller Bobak Ferdowsi stymie the efforts of parents across the world.

As it turns out, everyone was having a pretty big week.  The Commons team (it’s weird to write in the third person) announced our feature packed Commons 1.4 release.  Commons 1.4 is the result of some serious work from the Development Team and you can check the development blog to stay up to date on bug fixes and the like.   In the days ahead keep an eye out for posts explaining some of the new features.  To get everyone started Scott Voth kicks things off by talking out the new Google Docs Embed Plug-In.

Also having a good week was Footenotes’ favorite Zines at Brooklyn College.  Alycia Sellie posted to share a feature article in The Wall Street Journal.  Congratulations to everyone involved!  I’m still kicking myself for missing the party.

Tony Picciano gave us some follow up on the shooting last weekend.  Tony was also the first on the Commons to share the news about Romney picking Paul Ryan as VP.  I’m beginning to think that the contemporary Republican party is a kind of long running Actionist performance art piece.  I don’t mean this disparagingly, as there’s plenty one can say about the Democratic party, but there’s a kind of internal logic at work so byzantine that I have surrendered to the effect of the piece and can only stand in naked awe of it, bereft of linear comprehension.  I feel like only,like, Werner Herzog really understands what is happening.

Finally this week William Ashton posted a bit from BBC news about MCA’s will.  The deceased Yauch made clear that nothing from his artistic legacy was to be used for advertising.  I hope it sticks because it’d break my little heart to hear the Beastie Boys being used to sell tickets on a cruise.

Till next week.

 

 

Round Up

Lecture Hall – Hunter College

Years ago when I came to work for the Commons, my first real idea for the site was Footenotes.  A lot of good writing would get buried in the news feed and I thought it’d be great to pull out some gems every week for posts that might have otherwise missed their audience.  In reading almost all of the blogs each week I learned that one of the things bloggers on the Commons loved (and continue to love) was the news.   I started spending the first paragraph or two talking about national or local news before moving on to the Commons, and about the time Footenotes hit its stride I started to get cute about how “crazy” the state of Arizona was.  You can search the ‘Arizona’ tag and see I was on a tear for a while about Gov. Jan Brewer and her policy decisions regarding immigration and women’s reproductive rights.  As all good blogging usually is, these little missives turned into petite exercises in catharsis.  Then a young man shot Congresswoman Giffords.

I think that moment was pretty sobering because a lot of us realized what was happening in Arizona was far more sinister than we had imagined.  After that shooting I felt like maybe opining on the news when I was supposed to be unearthing great posts around the Commons was best left to others so I backed off a bit.  But if the Commons is anything,  the Commons is a conversation CUNY has with itself and the world.  Over the months talking about the news robustly worked its way back in and it’s always a pleasure of mine to sit down Sunday evenings and read what Tony Picciano or Helldriver or any of the Commons’ 640-something bloggers have to say about New York, America or the world.

Lately though I’ve been at a loss about how to talk about the news briefly, meaningfully, and with humor because events like the shooting in Colorado or today’s terrible tragedy in Wisconsin deserve more than a glib two sentences on the way to something else.  I think that there’s a point of intersection between events like these very real nightmares and the function of education, and most especially the noble tradition of public education, in society.

If I’m being frank, “point of intersection” is too weak:  The state of affairs in public education is indissociable from our current and very real state of public violence.

I’m not suggesting that we can educate our way completely out of tragedy.   Illness is a consequence of life and will always require tending.  I do, however,  think that at some point in our lives choosing education, and being in the service of it, as a profession is the realization that if it’s not this — it’s nothing.  If it is not the transmission of  knowledge, new perspectives and new ways of thinking and solving problems for society’s sake then we’re inevitably left with slings and arrows.

+++

Michael Smith found this wonderful picture of Richie Havens at Staten Island Community College.  Michael notes that this would have been a few months before Havens played Woodstock.   For the trivia minded it’s worth noting that Havens was the first act to play at Woodstock and went on by popular demand for nearly three hours.  If you watch the video of his seminal “Motherless Child” you’ll notice by the end he’s down to three strings on his guitar.

George Otte returned to Tributaries this week with two great posts.  At the heart of his posts are questions about what technology is going to do with professors and educators as we know it.  George points towards the shrill New York Times piece that was circulating recently and catches some lazy writing and research.  One of the perks of being on the Commons is actually _enjoying_ technology.

The GC’s new students blog was thinking about more urgent matters: Caffeine.  I’ll let you read the post and get their take on the best cup of coffee around the Graduate Center.  However, I’ll go ahead and second their vote for Stumptown Coffee Roasters.  I’ll also confess here that sometimes I just really love Dunkin’ Donuts’ coffee.  I know, I know…I’m sorry.

Brooklyn Zine crew had their debut last week and sent thanks to everyone involved. I didn’t get to make it out there but I saw it posted on the very hip “nonsense list” that went out.  Congrats again! Post pictures!

Till next week.

 

The Come-Down-Round-Up

Alas Commons, I have descended from Paradise.

The last adventure I got to have before leaving Hawaii was an accidental hike to the top of a mountain.  We had planned to do a hike along the river in the Iao Valley, but in typical island fashion a lone handwritten note taped to a fence post informed us that the road was flooded and to go no further.  Deflated, but not defeated, we drove along the coast and found another trail.  It was an exhausting climb up, and since we had no idea where this consolation hike would lead we pressed on in the manner of loyal dogs and feckless children on the hem.  As it just so happened this particular trail went all the way to the top.  Above is the last picture I snapped before camera gave up the ghost.  Occasional helicopters would dart through the valley below us.  Up in the cloud (monolithic and single tense) it was often impossible to see more than 10 feet beyond.  I realized when we reached as far as we could climb that I was simultaneously at the height of the island and the apex of summer.  In a few scant days I’d be on a plane barreling towards New York and, together, we’d all be shuffling papers and combing through dog-eared books to prepare for the coming semester.

Sure enough, it looks like fall is on many minds around the Commons.  Maura Smale made a wonderful post about how the NYCCT library turns game mechanics to their advantage in the overwhelming student rush of Orientation. The intersection of games, technology and learning is a powerful site of growth in the academy and the CUNY Games Network Blog has diligently kept the CUNY community informed with their enthusiasm and great posts.

The Welcome New Students blog continued with their borough testimonials and sales pitches.  This week it was Brooklyn’s time to represent.  Gwen Shaw sold us on why Brooklyn’s the greatest city in the world.  I’ll bet anyone on the Commons 50 bucks that Marty Markowitz shows up in the comments.  That guy loves his job.

Over at Associations Jessica Yood was also catching us up on some adventures abroad.  This latest post finds its author dealing with mindfulness in writing and experience, with some keen insights into pith and wit.

Helldriver spent some time with a small ensemble.  These posts are such gems, man.  Thanks.  Part of the work at Footenotes is to steer people towards post they might have missed during the week, but if you’re missing Helldriver posts by now what can I do?  This guy could write about what happened on America’s Got Talent and I’d be there.

Finally this week, Bruce Rosenbloom posted A Vision for Academic Technology at CUNY.  In light of so many people’s passion here on the Commons for technology and it’s potential to help better educate the people of New York and around the world, it’s good to see our goals here.  Their exemption from the CUNY Strategic Plan doesn’t necessarily mean that they are absent from our intentions, hopes, or vision as educators.

 

 

 

Image courtesy of Dan Century at flickr.com

Well, what’s in the news this week?  I’m going to skip the Obama/Romney shadow boxing for now because Lord knows there’s going to be plenty of that in the coming months.  But come on Mittens, show us the money.  I want to know what was in those tax records that made Sarah Palin a better candidate for VP.  Speaking of, can you imagine if they had won?  I don’t mean that in a partisan way, just as a thought experiment.  Take the next two minutes to imagine it.  Like, picture the Arab Spring and then we send Vice President Palin over to Egypt to make sure the Israel/Egypt treaty is going to stand.  I know, right? I know.

Whew.

Actually I was just writing that to get your blood pressure up because we really do need to freak out a little (but just a little) now.  You might recall several months ago that the CUNY Academic Commons and basically everyone else on the internet pitched in to stop SOPA/PIPA.  For a minute there it looked like we had managed to get an out of touch congress to slow down and think about what was happening.  Things were looking better as late as this month with ACTA failing to be ratified by the EU, essentially stalling international support for similar legislation.  But deep in the heart of Texas, Rep Lamar Smith was busy crafting some new legislation — the Intellectual Property Attache Act or IPAA.  IPAA isn’t nearly as sweeping as SOPA but it is basically a big chunk of that old bill reformatted with an emphasis on influencing foreign countries to create legislation that could help change the internet as we know it.  Though SOPA failed, bills like this could achieve the same result in piecemeal if we don’t stay informed.  Eyes on the road.

Meanwhile on the Commons — CUNY gets some guns!

Or rather, CUNY had some guns and used to shoot them a lot.  I can’t believe College of Staten Island had a rifle club.  I went to Hunter, where was my rifle club?  I think we had a fencing team.  Anybody over at CSI know if they still have the rifle club?  Wait…do we still have the rifles? What other slightly dangerous and yet oddly compelling sports do we have around CUNY?  Archery? Falconry?

Tim Wilson, long time blogger on the site, took the Commons back to its roots with some poetry this week.  For those of you new to the community the Commons had a deep poetry phase especially around Poetry Month that has, sadly, been on the wane.  I know Grindley has been hard at work on some other projects so that leaves you, Tim Wilson, holding down the fort.  New people — write some poems! Blog them!

If you, like me, missed Pete’s Mini Zine Fest at Pete’s Candy Store then be sure to head to Brooklyn College for Brooklyn College Library’s unveiling of the Zine Collection.  I love the blog and after completely missing the BC Zine crew at ZineFest earlier in the spring I can’t wait to check out the collection.  Mark your calenders folks!

Till next week.

 

The Fireworks Round-Up!

 

A couple of years ago I went on a tear here on Footenotes about Macy’s taking the fireworks off of the East River.  I didn’t move to Greenpoint for the killer pierogis, though they are superb, I moved here so I could drink on my roof and watch fireworks on the 4th.  I might have been a little bitter about the fact that, not only did I get cheated out of my own personal fireworks venue, but we now had to share our scant fireworks with New Jersey.  The New Jerseyian cadre on the Commons piped up and shamed me publicly in the comments.  It was awful.  I mention all of this though because I was delighted to see that I was a visionary.  This year Public Advocate Bill De Blasio and State Senator Daniel Squadron stepped up for the people of New York and started a petition to bring the fireworks back to Brooklyn.  It’s not what you know, it’s who you know.

Next year Macy’s…next year.

Here on the Commons terrible fireworks logistics didn’t stop Adam Wandt from filming the show and putting together some video for us.  I’m sad I missed it, but its great to see these clips — Thanks Adam!

Things tend to slow down on the Commons in the dog days of summer but you wouldn’t know it from the blogs this week.  Everyone was posting these great, full posts.  My hunch is that we’re all stuck inside next to the air conditioners while New York melts.  Speaking of the heat, the folks over at Bike CUNY posted some helpful tips for biking around the city under the murder sun.  Seriously though, read it.  If you bike around New York in the summer take care of yourself.

Lee Hachadoorian threw in his two cents on Mayor Mike’s new soda ban and the subsequent backlash.  The pictures on the subway of the soda turning to fat were pretty impressive.  The 11,000% increase in taxes on cigarettes definitely curbed a lot of people’s habit.  Shutting down the OTB parlors probably saved a marriage or two.  But this soda ban thing…I feel like I going to wake up one morning with Michael Bloomberg in my living room making me do yoga.  You gotta leave us something Mike.  I feel like we’re all going be doing the cinnamon challenge for kicks after the infinite mayor decides it’s time for bars to close at midnight.

While I’m pulling up links from Youtube…Earlier in the week I somehow made my way over to this video and the first thing that popped in my head was, “I bet this is what Helldriver does when he’s cleaning house or doing laundry.”  Lo and behold that same day a new Helldriver post showed up on the Commons.  Here Helldriver abandons previous form and presents us with a kind of “Sleep No More” version of a blog post.  That loud clank you heard was just the bar getting set a little higher.

Finally this week the game lovers of the Commons came out in full force.  New blog Transformative Games promises to take us through the development of educational games.  The Commons has always had a vibrant edu-game culture here and I’m happy to see a new blog on that front.  Over at the CUNY Games blog we learned that BMCC will put together a game library.  Also, Wil Wheaton, I need say no more.  Lee Hachadoorian showed up again in the games rush this week to talk Monopoly and the Panopticon.  If they try to add one of those nanny towers to Risk it’s going to be ugly.

Till next week!

Round Up!

Photo by Lauren Abele

Hello Commons!

Man — what a week?!  I can honestly say I was totally shocked at the Supreme Court decision on ObamneyCare.  I can’t express the deep satisfaction I felt after typing in “drudgereport.com” and watching the four alarm meltdown happen before my very eyes.  My favorite of the many, many links flying through the blogosphere was the stuff about Justice Roberts’ medication debilitating his judgement.  These guys…man…harsh.  For extra lulz (I never know if I’m supposed to be a citizen of the net here or an academic I feel so torn) after the ruling came an onslaught of “I’m moving to Canada” Facebook posts and Tweets.  Even the New York Times had to get in a dig.

But even before all affordable healthcare hell broke loose, Tony Picciano and I were still reeling from UVA’s Board of Visitors decision to reinstate President Sullivan after a botched coup. I would clean 6th Avenue with a toothbrush to be a fly on the wall the first time Sullivan and Dragas run into each other on an elevator.  It’s going to sound like John Cage’s 4’33” but it’s going to feel like this.

Speaking of Tony, this week he reminded us that BMCC will reopen a new Fiterman Hall this fall after losing the original from  damage on September 11th.  Savvy readers might recall the Commons’ own Michael Smith’s post about Fiterman and pictures from the original building.  I can’t recall if @CStein Chris Stein had a post about Fiterman here or if it was a conversation we had but in any event it’s good to see BMCC able to restore it’s campus.  Thanks for keeping us posted.

This week Michael Smith was able to connect with the College of Staten Island’s archives and bring some wonderful pictures to us from their campus.  If your campus has a similar archive and would like to be involved you should reach out the crew at “Pictures of CUNY” and help them grow their collection.  How else are we going to get to see gems like this Professor of Basketball?

New favorite “Associations” was back this week.  Jessica Yood was working out what happens when you can’t slash and burn the crops anymore for another harvest.  I should probably take this to the comments, but I’m writing now so I’ll just do it here: Vibrant Matter pretty much jacked up about 70% of my work.  Like, imagine you put on your nice clothes for a date and then Jane Bennett jumps out of the bushes and cuts off your sleeve, takes both shoes and spills ink on your shirt.  What were you reading that had you prepared for that?

Run, don’t walk folks, it’s a great blog.

Finally – JULY IS INTERNATIONAL ZINE MONTH

Come on people!  Get your Sharpies, long staplers, X-acto knives and channel your inner Valerie Solanas…er…well…or maybe your inner whoever you wanted to be in the 90s and make a zine!  They’re awesome;  it’s like a blog, only you can hold it, and trade copies with friends, or sell them.

You work for CUNY, you can only be like, what, 20 feet from a Xerox machine?

Plus, if they’re really good they might wind up with the awesome folks at Brooklyn College Library Zine Archive.

Till next week

 

 

Environment: Reclaim Dev

Branch: 2.5.x

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