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12:00 AM
flees fleas
:(
 
> Trump’s favored candidate in the Texas special runoff election last week, Susan Wright, lost to Jake Ellzey.
> The former president, however, gained clout on Tuesday, when the candidate he endorsed, Mike Carey, won a special House election in Ohio in a crowded primary field of GOP contenders.
> The report’s authors deemed it “impossible” to determine where last year’s surveys went wrong based on current data. However, the authors floated the still unproven theory that it could be tied to a fundamental difference in Republicans who are willing to take polls, an issue they said may be exacerbated by Trump’s attacks on polling. The report highlighted that larger polling errors were found in states with more Trump supporters, suggesting too few Trump supporters are responding to polls.
Crucial Quote
Various bits of interesting info from different sources.
 
12:19 AM
@Robusto The sadist's glee.
 
Looks like Biden's approval ratings are not too bad.
Much better than Trump's.
 
@Cerberus Biden's lowest is higher than Trump's highest.
 
@Cerberus What does that matter for the legislature?
 
@Robusto So far, yes.
@tchrist Nothing, just various bits of info.
 
Yes, Biden is not evil.
He has his flaws, and he makes mistakes. But he's human.
The sadofascists do not deserve that label.
That's a chart I posted of the number of days over 90 each year since records began here. Notice that it's doubled and is still rising. That changes things drastically.
 
12:24 AM
It's probably the same here.
 
I would not be surprised.
If they'd just turn off that darned Gulf Stream, maybe you wouldn't get so hot. :)
It's hard to find good temperature data for Europe over the past 150 or whatever years.
Rather, I have not found it easily.
 
30-year average temperature in Holland.
And another one.
 
12:44 AM
@Cerberus I don't understand the overlapping 30-year chunks. What does that mean?
 
12:59 AM
@Robusto E.g. for the year 1930, what you see is the average temperature over the past 30 years, so 1901–1930.
 
Ah, OK.
 
For 1931, you see 1902–1931, etc.
It's a bit confusing.
A way to make the curve look smooth.
Unless I misinterpret the graph.
 
1:17 AM
@Cerberus Thanks.
Anything showing the change not in average temperature but in the number of days over some warm temperature like 30C?
 
1:35 AM
All heatwaves.
Some years have two heatwaves, visible as two bars next to each other.
Based on data from the Koninklijk Nederlandsch Meteorologisch Instituut (state weather institute).
 
2:06 AM
@Cerberus Close enough, thanks!
I guess it doesn't get over 32C there very often?
Definitely see more of that in the latter years.
 
Why 32?
The darkest bits of bar are 35+.
 
Because my charts were for number of days over 90.
 
Ahh.
No doubt rarer than where you live.
 
I was trying to compare like things.
 
Much also depends on the exact method of measurement.
 
2:09 AM
Where I grew up, we averaged like 9 or 11. Milwaukee area.
Denver is appreciably hotter on the thermometer, but cooler on the skin, at least in the shade, for lack of humidity.
 
Recently, the KNMI scratched most heatwaves from before 1951, because they had not previously taken into account certain changes in measurements. So temperatures recorded from before that date had to be decreased by several degrees, and most heatwaves disappeared.
@tchrist Yes, and sunshine also increases how hot your body and your house get.
 
Another important measurement is how early in the spring this or that comes into flower, or when the marmotae come out of hibernation.
 
And being in a city, of course.
 
Disruptions can cause critters to starve.
 
Something like this?
 
2:13 AM
The only time I've ever lived in all-concrete places is when I lived in Madrid, which can certainly be hot. Even Wimbleton had plenty of greenery.
 
I wonder if you can figure out what that graph means...
 
@Cerberus Yes!
 
@tchrist Madrid doesn't have that much concrete!
 
@Cerberus It's not too bad, no.
 
Kievit = lapwing.
 
2:14 AM
eerste is the same.
I don't know your birds.
 
The same as what?
 
English.
Well, as erstwhile English. :)
 
It was erstwhile.
 
jinx
 
The graph is a bit hard to understand for a Dutchman!
But you already know the context.
 
2:16 AM
Well the Y-axis is the Julian day.
 
Is that a term?
 
It's the yearday, yes.
 
But, yeah, you probably know each root used in the text, so you can figure it out.
Yearday is probably accurate.
 
In computing. It actually means something different in horological circles.
 
So you understand the graph?
 
2:18 AM
Yes.
 
You know the word ei?
 
But not the non-blue dots.
eggs
 
Yes, ei = egg.
@tchrist Nor I.
Perhaps outliers.
 
Remember when I was kid I had about a year of German. Things leak through for Dutch sometimes.
 
I think you can say "floating average" in English as well?
 
2:19 AM
Yes.
 
Right.
 
Running average.
 
That's what I should have said when Rob asked.
 
Or moving average.
 
Those all make sense.
I have only passive knowledge of the term zwevend gemiddelde, and only in context did I understand what it really meant.
 
2:20 AM
There's a word my mother knows but I can never remember, a fancy one which is the study of these things. The seasonal markers in flora and fauna.
 
Hmm.
 
An ordinal date is a calendar date typically consisting of a year and a day of the year ranging between 1 and 366 (starting on January 1), though year may sometimes be omitted. The two numbers can be formatted as YYYY-DDD to comply with the ISO 8601 ordinal date format. == Nomenclature == Ordinal date is the preferred name for what was formerly called the "Julian date" or JD, or JDATE, which still seen in old programming languages and spreadsheet software. The older names are deprecated because they are easily confused with the earlier dating system called Julian day number or JDN, which was in...
There. We used to call that the "Julian date".
It's the yearday.
An integer between 1 and 366.
It got renamed because it was too easily confused for the day in the Julian calendar.
You have to take that into account when doing these studies. Because of the drift till leapyear.
I think programming libraries now call it rata die or something like that.
=head3 $dt->utc_rd_values

Returns the current UTC Rata Die days, seconds, and nanoseconds as a
three element list. This exists primarily to allow other calendar
modules to create objects based on the values provided by this object.
Yeah.
 
Ah, I see.
I think I have seen Jdate.
 
Rata Die (R.D.) is a system for assigning numbers to calendar days (optionally with time of day), independent of any calendar, for the purposes of calendrical calculations. It was named (after the Latin ablative feminine singular for "from a fixed date") by Howard Jacobson. The same system (including the same epoch) was used earlier, e.g., the REXX programming language since about 1980: The base date of 1 January 0001 is determined by extending the current Gregorian calendar backward (365 days each year, with an extra day every year that is divisible by 4 except century years that are not divisible...
It's amusing they gave up and went back to Latin.
 
Of course.
 
2:31 AM
My imitation of an intoxicated poster:
Shelves is the singular of shelve, which is plural: he shelves, they shelve. This is no irregular. It works just like she halves in the singular but they halve in the plural, or when cows or glaciers are involved, then she calves singular and they calve plural. And he leaves and he delves but they leave and they delve. I guess you can say he leafs and she calfs and he halfs and he delfs and he shelfs if you really want to, but I reckon folks will think you half a bat speech impetiment of some kint. :) — tchrist ♦ 27 mins ago
He wants to say shelfs. It probably isn't going to go over well.
They're she-elves, of course, not shelfs.
 
@tchrist He leafs through a book?
 
Yes, but leafing and leaving differ.
It's a valid verb. New, as you can tell by its odd lack of voicing.
 
> I guess you can say he leafs...
You can!
Yes, unvoiced suggests new.
Newly formed from a noun substantive.
 
Because trees have been leafing out earlier and earlier each year, they've decided to move their normal April Tree Pride celebration back a month so they can have real Tree Pride March instead.
@Cerberus Yes. Compare wolfs down with the older wolves as a verb.
> If any Seducers were let loose to wolve it among the good People of Roxbury.
It's harder to find examples of this with -rf vs -rve. Perhaps serf noun and serve verb.
May you could say starfish if you were just a little bit starving. :)
In Old English ceorfan was to carve with a k- of course. Its past tense was cearf, and Middle English had carf there. But it got stuck voiced from carves.
Middle English also had ic kerve so that kind of got stuck.
And the verb to swerve did have a swarf past tense in Middle English.
> Etymology: Common Germanic (originally) strong verb with a variety of meanings: Middle English swerve, past tense swarf to turn aside, representing Old English sweorfan, past tense swearf, past participle sworfen to file, scour, = Old Frisian swerva to creep, (West Frisian swerv(j)e, past tense swurf, past participle swurven to wander, hurry away, North Frisian swarwi), Old Saxon *swerƀan to wipe, only in past tense swarf, Middle Dutch swerven (Dutch zwerven) to rove, stray, Low German swarven to swerve, stray, riot, Old High German swerban (Middle High German swerben) to wipe, to move qu
Oh the miners borrowed a version back from the Norses.
> kirve v.

Forms: Also kerve, curve.
Frequency (in current use): Show frequency band information
Origin: A borrowing from early Scandinavian. Etymon: Norse kyrfa.
Etymology: < Old Norse kyrfa to carve < *kurƀjan : see kerf n.
> 2. Coal Mining. To undercut a seam; to hole. Cf. kirving n.
> 1883 W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining Kirve, to hole.
 
2:54 AM
Dutch has those words too.
But I am brushing my teeth again.
 
I can't make heads or tales of the obsolete citation.
> †1. To carve. Hence kirving-knife, carving-knife. Obsolete. rare.

1484–5 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1901) III. 649 Pro emundacione de le kirvyngknyffez d'ni Prioris, 12d.
I don't think it was in English.
"Pro emundacione de le..." doesn't look very English to me.
A "kirvyngknyffez" is amusing though.
@Cerberus Does Dutch still use zwerven with the meaning of English swerve as in turn aside and around something?
You swerve around a big pothole in the road so as not to damage your bike.
Or get hurt.
Emundation is ceremonial cleansing!
 
@tchrist For the emandation of the carving-knives of the new priory, perhaps?
A very odd quotation.
 
Yes!
 
@tchrist Oh, that does make sense.
 
We stopped using the word in English once people stopped studying Latin much.
 
3:00 AM
@tchrist Hmm I don't think so.
Zwerven is to wander, be a vagabond.
 
> Etymology: < Latin ēmundātiōn-em, noun of action < ēmundāre to cleanse, < ē out + mundus clean.(Show Less)

The action of ceremonial cleansing or purification.
1610 Bible (Douay) II. Psalms lxxxviii. 45 Thou hast destroied him from emundation.
1652 J. Gaule Πυς-μαντια 39 This they apply to the ceremoniall emundations, or purifactions.
1731–1800 in N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict.
1775 in J. Ash New Dict. Eng. Lang.
 
Mundus = kosmos.
 
@Cerberus Yeah they can't figure out why it means the other thing in English now.
 
Clean = beautiful.
 
Unstained.
 
3:01 AM
Schoon (Dutch) = schön (German).
Yes.
Pure.
@tchrist Those sense seem pretty close?
To wander, to stray, to swerve.
 
> The original sense of the radical may be that of agitated, irregular, or deflected movement; compare swarm n., etymology. The sense of filing did not survive the Old English period, but is preserved in the derivative noun swarf n.2 The sudden emergence of the sense of ‘turn aside’ in Middle English is remarkable; the presumption is that it existed in Old English, since there is no known foreign source to account for it.
It's related, yes. But you don't use it like we do now.
Time to call the cats home.
 
@tchrist Yes, the irregular movement is also attested in older Dutch.
@tchrist No, indeed.
Dutch has zweven "float", and wervelen "whirl".
 
Interesting.
 
And of course zwerm "swarm".
 
Of course.
 
3:07 AM
Zwerk "sky" may be unrelated.
Oh, and there is zwenken, which is pretty close to modern English swerve.
Also wenken "beckon".
 
Yeah, I don't see where zwerk would be related. But I seldom see things.
 
Nor I.
 
Sky is a weird word. Not weird like dog is weird. Just weird because it's from Norse.
 
All of those -we- verbs seem to have some irregular movement in them.
I thought sky was Skandinavian?
 
It is.
That's what I meant.
 
3:10 AM
Oh, I thought dog was Scandinavian, but no?
 
No.
We don't know know where dog is from, just as we don't know where Iberian perro is from!
Old English has docga but it was rare. And nobody else has anything like it.
 
Zwerk is probably from some root meaning "dark" (zwart?), but they are not sure.
 
zwart is black no?
 
So it's the cloudy sky.
Yes.
@tchrist Most odd.
 
Cue bad Mel Brooks joke about the schwarzes.
Rabbit is another puzzle. It might have come from Walloon. Maybe.
2
Girl is a mystery.
2
 
3:14 AM
So they are.
 
Boy might be from Frisian, but we aren't sure.
It's really weird to have such super-common words that we can't trace.
 
Quite.
Perhaps they came from street language...
Slang is often hard to trace.
But I have finished my brushing.
 
gawk, traipse
Sleep.
Have Lorin but he's just staring at me not wanting to come in. Actually, staring at the front so I guess the coons are marauding again.
 
Hmm.
Good luck!
No cat door?
 
Sure, but I'd rather they come to bed with me.
 
3:18 AM
Ah, OK.
 
He's perched on the stone wall, staring intently. That's always critters.
 
Give them my regards.
 
Shall.
 
Adeus.
 
Yup, big giant raccoon in the front garden.
 
 
1 hour later…
4:23 AM
I am doing homework about Adjective Clause that modifies a whole previously mentioned sentence.


Given example:

He agreed to accept the offer. It is news to me.
Answer: He agreed to accept the offer, which is news to me.


However, in the exercise, there is one question that looks a bit different pattern as follows.

Your argument is reasonable. I still don't believe it.

My answer: Your argument is reasonable, which I still don't believe.


**Is it correct?**
 
 
1 hour later…
5:44 AM
A toast sandwich is a British sandwich made with two slices of bread in which the filling is a thin slice of toasted bread, which may be heavily buttered. An 1861 recipe says to add salt and pepper to taste. == Victorian recipe == A recipe for toast sandwiches is included in the invalid cookery section of the 1861 Book of Household Management by Isabella Beeton, who adds, "This sandwich may be varied by adding a little pulled meat, or very fine slices of cold meat, to the toast, and in any of these forms will be found very tempting to the appetite of an invalid." == 2011 publicity == In November...
 
 
5 hours later…
11:23 AM
There is a lot of COVID-19 discussion here. So I'm asking, does anyone know of a site with a systematic comparison of COVID-19 vaccines internationally? Not just those available in a single country.
 
11:42 AM
The most-faraway Bible is lying on the control panel of the Moon Rover, left there by a member of the Apollo 15 expedition.
Imagine a huge asteroid hits Earth and destroys everything. Then the only book in our Solar System will be that Bible.
 
12:05 PM
@M.A.R. - - oldest prosthetic eye found in Iran.
Or maybe a fake.
 
 
1 hour later…
1:12 PM
William "Bill" Daniel Ehrhart (born September 30, 1948) is an American poet, writer, scholar and Vietnam veteran. Ehrhart has been called "the dean of Vietnam war poetry." Donald Anderson, editor of War, Literature & the Arts, said Ehrhart's Vietnam-Perkasie: A Combat Marine Memoir, is "the best single, unadorned, gut-felt telling of one American's route into and out of America's longest war." Ehrhart has been an active member of Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW). He was a 1993 Pew Fellow in the Arts. == Life == Immediately upon graduating from high school in June 1966, Ehrhart joined the...
This is that guy.
 
1:37 PM
@WhoSaveMeSaveEntireWorld I think you would normally place the adjectival clause inside the main clause:
> Your argument, which I still don't believe, is reasonable.
Although it still sounds a bit odd.
I would simply not use an adjectival clause here, because you have clear opposition.
> Although your argument is reasonable, I still don't believe it.
That is how I would write it.
 
“The most important thing is to keep the most important thing the most important thing.”
- Donald P. Coduto
 
2:21 PM
> After communist troops took control of the base, Lém arrested Lieutenant Colonel Nguyen Tuan with his family and forced him to show them how to drive tanks. When Lieutenant Colonel Tuan refused to cooperate, Lém killed Tuan, his wife and six children and his 80-year-old mother by cutting their throats. There was only one survivor, a seriously injured 10-year-old boy.
Nguyễn Văn Lém is the guy on the right. Today I learned that before being shot, he killed 9 people.
He wore no uniform, which under the laws of war permits execution if the person is captured performing military or intelligence tasks. And he committed a mass murder by cutting throats of civilians.
I never knew that.
Of course he should have been brought to a court. But if he indeed killed 9 people, at least now I understand the reason.
The sole boy who survived became a rear-admiral in the USA
Huan Nguyen is a rear admiral in the United States Navy. During the Tet offensive of the Vietnam War, his whole family was killed. Aged nine at the time, he was shot thrice during the attack and stayed with his mother for two hours as she bled to death. In 2019, he became the highest ranking Vietnamese-American officer in the U.S. military when he was promoted to the rank of rear admiral in the United States Navy. == References == This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Navy document: "Rear Admiral Huan Nguyen".
 
3:18 PM
@Cerberus Thank you very much for your explanation. :-)
 
> 43-year-old Tatsiana Zviarko, the mother of a two-year-old son, was sentenced to 1,5 years in a penal colony. She was charged with insulting Lukashenko and a policeman.
 
 
1 hour later…
4:44 PM
A bat flew more than 2000 km from UK to Russia, only to be killed by a cat bbc.com/russian/other-news-58108884
Russia's population decreased by 421 000 in the first half of 2021 tvrain.ru/teleshow/here_and_now/smertnost_kovid-535518/…
I mean the natural decline, excluding migration. Births minus deaths produced a figure of minus 421 thousand
Migration was keeping Russia's population growing in the past years despite the natural decline.
Dark brown: natural growth or decline
Orange: migration
Red line: total change in Russia's population
 
> You should ask catholic priests around the Vatican City. It would be interesting to see if they speak some Latin.
From the comments section
 
Funny that they keep trying to speak to him in English.
 
Because English is the Lingua Franca
 
@CowperKettle Which it inherited from French, which inherited it from Latin.
 
5:16 PM
@Robusto they're all so accommodating. They're trying to help even though they have no(or little) idea what he's saying
If it were NYC the locals would just say 'f u' and give a wide berth on the sidewalk
Granted that's be the same reaction if you spoke with a cockney accent
 
5:52 PM
This website shows how the space curves as you approach the speed of light makc.github.io/misc/relativity-1.html
 
@Robusto 😳
 
6:06 PM
And I constantly come across Twitter posts by anti-Putin Russians who say "we should allow people to own small arms, that will make them safer and more independent".
In 1918, Russia was awash with guns.
 
6:23 PM
@CowperKettle Does it still work?
 
@Mitch I don't know ))
> “We found that two elongated areas of elevated methane concentration on the PULSE map perfectly coincide with two stripes where limestone formations occur in the subsurface,” Froitzheim says.
 
@CowperKettle Maybe shrug
 
> Frotzheim suspects record-breaking temperatures disturbed fractures in the limestone, providing an opportunity for natural gas from deeper within the permafrost to escape into the atmosphere.
 
1 percent of people interested in historical sites in Iran genuinely love history. 99 percent of the people are losers that want to feel a fleeting sense of pride, as if they get credited for it, that some people did something 5000 years ago.
 
@M.A.R. What else are history sites for?
 
6:31 PM
@Mitch Elsewhere, they might actually be preserved in their beauty. In Iran, as soon as some rich asshole likes the spot for his next villa, they're vandalized and demolished.
Well, actually not in Zabol. That's just a frigging desert
Actually the equivalent of, I dunno, El Paso or something, because it's where drug cartels move drugs across the border from Afghanistan
 
Putorana Plateau, Siberia
Has roughly 25 000 lakes.
Stretches for 800 km.
A remnant of a huge volcanic eruption that killed off 60% of species 251 million years ago.
Putorana translates as "lakes with steep banks"
From the local language
 
7:13 PM
> E. O. Wilson summarized, "In a group, selfish individuals beat altruistic individuals. But, groups of altruistic individuals beat groups of selfish individuals."
Group selection is a proposed mechanism of evolution in which natural selection acts at the level of the group, instead of at the more conventional level of the individual. Early authors such as V. C. Wynne-Edwards and Konrad Lorenz argued that the behavior of animals could affect their survival and reproduction as groups, speaking for instance of actions for the good of the species. In the 1930s, R.A. Fisher and J.B.S. Haldane proposed the concept of kin selection, a form of altruism from the gene-centered view of evolution, arguing that animals should sacrifice for their relatives, and thereby...
 
7:46 PM
@Robusto Baaaad air coming your way but hasn't arrived yet there. AQI is 165 here and visibility is no more than a mile. Don't exercise in this.
 
@tchrist We are startlingly clear here, for now. Green in all three metrics.
 
Like a little oasis. We were in one of those quite recently, but no more.
We seem to be getting as bad as Salt Lake City had been (and still is), and for the same reason. I don't think that the levels seen in Las Vegas will get here though, barring new fires.
Smells bad outside now. And we're thousands of miles away from it.
We also have sustained high winds, for no discernible reason. That would be really bad if the fires were nearby.
 
@tchrist That sucks.
I was getting gas today and got hammered by a dust devil. Surprisingly stronger than expected.
 
Gusting to 45 here.
But it seems only to bring smoke in not chase it out.
And this isn't high up either. It's down on the ground. Hard to see.
 
8:23 PM
@tchrist Airnow.gov seems cryptic and inconsistent at times.
"Everything's fine today, but everything is not fine today."
In any case, I'm off to CA tomorrow.
 
@Robusto Into the belly of the beast.
 
Lotta outdoor meals, for sure.
@tchrist Hey, it's not like I'm going to Florida.
 
You'll be in the south part, not the north part where the fires are worst.
Yes, California gets a lot of new covid cases. They also have a lot of people.
 
Correct.
@tchrist There are currently no fires along my route. Not even close.
 
Just the Noisy Desert.
(And no, that's not why it's called that. Nobody knows.)
 
8:33 PM
El Ruidoso?
 
Sonorous.
But it almost certainly does not mean that.
Its origins have been lost to us.
 
Ha, OK.
I'll be a bit north of the Sonoran desert.
 
@CowperKettle As predicted, right? Or is it different?
 
Still toasty.
 
Yes. But there is no "cool" way to drive to CA from here.
BTW, since I began my Spanish education I find that so many things that sounded exotic are actually quite pedestrian and literal. Baja California, for example.
 
8:38 PM
Heh.
 
Does California mean anything?
 
Bass California pairs with the Altos up north.
@Cerberus Not what it looks like. :)
 
?
 
It's neither a hot oven nor hot fornication.
Multiple theories regarding the origin of the name California, as well as the root language of the term, have been proposed, but most historians believe the name likely originated from a 16th-century novel, Las Sergas de Esplandián. The novel, popular at the time of the Spanish exploration of Mexico and the Baja California Peninsula, describes a fictional island named California, ruled by Queen Calafia, east of the Indies. The author of the novel, Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo, also known as Ordóñez de Montalvo, is thought to have derived the term California from the Arabic Khalif and/or Khalifa...
 
> The name likely derived from the mythical island of California in the fictional story of Queen Calafia, as recorded in a 1510 work The Adventures of Esplandián by Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo.
 
8:43 PM
Possibly.
Or from Orlando:
> Morz est mis nies, ki tant me fist cunquere
Encuntre mei revelerunt li Seisne,
E Hungre e Bugre e tante gent averse,
Romain, Puillain et tuit icil de Palerne
E cil d'Affrike e cil de Califerne;
Not that that one is explained, either.
 
Noted.
 
I had thought it the Calida Fornax origin, but probably not.
 
@Robusto I honestly think those universities do have a problem, though.
 
@Robusto There is a contextual meaning of "diversity" there where you wouldn't know what it was a code-phrase for if you weren't plugged into the Zeitgeist du jour.
@Cerberus You were thinking of one in particular? :)
Not all "small towns" are culturally homogeneous, but they're also unlikely to be gated enclaves of the wealthy.
"encountered diversity" is an annoying phrase.
 
8:54 PM
@Cerberus Yeah. The conservatives resent anyone else from messing with their indoctrination via Faux News, et al.
 
What they mean by diversity is anything that doesn't look like it belongs on the set of the old Leave It To Beaver TV show.
 
@tchrist No, why?
 
You said you think those universities do have a problem. I wondered which one you had in mind.
 
No particular one.
 
What makes you think they have a problem then? I'm not disagreeing; there's no doubt that every university has many problems, some shared, others unique to that institution.
 
8:59 PM
Well, I guess in fields where 'diversity' is sorta their business or at least related, you could argue there's this problem in the approach where everyone huffs and puffs and says "we should be nice to minorities" and stuff.
 
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