Friday, December 4, 2009
Wave extensions list growing up rapidly
view the list here: wave extensions list
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Twitter Billboard expands twitter functionality

now twitter is every ware, why can't use for live news and tv announcements?
living with the fact that every one is using it in different ways,the reach of twitter is beyond online .
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Google Wave all set to kill Social Media

Wave is a communication collaboration tool which has a extended functionality with robots and gadgets called as extensions, wave is a threaded conversation can be modified and communicate in real time, a few blips (a single message) creates a wavelet and some wavelets becomes a wave which is a parent, a document is a peace of content attached to blip which can be added retrieved or modified, as wave is alive forever.with extensions like twitter type timeline, video,images even joomla gadgets and more. wave becomes open social media.
wave apps extensions
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
The Complete Guide to Google Wave .pdf released

The Complete Guide to Google Wave Is a Comprehensive Book on Wave
DOWNLOAD FILE
Got an interest in Google Wave but have absolutely no idea where to get started? Try out The Complete Guide to Google Wave, a new (free) book written and edited by my pal and Lifehacker cohort Gina Trapani and yours truly.
Google Wave may not be available to everyone just yet, but there's still a lot to learn about it and not that many places to do that learning. That's where The Complete Guide to Google Wave steps in.
Wave is a young, complex, and frankly incomplete web application and technology. It's also an ambitious project that has the potential to change how we work, collaborate, and communicate on the web. That's why Gina and I decided to pour our time and attention into Google Wave and pull it all together into this book.
We're calling it a book, even though right now its content is only available on the web at completewaveguide.com. It features eight chapters and two appendices, but we're going to expand the book as Google continues to grow and expand Wave. (In fact, anyone can help us do just that by contributing to the guide.)
If you'd like a more permanent or convenient copy of the book, its first preview edition will be available for purchase as a PDF later this month, and the first edition print version will be available in January of 2010. Gina and I are planning to release four editions of the book throughout 2010 to keep up with the changing face of Wave, but the latest version of the book will always be available and free at completewaveguide.com.
Check out the book's About page for more details on our adventure in publishing (including why we're self-publishing), or just head to the home page to get started with your Wave education. For updates on book releases and various Wave tips, follow @gwaveguide on Twitter.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Google wave extensions wave apps robots gadgets tutorials
Thursday, July 16, 2009
The Ultimate Harry Potter Countdown Roundup
So you're heading out to see Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (buy tix here) at midnight tonight (or shortly thereafter), and you need something to get you in the mood ... am I right? Well we'll be posting our official review in a little while, along with a Potter-related Cinematical Seven, but in the meantime check out this roundup of all things Potter from across the fine AOL networks: Insert Caption: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (win some very cool prizes by providing a caption for a photo from the film) Moviefone's Interview with Daniel Radcliffe Potter Cast Reflects on a Hogwarts Childhood Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince Character Guide Which Harry Potter Character Are You? 15 Things to Know About Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince The Harry Potter Villains Harry Potter Romances The Five Best Things About Half-Blood Prince Life After Harry Potter ... and check out our Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince gallery below. That should hold you over for a few hours. Enjoy the show! Gallery: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood PrinceErik Davis, The Ultimate Harry Potter Countdown Roundup, Jul 2009
Stormy Weather May Delay Shuttle Launch
Stormy Weather May Delay Shuttle Launch By Tariq Malik Senior Editor NASA's space shuttle Endeavour is ready for its planned launch into orbit this weekend, though stormy weather could delay liftoff, mission managers said Wednesday. Endeavour and a crew of seven astronauts are slated to launch toward the International Space Station on Saturday evening at 7:39 p.m. EDT (2339 GMT). But the potential for thunderstorms and thick clouds near Endeavour's launch site at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida give the shuttle only a 40 percent chance of good flight weather, said shuttle weather officer Kathy Winters. "That's definitely a concern for launch," Winters said during a televised mission briefing today. A series of afternoon thunderstorms have peppered NASA's spaceport in Cape Canaveral, Fla., in recent days in a trend that is expected to weaken only slightly through the weekend, she added. If weather prevents a Saturday launch for Endeavour , the forecast will improve for Sunday, Winters said. Aside from potentially foul weather, Endeavour is ready to fly after nearly a month of delays. A hydrogen gas leak associated with a vent line on the shuttle's 15-story external tank thwarted two consecutive launch attempts in mid-June. Since then, engineers have replaced a misaligned plate on the tank as well as vent line seal to plug the leak. The fix passed a fueling test last week. "Endeavour's in great shape," NASA test director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson said, adding that there are no issues with the shuttle at all. "We're ready to fly this mission." Commanded by veteran shuttle flyer Mark Polansky, Endeavour's six-man, one-woman crew is set to fly a marathon 16-day mission to the space station. The astronauts will deliver a new member of the orbiting laboratory's six-man crew and install the last piece of Japan's massive Kibo laboratory at the outpost. Five spacewalks are planned for the mission. "This is a very busy mission," Blackwell-Thompson said. "We're all eager to get Endeavour and her crew to the International Space Station." Polansky and his crew arrived at the Kennedy Space Center on Tuesday. NASA plans to begin the countdown toward Saturday's launch tonight at 10:00 p.m. EDT (0200 July 9 GMT). Endeavour has a slim four-day day window to launch toward the space station due to other incoming traffic at the outpost. According to NASA's current plan, Endeavour must launch by July 14 or else stand down until July 27 to allow a previously scheduled unmanned Russian cargo ship to dock at the station. The unmanned cargo ship can loiter in orbit for a few days if required, NASA has said. Blackwell-Thompson said NASA hopes to launch Endeavour by July 13 to avoid interfering with the cargo ship's normal flight plan. Video - Meet the STS-127 Shuttle Astronauts Image Gallery - Shuttle Endeavour Blasts Off at Nightspace.com, Stormy Weather May Delay Shuttle Launch, Jul 2009
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Obama's Saintly Gift
Image via Wikipedia
In this Year of the Priest, leave it to the POTUS to give the Pope a simple stole with a notable history: During President Barack Obama's July 10 meeting with Pope Benedict XVI, he will present the pope with a stole that was placed on the remains of St. John Neumann. "It's a delight that something of one of our Redemptorist saints would be given to our Holy Father...whispersintheloggia.blogspot.com, Obama's Saintly Gift, Jul 2009
Why Blog When You've Got Facebook?
Image via CrunchBase
I got a really good question last week via twitter/email and after yesterday's twitter problems, it's appropriate to address this now. Here's what I was asked: From your perspective on blogging, what's the advantage of actually doing a blog, over having a well-developed page on Facebook--where you not only share regularly updated status reports, but can also post Notes (where I imagine what would have been posted to a blog would be posted on Facebook), can easily share media, engage people in conversation and relationships, and organically have your updates propagated to other friends' pages, etc.? It's an excellent question and one that does come up in some form when I speak and teach. First, let's look at what happened on Twitter. Yesterday, with no explanation for nearly 4 hours, hundreds of thousands of legitimate twitter accounts were suspended citing "suspicious activity." People on Facebook, FriendFeed and blogs went nuts. OMG! We can't communicate with our followers! I admit that I got a bit freaked out too when I discovered my account had been suspended when I tried to retweet a client's blog post and got a big warning message. That was before I knew that so many other accounts were suspended. Once it became apparent that it wasn't just me, I calmed down. Within about four hours most accounts had been restored and all was good again in the world ;-) But what if this happened on Facebook? I have many colleagues whose accounts have been shut down with no warning or explanation. It took weeks to get a response and get their accounts reinstated. This is why I "preach" that your blog is your hub. It's your home base. It's where you want to drive all that social traffic ... to a space on the web you own and control. Yes, of course something could happen to your server and shut down your site, but at least you're in control. You are not in control of what happens on Facebook and twitter. Those sites do not belong to you and you are at their mercy. What if you had spent tons of time building a fan page, posting content via the Notes app, building your list of friends and fans, etc. and one day Facebook shuts down? Now what? You may have lost everything if that's you're only home on the web. Many smart people call social networking sites "satellites" or "outposts." Chris Brogan has an excellent post outlining what he calls "a simple presence framework" where he talks about using your outposts to socialize and connect and then gently guide people back to your home base (blog!). Ultimately, my goal is to have content that is so attractive that people will want to trade their email address for a free report, video course, etc. I connect socially on Facebook and twitter (and I have a presence on many other social networking sites as well) having conversations and sharing links to my content. Occasionally I promote a teleclass or new product or use an affiliate link to promote something a colleague is offering. I drive people back to one of my blogs where I can get more intimate and share more information in depth. This helps prospective clients get to "know, like and trust" me, which may entice them to go to the next level and request my free report or buy my product. Once they do that, they're on my email list. They've said "yes, I want to know/get more from you." New people find out about me every day on Facebook and Twitter, and as they watch, listen and interact, they decide whether or not to follow me home (to my blog). If Facebook or twitter were to disappear, poof! -- without a blog and an email list, all my friends and followers would be gone. But because my primary connection points are via my blogs and I frequently offer valuable content and programs, I would not suffer (too much!) if Facebook or twitter disappeared forever. As Mari Smith says in her post about lessons learned from the twitter incident: Twitter [and Facebook] is only one platform for visibility, branding, community building and connecting. It's vital to your social media success to be diversified and have a) a built-out Facebook profile (unless you're choosing to only use your profile for close personal friends/family), b) a built-out Facebook Fan Page, c) an active blog with increasing subscribers, d) an active account on LinkedIn with increasing contacts e) an active channel on YouTube, f) an active, built-out account on FriendFeed... and many, many more platforms. And here's a two minute video where I talk about your blog being the hub of your online activity. So what's the lesson here? Build a blog as your home base - don't depend only on 3rd party sites for your web presence Build a list, separate from your sites, so you can communicate and connect and sell Where do you stand on this issue: why blog when you can use Facebook for your online presence?Denise Wakeman, Why Blog When You've Got Facebook?, Jul 2009
Michael Jackson Body Missing: fact or fiction?
If you believe the online grapevine today Michael Jackson's body is missing, but is the rumor fact or fiction? We've done some homework and we have an answer for you. The basis for the Michael Jackson body missing rumors started during the memorial service Tuesday when several sites suggested that Michael Jackson's body wasn't in the casket at the memorial. On whether Michael Jackson's body was in the casket or not we can't be sure. However we do know for sure that the body isn't missing. What complicates the story is that it's likely that Michael Jackson hasn't been buried yet. According to multiple reports, Michael Jackson's brain is still at the LA Coroners Office undergoing further testing. Jackson's family is said to be delaying burial until the brain is returned. Michael Jackson's body is believed to be in cold storage at the Forest Lawn cemetery, although whether he will be buried there or at his Neverland Ranch still isn't clear. So the short answer to the Michael Jackson body missing rumor is that the rumor is 100% false.Duncan Riley, Michael Jackson Body Missing: fact or fiction?, Jul 2009
Friday, July 10, 2009
Small Online Sellers Build Big Social Networks
Image via CrunchBase
I found this fascinating quote today:
apophenia: answers to questions from Twitter on teen practices @connyb: Parents' concerned with what kids do online , right? I'd ask teens if they know what exactly their parents do at their dayjobs. Teens do not tend to know exactly what their parents do, nor do they particularly care. (It's important to note that parental ... Many teens have ZERO interest in interacting with teachers on social network sites, but there are also quite a few who are interested in interacting with SOME teachers there. Still, this is primarily a social ... Report: Online employers want you to sell, sell, sell May 05 09 ... Breaking: Six Apart Announces Wordpress Plugins · ReadWriteWeb 4 hours ago. San Francisco based social networking and blogging company Six Apart announced today at WordCamp Mid-Atlantic that it is introducing plugins that will work on rival Wordpress sites and other blogging platforms. Post your comment ... Teachers, principals, firefighters, mayors, university presidents and everyday people have all discovered the dark side of putting the wrong photos and videos on social networking sites. Sometimes they paid the price in embarrassment. ...jonggunLee, Small Online Sellers Build Big Social Networks, Jul 2009
You should read the whole article.
URL Shorteners and the Semantics of Redirection
When I worked at Bell Labs in Murray Hill, NJ, it amused me that at one end of the building, the fiber communications people were worrying that no one could ever possibly make use of all the bandwidth they could provide- we would never be able to charge for telephone calls unless they figured out how to limit the bandwidth. At the other end of the building, computer scientists were figuring out how to compress information so that they could pack more and more into tiny bit-pipes. I'm still not sure who won that battle. When I was part of a committee working on the OpenURL standard, we had a brief discussion about the maximum length URL that would work over the internet. A few years before that, there were some systems on the internet that barfed if a URL was longer than 512 characters, but most everything worked up to 2,000 characters, and we anticipated that that limit would soon go away. So here we are in 2009, and Internet Explorer is just about the only thing that still has a length limit as low as 2083 characters. Along comes Twitter, with a 140 character limit on an entire message, and all of a sudden, the URL's we've been making have become TOO LONG! Just as fast, URL shortening services sprung up to make the problem go away. The discussion on my last post (on CrossRef and OpenURL) got me interested in the semantics of redirection, and that got me thinking about the shortening services, which have become monster redirection engines. When we say something about a URI that is resolved by a redirector, what, exactly are we talking about? First, some basics. A redirection occurs when you click on a link and the web server for that link tells your browser to go to another URL. Usually, the redirection occurs in the http protocol that governs how your web browser gets web pages. Sometimes, a redirect is caused by a directive in an html page, or programmed by a javascript in that page. The result may seem the same but the mechanism is rather different, and I won't get into it any further. There are actually 3 types of redirects provided for in the http protocol, known by their status codes as "301" "302" and "303" redirects. There are 5 other redirect status codes that you can safely ignore if you're not a server developer. The 301 redirect is called "Moved Permanently", the 302 is called "Found" and the 303 is called "See Other". Originally, the main reason for the different codes was to help network servers figure out whether to cache the responses to save bandwidth (the fiber guys had not deployed so much back then and the bit squeezers were top dogs). Nowadays the most important uses of the different codes are in search engines. Google will interpret a 301 as "don't index this url, index the redirect URL". A 302 will be interpreted as "index the content at the redirect URL, but use this URL for access". According to a great article on url shorteners by Danny Sullivan, Google will treat a 303 like a 302, but who knows? Just as 301 and 302 semantics have been determined by their uses in search engines, the 303 has been coopted by the standards-setters of the semantic web, and they may well be successful in determining the semantics of the 303. As described in a W3C Technical Recommendation, the 303 is to be used ... to give an indication that the requested resource is not a regular Web document. Web architecture tells you that for a thing resource (URI) it is inappropriate to return a 200 because there is, in fact, no suitable representation for those resources. In other words, the 303 is suppoesed to indicate that the Thing identified by the URI (URL) is something whose existence is NOT on the web. Tim Berners-Lee wrote a lengthy note about this that I found quite enjoyable, though at the end I had no idea what it was advocating. The discussion that led to the W3C Recommendation has apperently been extremely controversial, and has been given the odd designation "http-range-14". The whole thing reminds me of reading the existentialists Sartre and Camus in high school - they sounded so much more understandable in French! As discussed in Danny Sullivan's article, most of the URL shorteners use 301 redirects, which is usually what most users want to happen. An indexing agent or a semantic web agent should just look through these redirectors and use the target resource URL in its index. The DOI "gateway" redirector at dx.doi.org discussed in my previous post uses a 302 redirect. Unless doi's are handled specially by a search engine, it means that the "link credit" (a.k.a. google juice) for a dx.doi.org link will accrue to the dx.doi.org URL rather than the target URL. This seems appropriate. Although I indicated that if you use Linked Data rules the dx.doi.org link identifies whatever is indicated by the returned web page, from the point of view of Search engines, that URI identifies an abstraction of the resource it redirects to. A redirection service similar in conception, PURL, also uses 302 redirects. I was curious about the length limits of the popular url shorteners. Using a link to this blog, padded by characters ignored by Blogger.com, I shortened a bunch of long URLs. Here are 4 shortened 256 character links to this blog: http://bit.ly/Ms5gX http://tr.im/rrFi http://is.gd/1ro2Q http://snurl.com/mdwi5 They all work just fine. Moving to 1,135 character links, everything still works (at least in my environment): http://bit.ly/z9NxE http://tr.im/rrFs http://is.gd/1ro59 http://snurl.com/mdwhd At 2083 characters, the limit for Internet Explorer, we start separating the redirection studs from the muffins. http://bit.ly/171s4y http://snurl.com/mdwem http://is.gd/1ro7Q clips the URL at 2000 characters tr.im fails to shorten the URL. When I add another character, to make 2,084 total, bit.ly and snurl.com both work, but blogger.com reports an error! http://bit.ly/eGkSK http://snurl.com/mdwaa The compression ratios for these last two links is 109 to 1 for bit.ly and 95 to 1 for snurl. The bit squeezers would be happy. Next, I wanted to see if I could make a redirection loop. Most of the shortening services decline to shorten a shortened URL, but they're quite willing to shorten a URL from the PURL service. Also, I couldn't find any way to use the shortening services to fix a link that had rotted after I shortened it. It could be useful to add the PURL service as link-rot insurance behind a shortened url if the 302 redirect is not an issue. So here's a PURL: http://purl.oclc.org/NET/backatcha that redirects to http://bit.ly/aE0od which redirects to http://purl.oclc.org/NET/backatcha etc. Don't click these expecting an endless loop- your browser should detect the loop pretty fast. A recent article about how bit.ly is using its data stream to develop new services got me thinking again about how a shortening redirector might be useful in Linked Data. I've written several times that Linked Data lacks the strong attribution and provenance infrastruction needed for many potential applications. Could shortened URIs be used as Linked Data predicates to store and retrieve attribution and provenance information, along with the actual predicate? And will I need another http status code to do it?Eric Hellman (noreply@blogger.com), URL Shorteners and the Semantics of Redirection, Jul 2009
Facebook: Less Errors, More Connections Please
Image via CrunchBase
One thing I'll grudgingly grant to MySpace - the site works. That's more than I can say for Facebook over the last month or so. In the past Facebook has had desperately slow page views and occasional downtime. But recently, the site has become almost unusable for me. And no, I'm not just talking about the abysmal messaging system that still won't let me properly sort through thousands of emails. I'm talking about a complete inability to create new "connections." My profile (no vanity URL for me yet) is near the 5,000 limit on friends, but it has a few slots to spare. And I'm a fan of only a handful of Facebook pages. But any time I try to add or confirm a friend, or become a fan of a page, I get an error saying "Sorry, you cannot create any more connections." The fact that there are limits at all on connections is absurd (MySpace doesn't have this limit, neither does Twitter or any other site I can think of). And the fact that I can't make new connections even though I'm under the limit is worse. I know Facebook continues to grow at a breakneck pace - Comscore pegs them at 316 million monthly visitors and 122 billion page views. But the fact that MySpace, no slouch in the user numbers or page views themselves (122 million, 35 billion). The fact is that MySpace has a different architecture than Facebook. News items from friends aren't pushed to my home page into one feed, for example. Regardless, Facebook needs to address this on a technical level, not a policy one. A Facebook employee, listening to my gripes, recently told me to switch my Profile to a Page, and they would transfer all my 5,000 friends and 4,500 or so friend requests over to that page as fans. But putting aside the fact that people may not be so happy to be labeled as "fans," this still isn't a good solution. I can't have a two way connection with these people via messaging and chat. Facebook either needs to ditch the idea of friends entirely and move to a Twitter follow model, or allow as many connections as I choose to create. The company now has 1,000 employees, I've heard recently. One of those bright and eager engineers should be able to fix this. Am I asking a lot of a company that has grown faster than perhaps any Internet company in history? Probably. But if they want to be the next Google, it's time to get organized.Michael Arrington, Facebook: Less Errors, More Connections Please, Jul 2009
John Mayer didn't want to be compared to Michael Jackson
John Mayer decided against tackling vocals at the Michael Jackson memorial at Los Angeles' Staples Center on Tuesday as he didn't want to be compared to Michael. "The decision not to sing cam from knowing what's best for me. I think it's a mine field to try in any way to replicate vocally what Michael Jackson has done." John said. "And in a way, it was sort of respectfully leaving an absence, you know, sort of the presence of his absence." John, 31, was amazed to be asked to attend the memorial - which also saw performances from Mariah Carey, Usher and Michael's brother Jermaine Jackson - as he had never met the 'Billie Jean' singer. He explained: "The first thing I said was a question, 'Does this really come from the family?' I think that was essential to me to be able to process the honor. It took me about 48 hours to strike the balance in how I was going to approach being invited to this unbelievable event without actually having the proximity to Michael Jackson, personally. I'd never met him." In case you missed it, here's the video of John Mayer performing an instrumental version of the Michael Jackson song Human Nature:Bang, John Mayer didn't want to be compared to Michael Jackson, Jul 2009
Your Mouse Is Your Friend: Facebook and Twitter Mouse Pads
Image via CrunchBase
You spend a ton of time checking your Facebook and updating your Twitter (admit it), so your mouse is sure to be getting quite the workout. Why not let it have some fun of its own with these Facebook and Twitter Mousepads ($18)? Coming in a set of two (so you never have to be without one or the other), these babies are just the things you need to remind you to update your status, and keep you in sharing mode. But just remember, don't share too much, OK?geeksugar, Your Mouse Is Your Friend: Facebook and Twitter Mouse Pads, Jul 2009
Acquia Search versus Drupal search
Image via CrunchBase
It's been several days since we launched Acquia Search commercially. After reviewing the press, articles, comments, and tweets, I wanted to address the question of why we seem to care so much about search and why we can't simply improve Drupal's built-in search module. These questions came up during the beta test period as well, and have even resonated with the WordPress community on Matt Mullenweg's blog. I feel they are important questions to address.Dries Buytaert, Acquia Search versus Drupal search, Jul 2009
Help Shape WordPress 2.9
Image via CrunchBase
What media features do you want in WordPress 2.9? That's the question asked on the wordpress.org blog right now, and if you're a user you really should cast a vote to help shape 2.9. You might also be interested that the release of WordPress 2.8.1 is near, with the first release candidate now available. There's also a beta of WordPress MU 2.8.1 if you like to help testing that. Possibly Related Posts WordPress And WordPress MU Will Merge: Good Or Bad?Thord Daniel Hedengren, Help Shape WordPress 2.9, Jul 2009
us-unique-visitors-to-facebook-up-another-whopping-107-in-june
Image via CrunchBase
One of these months, Facebook's growth in the US is going to slow down. June was not that month. According to web metrics firm Compete, total uniques to Facebook's main Facebook.com site were up 10.7% in June to 91.7 million US visitors. Traffic to Facebook Connect-enabled sites also increased 10.6% to 71.9 million uniques. Total uniques to all Facebook domains were up 8.5% to 122.6 million for the month. Total www.facebook.com Facebook Connect Unique Visitors 122.6 MM 91.7 MM 71.9 MM M/M growth 8.5% 10.7% 10.6% Y/Y growth 248.2% 166.5% N/A Just to put that in perspective, US traffic to the main Facebook.com site has increased 65% in the last six months, up from 55 million visitors in December 2008. During the same time period, MySpace's traffic is roughly flat at 60 million visitors (though it had a nice up month in June to return to beginning of year levels), while US traffic to Twitter has increased several times over from 4 million uniques in December to 23 million in June. Of course, Compete is just one data source, and reports often vary greatly amongst different web metrics firms. Nevertheless, 10% US audience growth to 91 million uniques continues to be a very impressive clip for Facebook at this stage. Facebook: Up 8.5% overall in June to 122.6 million US uniques MySpace: Up 7.2% overall in June to 61.0 million US uniques Twitter: Up 16.6% overall in June to 23.0 million US uniques To learn more about how to engage Facebook's 91.7 million visitors and growing, check out our industry leading Facebook Marketing Bible.Justin Smith, Compete: US Unique Visitors to Facebook Up Another Whopping 10.7% in June, Jul 2009
Your Mouse Is Your Friend: Facebook and Twitter Mouse Pads
Image via CrunchBase
I found this fascinating quote today:
You spend a ton of time checking your Facebook and updating your Twitter (admit it), so your mouse is sure to be getting quite the workout. Why not let it have some fun of its own with these Facebook and Twitter Mousepads ($18)? Coming in a set of two (so you never have to be without one or the other), these babies are just the things you need to remind you to update your status, and keep you in sharing mode. But just remember, don't share too much, OK?geeksugar, Your Mouse Is Your Friend: Facebook and Twitter Mouse Pads, Jul 2009
You should read the whole article.
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