martes, 21 de agosto de 2012

iPad By Davis: “Poll: How much do you think Apple would charge for an 8GB iPad mini?” plus 19 more

iPad By Davis: “Poll: How much do you think Apple would charge for an 8GB iPad mini?” plus 19 more


Poll: How much do you think Apple would charge for an 8GB iPad mini?

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 10:35 PM PDT

How much do you think Apple would change for an 8GB iPad mini? We've already had Chris way in with the investor perspective, but I'm all about the iMore nation -- I want to know what you think. The Amazon Kindle Fire and Google Nexus 7 are both $200 but both are also sold at break even or below, and Apple doesn't do that. Amazon and Google also have very different business models, and ones that don't require profitable hardware sales the way Apple's does.

Now Apple does sell the 8GB iPod touch for $200 already, but that hasn't been updated since 2010 and probably costs quite a bit less than that to make. Could Apple sell an iPad mini for the same price? If Apple keeps the entry-level iPod touch at $200, could Apple sell the iPad mini at $250? At $300?

The 16GB iPad 2 is currently $400. Could Apple get the entry-level iPad mini up anywhere near that? $350 maybe?

I don't think Apple could or would go lower than the current iPod touch, and I don't think they could (even if they would!) go any higher than the current iPad 2. So that leaves us with a range for about $200 to $350. Where do you see the iPad mini fitting in? Vote up top and tell me why you voted the way you did in the comments below!




The Brick Joystick for iPhone and iPad review

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 09:23 PM PDT

I love the Brick Joysticks by GrayHaus. I was worried about them at first. I didn't think the little, tiny suction cups could stick to my iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad. But they do. Mostly. And they have a variation called the bend-type as well that uses an elasticized band as well as a suction cup and provides an incredible range of motion for iOS gaming.

The Brick Joystick for iPhone and iPad review

They're made out of what GrayHaus describes as German liquid silicone rubber (LSR) technology, which hey say provides superior performance without scratching your precious iPhone or iPad screen, and is transparent to keep screen shading to a minimum. They've also tried to make them as ergonomic as possible so they stay comfortable even through really long gaming sessions.

Th stick-type Brick Joystick adhered to the glass screen of your iPhone or iPad using a suction cup and provides a capacitive connection so you get more of a traditional, thumbstick feel instead of the simulated multitouch d-pad we all know and loathe on iOS. Attach the stick-type Brick Joystick and you get all the up and down, left and right, action you need for classic gaming. I'm talking fighting games, adventure games, RPGs, and the like.

The bend-type Brick Joystick is a lot of fun. Because the suction cup sticks at the back, and the elastic band wraps around your iPhone, the joystick itself is free to move around much more than the conventional joystick. It can be adjusted to fit anything from the iPhone to a 5.5 inch device, though sadly not the iPad. Still, on the iPhone is works really, really well for sports games and some combat games.

You can use two stick-type Brick Joysticks at the same time for double d-pad games, or mix a stick-type and a bend-type if that's what the game calls for.

Both types are really small, and I love that they don't block out any more screen than is absolutely necessary. Even though there's an elastic around the bend-type Brick Joystick, and it does cover the screen, it's still fabulous.

Now the suction cups do slip every once and a while. The Brick Joysticks come with extra, non-slip disks to stick on your screen, but the extra adherence isn't worth putting a sticker on my iPhone or iPad screen. At least not to me. I also worry that the elastic around the bend-type Brick Joystick might wear down and break eventually, but so far it's been remarkably reliable.

The good

  • Minimal screen obstruction
  • Suction cup sticks well
  • Good capacitive connection

The bad

  • Suction cup can slip a bit

The bottom line

if you love gaming on your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad, and the virtual d-pads have just never done it for you, the Brick Joysticks are a great option to consider. I'm really impressed with both the quality and utility of the Brick Joysticks, and I especially love the bend-type option. I only wish they were compatible with even more games!

The GrayHaus Brick Joystick is available now in two packages -- dual stick-type and one stick-type and one bend-type.

$29.99 - Buy now




Forums: iPad mini discussion, Camera shutter acting weird, Deleting completed reminders possible?

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 07:10 PM PDT

From the iMore Forums

Found an interesting article you want to share with iMore? Have a burning question about that feature you just can't figure out? There is ALWAYS more happening just a click away in the forums. You can always head over and join in the conversation, search for answers, or lend your expertise to other members of our community. You check out some of the threads below:

If you're not already a member of the iMore Forums, register now!




Keep stylish shopping and to-do lists with Lister for iPhone

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 06:42 PM PDT

Lister is stylish new list app for the iPhone. It offers a nice, clean interface for shopping and to-do lists that can be password protected on a per-list basis. You can also add pricing to shopping list items so that you can quickly see the total cost associated with each list.

Lister supports two different types of lists: shopping and to-do. With both types, you can assign a unique password to each list if you desire to. From the List View, you can quickly see all your lists, how many items are in each list, the date it was created, and for shopping lists, the total cost associated with them.

When creating a shopping list, you can assign each item to a category so that they are nicely organized in your list. You can also add amounts such as 3 pieces, 7 boxes, 3 jars, and 10 packets. If you want to keep track of the monetary value of the items on your list, Lister also lets you enter dollar amounts for the item you are adding and keeps a running total for you.

To-do lists in Lister feature a much more stripped down user interface so that you can quickly and easily add items to these lists. You just type in your list item or select it from the list of previously used entries and move on. When you complete a task, simply check it off.

So far, I really like Lister. It's a nice compromise between a fully-featured list app and a stripped-down-to-just-the-basics list app. It does not have a reminders feature, so if that's something you rely on, Lister is not for you. If you're looking for a stylish way to keep traditional shopping and to-do lists, however, then you may want to give Lister a look!

$0.99 - Download Now




AT&T's FaceTime over cellular restriction could put them at odds with the FCC

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 05:53 PM PDT

AT&T's FaceTime over cellular restriction could put them at odds with the FCC

AT&T's restriction of iOS 6 FaceTime over cellular to shared data plans might cause them to run afoul of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). AT&T won't be charging extra for FaceTime over cellular, but will be requiring what for many could be more expensive plans. Since AT&T doesn't do that with other video calling services, like Skype. Brian X. Chen reports for the New York Times:

John Bergmayer, senior staff lawyer at Public Knowledge, said AT&T was violating the F.C.C.'s Open Internet Rules, which say that mobile providers shall not "block applications that compete with the provider's voice or video telephony services."

"There is no technical reason why one data plan should be able to access FaceTime and another not," Mr. Bergmayer said in a statement.

Following WWDC 2012, when Apple announced they'd finally -- finally! -- bring their video calling service, FaceTime to cellular with iOS 6, early beta versions running on AT&T iPhones showed signs that it might be restricted on that network. AT&T has a history of restricting services like tethering and MMS, so while disappointing, it was hardly a surprise.

The FCC is supposed to regulate the legal oligopolies enjoyed by telecommunication companies like AT&T. So lets see if the FCC does its job here and starts telling all the carriers that a bit is a bit, and once a customer has paid for tiered data, it's their business what they do with it.

Source: New York Times




Developer interview: How Haiku is building a better BeOS

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 04:45 PM PDT

Developer interview: How Haiku is building a better BeOS What happened to the BeOS of old? It's turned to Haiku.


Apple-Samsung jury to face 700-plus questions on verdict form

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 04:28 PM PDT

Apple-Samsung jury to face 700-plus questions on verdict form Imagine the longest, most complex government form you've ever had to fill out and you start to have an idea what jurors will face as they begin to consider their verdict in the patent infringement case between Apple and Samsung.


iPad mini preview: Imagining Apple's smaller tablet

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 03:26 PM PDT

iPad mini: Everything you need to know

Rumors of a smaller iPad have persisted for years, probably ever since Apple announced the original 9.7-inch iPad back in 2010, and definitely since competitors from Samsung to BlackBerry to Amazon to Google have shipped 7-inch tablets. Apple has been experimenting with smaller form factor tablet for while, perhaps as far back as the original Safari pad project that ultimate yielded the iPhone in 2007, and certainly since Apple SVP Eddy Cue helped warm Apple's late co-founder, Steve Jobs to the idea back in 2011.

Back in March of 2012, iMore learned that Apple had decided to go ahead with the iPad mini, that it would be running the iPad version of iOS for around $200-$250, and that it was tentatively planning to release it in October of this year. Back in July, we learned Apple was planning to announce the iPad mini on September 12, the same day as the iPhone 5. Last week, we helped show what the iPad mini is probably going to look like. (Check out the terrific Render John Anastasiadis did for us, above.)

Despite all this, despite a few parts leaks and some information about the Dock connector, there's still a lot we don't know -- like what Apple will ultimate call it. But whether it's the iPad mini or the iPad Air, or the 7- or 8-inch iPad, the there's a lot we've tried to think through and put some context to. Here's a quick roundup of what we've put together so far -- everything you need to know.

What the iPad mini will probably look like

iPad mini won't be much smaller, but will be a lot narrower, thinner, and lighter

Looking at it, the iPad mini may not seem radically smaller than the 9.7-inch iPad. And that's the point. It's not supposed to be a major compromise in screen size or usability. It is, however, thinner and lighter enough to make a substantial difference. Holding it with one hand will be easier, and holding it for prolonged periods of time will be much easier.

It's those two elements, the lightness at that size, that allows for the smaller bezel -- just like the iPod touch's thinness and lightness allows for even less size bezel. (Obviously the top and bottom bezel aren't as radically thin, due to the components that need to be placed there, like the Home button.)

Most importantly, this isn't a big iPod touch.

Why Apple would release an iPad mini

Amazon Kindle bikini ad

Apple's goal is to mainstream computing. They want to sell hundreds of millions of devices that delight exactly the type of consumer usually left frustrated and alienated by technology.

While neither the 7 inch BlackBerry PlayBook, nor the 7 inch Amazon Kindle Fire, nor the 7 inch Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet took the world by storm, they weren't iPads. They didn't focus on a simple, consumer-friendly interfaces, tablet-specific apps, and content that was accessible beyond U.S. borders.

Even considering the current iPad's incredible market lead, some customers are simply not buying it because it's too heavy or too expensive. With an iPad mini, Apple can remove that barrier of entry.

How Apple could implement the iPad mini interface

The iOS interface, as it's running on the current iPa,d would simply run, scaled down, on the 7.x-inch iPad. Pixel size would be the same the 9.7-inch iPad, 1024x768. (Getting 2048x1536 down to 7.x-inches for around $200 may not be doable until future generations.) Pixel density would be around the same as the original 3.5-inch iPhone, 163 ppi. (Or 326, the same as the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S, if and when it goes Retina.) Quite the coincidence, as noted by Daring Fireball's John Gruber.

Everything would then simply stay the same. Buttons and touch targets would be smaller, but not unusably so. The "slack" that currently exists between 3.5-inch iPhone interface elements and 9.7-inch iPad elements would just disappear, and you'd have the same basic iPad look with the same basic iPhone feel.

How Apple could handle the 7-inch iPad mini display

Solving for 7: How Apple could implement the iPad mini interface

On one hand, it's hard to imagine Apple releasing a non-Retina iOS device at this point. The current generation iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad are all running at Retina. On the other hand, no iOS device has ever been introduced with a Retina display. The original iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad were all launched with standard displays, and later received Retina displays as part of their upgrade cycle.

Apple experimented with a Retina display in the 2011 iPad 2 but due to price and yield issues, had to wait until the 2012 iPad to ship it. Arguably, 2048x1536 is still too much panel for the 9.7-inch iPad to handle, and it might take until 2013 and new chipsets before it gets really comfortable. Likewise, it's possible Apple has experimented with a Retina display for the iPad mini but not for the one that's rumored to be shipping this year.

The name game: What Apple could call the 7-inch iPad

The name game: What Apple could call the 7-inch iPad

Internally, for now, Apple might still be calling it "the 7-inch iPad" and be leaving the big branding decisions for closer to launch time. Or maybe they've already decided to call it an iPad mini or something else. Either way, whatever name they choose will influence how the public understand the new device and its place in Apple's lineup, and that's an interesting topic to explore.

Apple's branding is typically as succinct as Occam's Razor. Earlier this year, they took it a step further and rebranded what would have been the iPad 3 as simply the (new) iPad. While we probably won't see Phil Schiller on stage beneath a slide reading "the small iPad", we probably will see him beneath one reading the 7-inch iPad, or the iPad mini.

Could Apple sell a $200 iPad mini?

Apple has a long history of successfully carrying multiple sizes. Just look at the MacBook Pro and Macbook Air lines. You have 11-, 13-, and 15-inches options (and until a couple of months ago, 17-inches as well). I've always said that tablets can come in multiple sizes. Once you pick an aspect ratio (whether it be 16:9 or 4:3, or something else), the size should just be an option. It has been this way in the TV industry forever. Why are tablets any different?

If you buy the argument that size is simply an option, why would a slightly smaller iPad deserve a significantly smaller price? How can Apple price a 7-inch iPad at $199 or $249 while asking the much larger price of $499 for the regular (new) iPad?

More on the iPad mini

For more on the iPad mini, iPad air, or whatever Apple ends up calling it, check out:

Also check out John Gruber's deep dive:




Brace yourself, and your iPhone, for back-to-school

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 03:22 PM PDT

First day of school in today's digital world -- love it!

At what age did your kids get their own iPhone?

Source: Marlette Cartoons Facebook Page




Padintosh Case for iPad: First Impressions

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 01:56 PM PDT


I posted last week about the Padintosh Case for iPad, and how striking looking it was. I ordered one very shortly after seeing it at ThinkGeek, and it arrived a little earlier today.

I've only given it a very quick tryout so far, but I've already learned one important thing at it, and have some quick first impressions to share. The one big thing I've learned is that this case is not fully compatible with the ultra-thin Gelaskin that I use in the back cover of my new (2012) iPad. It very nearly fits, but not quite. I can get the iPad into 3 of the 4 corner slots of the case by not into the final one, no matter which way I try to insert it.

Other than that one drawback, I'm quite impressed with the Padintosh iPad case. The cutouts are among the cleanest and most precise I've ever seen on a back cover case like this. The case feels solid and should offer good protection to the back of the iPad. It works nicely with the Apple Smart Cover for the iPad too.

(...)
Read the rest of Padintosh Case for iPad: First Impressions (188 words)


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Apple’s Genius Bar reportedly handles 50,000 appointments a day worldwide

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 01:18 PM PDT

Apple's Genius Bar deals with 50,000 appointments a day worldwideApple's Genius Bar apparently deals with 50,000 appointments a day from all around the world. The appointments involve iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, iPod, Apple TV, and Mac repairs, and whichever way you look at it, it's a huge number of appointments. The information comes from The Loop who managed to get a meeting with Apple to discuss its retail operations after Apple opened its 374th and 375th retail store in Canada.

According to Apple, the company has seen almost 300 million worldwide visitors so far in its fiscal 2012, which started in October 2011. To give you some type of comparison, by July 2011, the population of the United States was estimated to be 311 million people.

There is also an interesting data point from Apple's retail Genius Bar. According to the company, 50,000 people get serviced at a Genius Bar around the world, every single day. That's a lot of appointments.

Apple Stores are certainly a unique shopping experience and offer much more than shelves filled with boxes to buy. Each store offers hands on experience of most Apple products, including iPhone, iPad and iPod touch as well as all of the Mac lines. When it comes to customer service, from my experience the Genius Bar is second to none. When you buy an Apple product you know you have the backing of the best customer service around. You don't get that level of comfort from any other consumer product; it gives you total peace of mind. Not every Apple product is perfect, if you experience a problem; it gets fixed or replaced without any argument.

If you have used the Genius Bar bar, have you had a similar experience to me? Were you surprised by the excellent customer service or did you experience something different?

Source: The Loop




Jobs burglary suspect enters no plea, case to continue next month

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 12:50 PM PDT

Jobs burglary suspect enters no plea, case to continue next month The man accused of breaking into the home of late Apple CEO Steve Jobs appeared in a California court on Monday morning but did not enter a plea.


How to send a Voice Memo from your iPhone via iMessage or SMS

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 12:07 PM PDT

How to send a voice note from your iPhone via iMessage or SMS

The iPhone and iPod touch have a built-in Voice Memo app that can be handy for recording lengthy thoughts or instructions. After finishing your Voice Memo you can easily share it with someone else as an iMessage or SMS. Once they receive it they'll be able to play it directly through the Messages app.

  1. Launch the Voice Memos app from the Home screen (by default it will be in the Utilities folder on the second page.
  2. Tap on the Voice Memo you'd like to share.
  3. voice note from iphone main menu
  4. Tap the Share button in the bottom left corner and then choose Message.
  5. Send voice note from iPhone in message or e-mail
  6. Choose the recipient you'd like to send it to and then tap the Send button.
  7. Choose recipient to receive voice note
  8. The recipient will receive an iMessage or text just like they normally would but the file will be attached.
  9. voice note received on iPhone

If the recipient isn't using an iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad, but another smartphone like Android, BlackBerry, Windows Phone, or even a feature phone, they won't be able to receive an iMessage but might get the file anyway as an MMS message. If they do, whether or not they can play the audio will depend on what kind of file formats their device supports. (Voice Memo files are in .m4a -- or mp4 audio format.)




iPad at Work: in Ford Dealerships

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 12:04 PM PDT

Ford Motor Co. has launched an iPad deployment program to its dealerships in the USA. Following a successful 6 month pilot program at 14 dealerships, the company has gone nationwide with the program and around 140 dealerships have already signed up for it.

The iPads are being used by managers and sales consultants at the Ford dealerships. As autonews.com reports, the iPads are running a custom app called Showcase that helps sales staff.

The Showcase app can help sales staffers in several areas. It has some short, web-based instructional videos explaining new technology in Ford and Lincoln vehicles, such as the MyFord Touch infotainment system, Sync voice recognition, and Park Assist. The app also has a list of vehicles the dealership has in stock including packages, features, and window stickers.

One New Jersey Ford dealer involved in the pilot is pretty scathing when comparing the iPad to PCs:

I see no benefit to the PC versus the iPad. The PC is over, it's just not relationship friendly. It's a wall sitting between you and the customer.

If any of you have been at a Ford dealership recently and seen iPads in action, please let us know what you thought of the experience in the comments.

Spotted via: TUAW


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Plants vs. Zombies 2 teased... for spring 2013!

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 11:49 AM PDT

Plants vs. Zombies 2 teased... for spring 2013!

Plants vs. Zombies, the wildly popular undead-themed tower defense-style game for iPhone and iPad will finally -- finally -- be getting a sequel... in late spring 2013! Yep, it's walking this way at full, lurching, zombie speed, it seems. Developers PopCap, a division of EA, have still seen fit to send out a tease, and that's about all it is -- the promise that it's coming and hoards of new zombies, plants, and features are coming with it.

Still, PopCap isn't totally without heart, or a sense of human, and so they've provided pull quotes from some of the characters to tide us over.

"Spring is crullest curlie ungood time, and plantz grow dull roots," noted an unidentified spokesperson. "So, we are meating you for brainz at yore house. No worry to skedule schedlue plan… we're freee anytime. We'll find you."

"There was a time we relished a bracing, hearty blend of zombies, in the morning," said Sonny F. Lower, a representative of the Flora Forever Foundation. "But first, a brisk shower and some strategic pruning are required. Tomorrow is near!"

I don't even want to begin to count the hours I've lost to Plants vs. Zombies over the years, so at least we'll have the winter to get some work done before late springs come and the zombies EAT OUR BRAINS!

In the meantime, what new features would you love to see in Plants vs. Zombies 2? Zombie giants vs Ents?!




iOS App Review: Unique features help Projectbook stand out

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 11:30 AM PDT

iOS App Review: Unique features help Projectbook stand out This new note-taking and task management tool offers several unique features that may appeal to productivity-minded iPad owners. The app may not quite measure up to a more mature rival like Evernote at this point, but Brian Beam thinks Projectbook is off to a good start.


From DVD to iMovie to Facebook

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 11:00 AM PDT

From DVD to iMovie to Facebook A reader rips out his hair while attempting to create a workflow for ripping video from a DVD of his concert performance and posting the resulting clips to Facebook. Chris Breen saves his follicles from further stress.


Variety: Hulu content may change this fall

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 10:50 AM PDT

Variety: Hulu content may change this fall Video streaming site Hulu puts together a contingency plan in case the network partners are able to take full control.


Find my Car Smarter Bluetooth 4.0 hands-on

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 09:53 AM PDT

Find my Car Smarter is a combination iPhone app and Bluetooth 4.0 accessory whose simple purpose is to easily, automagically keep track of your car when you've parked it somewhere, anywhere, that may be difficult to find on your own.

Whether it's a crowded mall parking lot, event venue spill-over, or as close as you could come on a city street, Find my Car Smarter's tiny USB Bluetooth 4.0 dongle will fire up and drop a GPS beacon where ever you park, and the Find my Car Smarter app will lead you right back.

Here's how it works -- the Find my Car Smarter dongle plugs right into a USB port on your car, or into a USB adapter that plugs into the "cigarette lighter"/ac power in your car and stays there, minding its own business. When you turn off the car and power gets cut, the ultra-low-power Bluetooth 4.0 connection causes the connected app to realize you've parked, and your iPhone GPS records your location.

You then go shopping, eventing, or street-festivaling to your heart's content, free from the cognitive burden and mental overhead of having to remember where you parked. When you're done, launch the Find my Car app and it'll show you where you are relative to your car, and you just follow the directions back.

I did have some trouble with earlier versions of the app, and it did take some getting used to to figure out how it was supposed to work. Mostly because it does so much on its own -- I kept trying to over think and over do it. When I finally learned to trust it, like autocorrect, it did great.

The key is to just get out of your car and go. Don't touch the app, don't touch the dongle, don't give into old, outdated habits. Just. Go.

The only time you have to launch the app is when you need to find your car. The only time you have to touch the Bluetooth 4.0 dongle is never.

I'm a huge fan of futuristic technologies. I'm also terrible at remembering where I parked. For someone like me, that makes Find my Car Smarter not only fantastic, but incredibly helpful.

The Find my Car Smarter app is free in the App Store. The Find my Car Smarter Bluetooth 4.0 dongle is $25, or $30 with a USB adapter.

Free - Find my Car Smarter app - Download now

$25+ - Find my Car Smarter accessory - Buy now




IconToggles adds system shortcuts right to your Home screen [jailbreak]

Posted: 20 Aug 2012 09:13 AM PDT

IconToggles adds system shortcuts right to your Home screen [jailbreak]

The best part of having a jailbroken iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch is the ability to access things like system settings quicker than you can stock. IconToggles adds beautiful system toggle icons straight to your Home screen for even quicker access than apps such as SBSettings offers.

After downloading IconToggles to your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch there really isn't much to configure. You'll see 16 new icons added to your Home screen that give you quick access to commonly used functions. Obviously toggles such as call are only available on the iPhone but many of them will work on the iPad and iPod touch as well. You can nest the shortcuts into folders or leave them on your Home screen. I've gotten ones I don't use frequently tucked away in a folder while the ones I do use regularly right on the Home screen for easy access.

Currently IconToggles supports several actions including respring, reboot, new mail, new call, bluetooth, airplane mode, Wi-Fi, safe mode, location services, and more. The developer has also said that more will be added over time so if you've got a suggestion you can contact them on Twitter or via e-mail with your requests.

Inside the Settings app you can add a phone number for the new call feature to use. It seems the point of that specific toggle is more to call a favorite person and not quick access to the Phone app.

The one thing I'd like to see the developer add is a way to enable/disable toggles. I personally would never use some of them and don't feel the need to have the ones I won't use cluttering up my Home screen or the inside of a folder. Other than that it's a pretty elegant solution if you want quick one tap access to certain system settings.

IconToggles will work with any iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch running iOS 5 or higher and is available in Cydia now.

$1.99 - Cydia Search Link




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