the world most livable city is.....



If you want high quality of living, your best bet is going “Down Under” or the “Great White North.”
That’s according to the Economist Intelligence Unit’s ranking of 140 cities worldwide that “quantifies the challenges that might be presented to an individual’s lifestyle,” according to the report.
For the first time in a decade, Vancouver has been topped by the southern Australian city of Melbourne, based on metrics that weigh stability, healthcare, culture and environment, education and a city’s infrastructure.
The top 10 cities are:
1) Melbourne, Australia
2) Vienna, Austria
3) Vancouver, Canada
4) Toronto, Canada
5) Calgary, Canada
6) Sydney, Australia
7) Helsinki, Finland
8) Perth, Australia
9) Adelaide, Australia
10) Auckland, New Zealand
The report says that the top 63 cities – from Melbourne to the 63rd ranked city, Santiago, Chile – are in the “very top tier of livability, where few problems are encountered … presenting few, if any, challenges to residents’ lifestyles.”
At the bottom of the list:
1) Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire
2) Tehran, Iran
3) Douala, Cameroon
4) Karachi, Pakistan
5) Tripoli, Libya
6) Algiers, Algeria
7) Lagos, Nigeria
8) Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea
9) Dhaka, Bangladesh
10) Harare, Zimbabwe
The “Arab Spring” has hurt livability ratings of cities in the Middle East and North Africa, with Tripoli – which has unraveled into street fighting in recent weeks – ranking among the worst cities for the first time (the survey was done in July, before the rebel assault).
So what makes Australia and Canada so livable?
Read More … the world most livable city is.....

8 Dead As Typhoon with notherm philiphines


Slow-moving Typhoon Nanmadol remained dangerous Sunday despite weakening as it struck the tip of the mountainous northern Philippines, leaving at least eight people dead and scuttling a visit by a U.S. Navy battleship group, officials said.
Taiwan issued sea and land warnings and planned to evacuate about 3,700 people in its eastern and southern regions as it braced for the typhoon. Troops and rescue equipment have been deployed in advance for any contingency, Taiwan's Defense Ministry said.
With its enormous cloud band, the typhoon drenched northern provinces with rains for days before pummeling them with fierce winds, setting off landslides and floods and knocking down walls that left at least eight people dead and six more missing, said Benito Ramos, who heads the Office of Civil Defense.
Strong winds knocked down a concrete wall, which hit a small eatery in the capital's suburban Quezon City Sunday, killing a man and injuring two others in the latest casualties of the typhoon, police said.
In the northern mountain resort city of Baguio, a garbage dump's concrete wall collapsed and buried three shanties under tons of garbage Saturday, killing two children. Their grandmother remained missing, Ramos said.
Five others perished in landslides or drowned, including a fisherman, whose body was found floating Saturday off eastern Catanduanes province after he went missing late last week. A decision by many villagers to flee to safety before the typhoon struck and vigilance helped reduced the number of casualties, Ramos said.
A bus driver ordered his 18 passengers to rapidly alight after sensing the soggy mountain road they were on was about to collapse late Saturday in northern Benguet province. After they ran to safety, the road collapsed with the bus down a deep ravine, said regional disaster-response official Olive Luces said.
"The driver's presence of mind prevented a disaster," Luces said.
About 20 landslides cut off access to a number of Benguet towns, she said.
U.S. officials postponed a Manila visit by the U.S. Navy's John C. Stennis Carrier Strike Group, originally scheduled for this weekend, due to the bad weather.
The U.S. Embassy said all tours of the aircraft carrier, as well as the reception on board, had been canceled.
Domestic airlines also canceled more than a dozen flights to areas affected by the typhoon in the northern and central Philippines.
Nanmadol had sustained wind of 121 miles per hour and gusts of 143 mph Friday, becoming the strongest typhoon to hit the Philippines so far this year. It weakened after grazing northern Cagayan province Saturday. It would skirt the northernmost Batanes islands with 75 mph winds Sunday before starting to blow away from the country, Philippine government forecasters said.
Nanmadol was expected to hit Taiwan as early as Monday, Taiwan's central weather bureau said.
Read More … 8 Dead As Typhoon with notherm philiphines

One Protester Reportedly Killed as Kurdish Activists Clash With Police in Turkey


Hundreds of Kurdish activists clashed with police near the border with Iraq on Sunday, in skirmishes that led to one protester's death, reports said.
Police fired tear gas at the activists who gathered near the border in an attempt to cross the frontier and act as "human shields" against any possible renewed Turkish military airstrikes on suspected Kurdish rebel sites in northern Iraq, the state-run Anatolia news agency reported.
One activist died in hospital following the clash between the security forces and the stone-throwing activists in Hakkari province that borders Iraq, Anatolia said. The cause of death was not immediately known and Anatolia said authorities would conduct an autopsy.
Turkish warplanes carried out six days of aerial attacks on suspected Kurdish rebel positions across the border in northern Iraq earlier this month in retaliation for stepped up attacks by the rebels belonging to the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK.
Turkey's military said some 100 rebels were killed in the cross-border airstrikes, a claim the PKK has denied.
Earlier, suspected Kurdish rebels exploded a roadside bomb in Hakkari as a military convoy was passing by, killing three soldiers and wounding two others.
The PKK, which is considered a terrorist organization by the U.S. and the European Union, is fighting for autonomy in Turkey's mostly Kurdish southeast region.
The rebels maintain bases in northern Iraq from where they launch attacks on Turkish targets.
Tens of thousands of people have died in the conflict since 1984.
Read More … One Protester Reportedly Killed as Kurdish Activists Clash With Police in Turkey

Norwegian Police Arrest Man for Stockpiling Weapons, Explosives


Norwegian police say they have arrested a right-wing extremist who has been stockpiling weapons and explosives at his home in Oslo, but has no connection to mass killer Anders Behring Breivik.
"The police have no information linking him to Breivik, but after the terrorist attacks, they did not want to take any risks and made the resources available to find this person as quickly as possible," the Daily Verdens Gang reports.
The man is being investigated for the "possession of unauthorized weapons, possession of explosives and making threats,” according to his lawyer, Vidar Lind Iversen.
Breivik killed 77 people on July 22 in a bombing in Oslo and shooting rampage on a nearby island, and has since confessed to the killings.
Police previously discovered weapons in the man’s home in 2001, and convicted him of selling automatic weapons to right-wing extremists in the 1990s. They were unable to confirm local media reports that a police uniform -- similar to the one Breivik used to disguise himself in his attacks -- was found inside the man’s home, the AFP reports.
Read More … Norwegian Police Arrest Man for Stockpiling Weapons, Explosives

Lawyer for 2 American Hikers Jailed in Iran Submits Appeal


The lawyer for two American men sentenced to 8-year prison sentences on charges of espionage and illegal entry says he has filed an appeal.
Masoud Shafiei told The Associated Press that the appeals court could decide immediately about his clients, Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal, or take up to two months to decide.
Bauer and Fattal have been held since July 2009 after being taken into custody on the Iran-Iraq border. A third American who was taken with them, Sarah Shourd, was released in September 2010 on $500,000 bail and returned to the United States.The three say they mistakenly crossed into Iran.
Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal were sentenced to three years for illegal entry into Iran and five years for spying for the United States. The two were arrested in July 2009 near the Iraq-Iran border along with a third American, Sarah Shourd, who was released in September on $500,000 bail and returned to the U.S. All three deny the charges, saying they were only hiking near the ill-defined border.
Under Iranian law , a conviction on espionage can carry up to a 10-year prison sentence, while a sentence for illegal entry can run from six months to three years in jail. The terms are often significantly reduced upon appeal.
Shafiei said Bauer and Fattal were notified about the court ruling in prison on Saturday by Iranian authorities.
Iranian state TV first reported the verdict.
On Sunday, Aug. 21, Tehran's chief prosecutor Jafari Dowlatabadi confirmed the sentences and said the Americans have 20 days to appeal. He also said that Shourd's case "is still open and will be tried in absentia."
The Americans say they mistakenly crossed into Iran when they stepped off a dirt road while hiking near a waterfall in July 2009. While other parts of Iraq remain troubled by violence, the semiautonomous Kurdish north has drawn tourists in recent years, including foreigners.
Earlier this month, Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said he hoped "the trial of the two American defendants who were detained for the crime of illegally entering Iran will finally lead to their freedom."
The gap between words by Salehi and the verdict indicates increasing rift between President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's administration and hardline judiciary, controlled by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei who has final say on all state matters.
Read More … Lawyer for 2 American Hikers Jailed in Iran Submits Appeal

DataCell files a complaint with the European Commission July 14th 2011


The closure by VISA Europe and MasterCard of Datcell‘s access to the payment card networks in order to stop donations to WikiLeaks violates the competition rules of the European Community.
Today WikiLeaks and DataCell Ltd. of Iceland filed a complaint against the international card companies, VISA Europe and MasterCard Eurpe, for infringement of the antitrust rules of the EU.
DataCell offered payment gateway services to WikiLeaks through DataCell´s merchant account with a licensee of VISA Europe and MasterCard in Denmark and through this gateway DataCell received donations for WikilLeaks. In December 2010, after only 7 weeks of operation the Danish licensee terminated its agreement with DataCell at the order of the card companies, and thereby the gateway for donations to WikiLeaks was closed.
VISA Europe and MasterCard together have over 96 % of the payment card market in Europe and when these organizations deny businesses which rely on selling their services on line, access to their networks they contravene the antitrust rules of the European Union, both as regards the ban on restrictive business practices and the one that prohibits the abuse of market dominance:
Article 101(1) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union states:
“ The following shall be prohibited as incompatible with the internal market: all agreements between undertakings, decisions by associations of undertakings and concerted practices which may affect trade between Member States and which have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the internal market, and in particular those which:
(a) directly or indirectly fix purchase or selling prices or any other trading conditions;
(b) limit or control production, markets, technical development, or investment;
(c) share markets or sources of supply;
(d) apply dissimilar conditions to equivalent transactions with other trading parties, thereby placing them at a competitive disadvantage;
(e) make the conclusion of contracts subject to acceptance by the other parties of supplementary obligations which, by their nature or according to commercial usage, have no connection with the subject of such contracts.”
Article 102 of the Treaty reads: “The abuse by one or more undertakings of a dominant position within the internal market or in a substantial part of it as incompatible with the internal market insofar as it may affect trade between Member States shall be prohibited.“ Such abuse may, in particular, consist in: (a) directly or indirectly imposing unfair purchase or selling prices or other unfair trading conditions; (b) limiting production, markets or technical development to the prejudice of consumers; (c) applying dissimilar conditions to equivalent transactions with other trading parties, thereby placing them at a competitive disadvantage; (d) making the conclusion of contracts subject to acceptance by the other parties of supplementary obligations which, by their nature or according to commercial usage, have no connection with the subject of such contracts.”
In its complaint to the Commission DataCell stresses that the card companies have not come up with any objective justification for their refusal to do business with DataCell. DataCell points out in particular:
(i) The provision of payment gateway services whereby the holder of a merchant account uses it to accept donations or payments on behalf of businesses or non-profit organisations which do not have their own merchant account is an accepted and a normal business practice.
(ii) When DataCell applied for a merchant agreement with members of the payment card networks in Iceland the Central Bank of Iceland cleared the application without any reservation. Before, the Danish licensee had found DataCell‘s operation to be wholly compliant with Icelandic law. (Being a member of the EEA, Iceland‘s law in the field of payment services have to comply with EU law).
(iii) Neither WikiLeaks nor its Directors, employees or contractors have been indicted, prosecuted or summoned for breach of any civil law, any criminal law provisions or violations of ”ordre public” in any EEA country.
(iv) As concerns jurisdictions outside the EEA, neither WikiLeaks nor its Directors, employees or contractors have been subject to official indictments, prosecutions, judgements or summons for breach of any civil law, any criminal law provisions or violations of ”ordre public”.
DataCell operates a datacenter in Iceland and offers hosting and computer application services to individuals and businesses all over the world. The location of a datacenter in Iceland means that its entirely powered by renewable energy resources. Due to the huge energy demand of datacenters the source of their energy plays an increasingly important role when individuals and businesses choose data hosting services.
Read More … DataCell files a complaint with the European Commission July 14th 2011

Libya may be in America's vital interest after all



America’s intervention in Libya is not quite the success some are making out to be, as I point out here. Thus far, there is little empirical evidence to suggest that President Obama’s preference for “leading from behind” helped guarantee rebel victory (if anything, it prolonged the inevitable).
That said, the U.S. decision, however belated, to intervene in Libya – a country of tenuous importance to U.S. national security interests – was almost certainly the right thing to do. For this, credit is due. In a fit of isolationist pique, many on both the American left and right opposed the intervention. Iraq, understandably, loomed large. It is possible, however, to over-learn the lessons of the last war. It is true that America has a troubled, even tragic, history of interference in the Middle East. But just as there are bad interventions, there can also be good interventions.
Libya is perhaps the first of such “good” interventions. One hopes it will set a precedent for doing the right thing, even if – or perhaps particularly when – our “vital” national interests are not at stake.
It is odd to think that Arabs can like the United States or even entertain the thought that it is capable of being a force for good in the world. In much of the region, America’s popularity is at an all-time low (U.S. favorability ratings are lower under President Obama than they were under Bush, according to a recentZogby poll). Yet, today, many Libyans are grateful to the United States for supporting their struggle for freedom against a brutal regime. Libya also happens to be one of the only places where people are willing to considerslaughtering a sheep in the honor of Mr. Sarkozy, the otherwise beleaguered French president.
This suggests that fostering goodwill toward America, far from a fool’s errand, is still possible. As the Libyan rebels are fond of saying, they will not forget who supported them in their struggle – or who betrayed them. Creating that goodwill, however, requires clear, strong support for the protesters and revolutionaries fighting, and dying, for their freedom all across the Arab world.
For a long time, many of us who study the Middle East called for the United States to align itself with Arab democratic aspirations. In Libya, the United States, with France and Britain, oversaw the closest thing to a “pure” humanitarian or pro-democracy intervention. In this way, Libya is a test to see whether doing the right thing can bring with it other strategic dividends. A democratic Libya is likely to have a closer relationship with the United States and to welcome the role of the international community in helping rebuild the country and assist its political transition. By contrast, Egyptians do not look at the United States fondly. This is likely to limit our influence and leverage there in the coming months and years. After all, we supported Egypt’s autocrats for decades, with rather remarkable consistency. Successive U.S. administrations used Egypt to further a set of strategic interests inimical to the values and preferences of the Egyptian people. It seemed to work.
But, in a roundabout, indirect way, aggressively pursuing our “vital” interests in the short run can undermine them in the longer term, as Egypt now demonstrates. In Libya, the opposite may very well be true. The Libya intervention may not have much to do with our “vital” interests. Not yet, at least.
The views expressed in this article are solely those of Shadi Hamid.
Read More … Libya may be in America's vital interest after all

No Urban Distance : NyCity Escapes



NEW YORK, N.Y.— New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg says residents who had been ordered out of their homes in low-lying areas will be allowed to return Sunday afternoon.
Bloomberg says the evacuation order put in place for Hurricane Irene will be lifted as of 3 p.m. He had ordered more than 370,000 people out of those areas. They were mostly in lower Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens.
Not everyone waited, and people had already started making their way back to their homes. Some defied the order and didn't evacuate in the first place.
Irene unleashed furious wind and rain on New York on Sunday and sent seawater surging into the Manhattan streets. But the city appeared to escape the worst fears of urban disaster — vast power outages, hurricane-shattered skyscraper windows and severe flooding.
Water rushed over the wall of a marina in front of the New York Mercantile Exchange, where gold and oil are traded, and flood water lapped at the wheel wells of yellow cabs.
But the city's biggest power company, Consolidated Edison, said it was optimistic it would not have to cut electricity to save its equipment. The Sept. 11 museum, a centrepiece of the rebuilding of the World Trade Center site, said on Twitter that none of its memorial trees were lost.
And Irene made landfall as a tropical storm with winds of 104 km/h, not the 161 km/h hurricane that had churned up the East Coast and dumped 30 centimetres of water or more on less populated areas in the South.
“Just another storm,” said Scott Beller, who was at a Lowe's store in the Long Island hamlet of Centereach, looking for a generator because his power was out.
Irene weakened to winds of 96 km/h, well below the 119 km/h dividing line between a hurricane and tropical storm. The system was still massive and powerful, forming a figure six that covered the Northeast. It was moving twice as fast as the day before.
The storm killed at least 14 people and left four million homes and businesses without power. It unloaded more than 30 centimetres of water on North Carolina and spun off tornadoes in Virginia, Maryland and Delaware.
And even after the storm passes in the Northeast, the danger will persist. Rivers could crest after the skies the clear, and the ground in most of the region is saturated from a summer of persistent rain.
But from North Carolina to New Jersey, the storm appeared to have fallen well short of the doomsday predictions. Across the Eastern Seaboard, at least 2.3 million people were given orders to evacuate, though it was not clear how many obeyed them.
Max Mayfield, former director of the National Hurricane Center, said the storm wasn't just a lot of hype with little fury. He praised authorities, from meteorologists to emergency managers at all levels, for taking the threat seriously.
“They knew they had to get people out early,” Mayfield said. “I think absolutely lives were saved.”
In Virginia Beach, the city posted on Twitter late Saturday that initial reports were promising, with the resort area suffering minimal damage. Ocean City, Md., Mayor Rick Meehan posted wind readings and reported: “Scattered power outages. No reports of major damage!”
Charlie Koetzle was up at 4 a.m. on Ocean City's boardwalk. Asked about damage, he mentioned a sign that blew down.
“The beach is still here, and there is lots of it,” he said. “I don't think it was as bad as they said it was going to be.”
Under its first hurricane warning in a quarter-century, the country's largest city had taken extensive precautions. There were sandbags on Wall Street, tarps over subway grates and plywood on storefront windows. The subway stopped rolling. Broadway and baseball were cancelled.
John F. Kennedy International Airport recorded a tropical storm-force wind gust of 93 km/h. Kennedy, where on a normal day tens of thousands of passengers would be arriving from points around the world, was quiet. So were LaGuardia and Newark airports. So was Grand Central Terminal, where the great hall was cleared out entirely. Part of the Holland Tunnel was closed.
And 370,000 people in the city had been ordered to move to safer ground, although they appeared in great numbers to have stayed put. A storm surge of at least one metre was recorded in New York Harbor, and water pressed into Manhattan from three sides — the harbour, the Hudson River and the East River.
“You could see newspaper stands floating down the street,” said Scott Baxter, a hotel doorman in the SoHo neighbourhood.
New York firefighters made dozens of water rescues, including three babies, and said they were searching bungalows that had floated down the street in parts of Queens. The wind and rain were expected to diminish by afternoon.
The National Hurricane Center said the centre of the huge storm reached land near Little Egg Inlet, N.J., at 5:35 a.m. The eye previously reached land Saturday in North Carolina before returning to the Atlantic, tracing the East Coast shoreline.
Read More … No Urban Distance : NyCity Escapes

Japanese prime minister announces resignation


Tokyo, Japan (CNN) -- Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan, whose approval rating tumbled following the devastating March earthquake and tsunami, announced his resignation Friday.
Kan announced he is stepping down as party leader during a meeting with members of the ruling Democratic Party of Japan. The party will elect a new leader next week, who will take over as prime minister.
The resignation fulfills his promise to step down after parliament approved two pieces of legislation, including one related to post-earthquake reconstruction.
"I will put my words into action once those two bills are approved," Kan said this month at a Lower House committee session.
Kan believes the two bills -- the deficit-financing bond bill and the new energy promotion bill -- will push forward his reconstruction policies.
The bills passed Friday.
Kan has been under pressure to resign since the March 11 earthquake and tsunami and subsequent nuclear crisis in the nation. The disaster triggered the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl, as cores overheated and spewed radioactive material into surrounding areas.
Soon after the disaster, ratings agency Moody's put the country debt under review for a possible downgrade, as political infighting undermined measures to fix the budget deficit. Moody's officially downgraded Japan's credit on Wednesday, citing its unstable politics
In June, the embattled leader narrowly escaped a vote of no confidence in parliament.
As many as nine candidates, including Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda and former foreign minister, Seiji Maehara, are considered possible contenders for the post of prime minister.
Kan's resignation allows him to remain in office until the ruling party elects its new leader, a move scheduled for Monday.
A day later, parliament will vote in the new leader as prime minister, the sixth premier for the nation in five years.
Japan's next prime minister will inherit a series of problems, including soaring debt, nuclear woes, a shrinking population and a nation struggling to rebuild after the devastating earthquake and tsunami.
Read More … Japanese prime minister announces resignation

Steve Jobs Reigned in a Kingdom


Earlier this year, I wrote a column about the publishing industry’s resistance to the terms Applewas imposing for subscriptions on the iPad. Soon after, an e-mail was followed by a phone call andSteve Jobs was on the line to straighten me out.
At the time, publishers were profoundly unhappy. Apple was not only proposing to take a third of the revenues, but it was also requiring that the transaction go through Apple, meaning publishers would get none of the consumer data that had such high value to advertisers.
Mr. Jobs was friendly enough — I can recall a less pleasant conversation about the criminal case involving a stolen iPhoneprototype — but he thought it was silly for publishers to whine about sales without data. After all, he said, they already did a tremendous business on the physical newsstand that did not provide a lick of data about their buyers.
The exchange we had was more of an example of Mr. Jobs as micromanager than as technological visionary. But the perspective it showed is indicative of a pattern for Apple and Mr. Jobs. Again and again, he would step up to entrenched players in the media with calcified business models and explain their business to them in ways they did not recognize from the inside.
Apple is a technology company, but as someone who writes about the insular kingdom of media, I can’t think of a bigger player on the board in the last 10 years. In music, in movies, in publishing — television has been another story, so far, though there are rumors that the company is turning its guns on television in a big way — Apple has upended long-standing paradigms and altered the media landscape.
So what secret tunnel did he use to bypass and overcome traditional media businesses? One carved by consumers. By placing sexy, irresistible devices in the hands of the public, he reverse-engineered the business model of the industries that produce the content for Apple’s gorgeous hardware.
When the iPod and iTunes were unveiled in 2001, the music industry was under siege from piracy, with sites like Napster thriving on the free use of its content. Mr. Jobs’s take-it-or-leave it deal gave Apple control over pricing, data, distribution and platform, a proposal of towering hubris. But the industry, kicking and screaming all the way, eventually went along, and 10 billion song downloads later, digital revenue is a fundamental part of the business.
In the process, Apple brought a practical end to the album format — allowing people to buy individual songs and create their own playlists.
ITunes not only supplied a legitimate, easy-to-use alternative to piracy, it created a runway for services like Pandora and Spotify.
“He took a locked system, one that was controlled by the record companies, and cracked it open,” said Jim Guerinot, the longtime manager of The Offspring, Trent Reznor and Nine Inch Nails, and Gwen Stefani. “That disruption created opportunities for everything that has happened since.”
Mr. Jobs did not so much see around corners; he saw things in plain sight that others did not. “It’s not the consumer’s job to know what they want,” he explained.
In the case of music, many of us wanted the ease and portability of MP3 files, but didn’t want to become mouse-enabled criminals taking the music we wanted. From that perspective, 99 cents seemed like a small price to pay.
“I think far from destroying the music business, he put it on a path to redemption,” said Tom Freston, former head of Viacom and MTV. “With the iPod and iTunes, Steve not only created his own ecosystem, it turned out to be one that was contagious and created opportunities not only for his computer business, but for all the Apple products that came behind it.”
Mr. Jobs was initially pegged as a technologist who did not understand the media and entertainment businesses, but his track record as an operator is pretty enviable. In 1986, he bought the company which would become Pixar from George Lucas for $5 million and invested $5 million more.
Mr. Jobs understood that all that technological processing power could be used in service of narrative in unforeseen ways. After two decades and many computer-generated blockbusters, he sold the company to Disney in a deal valued at $7.4 billion.
Mr. Jobs has walked quickly and surely past conventional wisdom. He had no interest in market research. He did things his own way and expected the rest of the world to fall into line. He both brought the mouse into our homes and more or less killed it off, eliminated the floppy disc with the first iMac, and did away with the DVD on the MacBook Air, decisions that foretold the obsolescence of physical media. He shrunk Web-enabled devices by piggy-backing on the phone business, profoundly changing the way in which people consume media.
Read More … Steve Jobs Reigned in a Kingdom
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