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Posts Tagged ‘ Yahoo ’

By Nick Spence
December 3, 2010

LONDON – Yahoo! has released their list of top searched terms for 2010, with Apple typically scoring well.
Yahoo! analysed search queries from over 631 million people, adding up the results to create the annual Top 10 Searches and Top 10 Obsessions of 2010 list.

Apple was the only gadget maker in the Top 10, thanks to continued interest in the iPhone and best-selling iPad.

“Dizzying tech advances belied a bad economy. The iPhone’s fourth coming captivated naysaying geeks and covetous consumers alike, and beat out the iPad in searches. An accidental sneak peek unfolded like a joke (“So this engineer walks into a bar…”), but ended in record lines at stores,” Vera H-C Chan noted in a Yahoo! blog.

“High-tech drama stimulated an already frenzied Mac cult (which was also tracking the Apple iPad), and pushed the iPhone into the No. 6 slot.”

The full Yahoo! Top Ten Searches included the BP Oil Spill in top spot, followed by the World Cup, Miley Cyrus, Kim Kardashian, Lady Gaga, iPhone, Megan Fox, Justin Bieber, American Idol and Britney Spears.

Apple proved a hit in the Yahoo! Top 10 Obsessions of 2010, with the iPhone taking top spot, and the iPad at number three.

The Yahoo! Top 10 Obsessions of 2010 included the iPhone at number one, followed by
Lindsay Lohan, iPad, Glee, Jersey Shore, Facebook, Bedbugs, Tea Party, Silly Bandz
And Stieg Larsson’s ‘The Girl.’

“Obsessions in 2010 inspired constant Web surveillance (just when is the new iPhone coming out?) and vigilance for getting the scoop when a key moment came (order in the court, here comes Lindsay),” added Vera H-C Chan.

Full Yahoo! Year in Review coverage can be found here.

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By Rick Broida
July 28, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO – In response to a recent Hassle-Free PC about YouTube, a reader wrote me to ask about YouTube buffering. Specifically, he was wondering why YouTube sometimes starts and stops playback rather than buffering the entire video (or most of it, anyway) and then playing it.

Good question! YouTube? What do you have to say for yourself?

Nothing. I see. Well, the fact is that YouTube isn’t the only video site that does a mediocre job of buffering. Even if there’s network congestion or a slow connection, most video sites start playback immediately, which can result in those annoying pauses.

The solution? A free utility called SpeedBit Video Accelerator, which is expressly designed to make streaming video play without buffering interruptions.

SpeedBit relies on something called multi-connection technology to establish faster video downloads on sites ranging from AOL to Yahoo, with more than 160 others in between. (Alas, Hulu and Netflix aren’t among them–though I think those two are much better at buffering.)

The free version works this magic on “normal” and “HQ” videos (those streaming at up to 200 kbps). If you want the same acceleration for “HD” videos (200Kbps and higher), you’ll need to shell out $20–per year–for the Premium version.

That strikes me as a little steep, but hopefully the free version will get the job done. In my tests, SpeedBit worked as advertised, particularly when my connection was congested with other things like file downloads and VoIP phone calls.

I love Craigslist, but does the service have to be so user-unfriendly? I mean, would it kill Craig (or whoever’s in charge these days) to offer some kind of image preview in the listings? As it stands, you have to click through every single item to see whatever photos lie beneath.

To paraphrase a popular slogan, there’s a Firefox add-on for that. CLIP (aka CraigsList Image Prefetcher) adds thumbnail image previews to all Craigslist listings and search results. Even better, CLIP adds previews of the listings themselves. Just mouse over the little arrow to the right of any item and the underlying ad text appears in a pop-up box. That should save you a lot of unnecessary clicking.

While you’re at it, be sure to check out CL Genie, a free service that sends you an e-mail whenever a new Craigslist listing matches your search term(s).

Solve Internet Explorer 8 Crashes

A reader wrote me about a problem he’s having a problem with Internet Explorer 8:

“Whenever I try to access mail.yahoo.com, the page shows up and immediately IE 8 crashes. It happens with most [other] Web sites, too.”

Browser crashes can be tough to troubleshoot–especially when you don’t provide information about your PC, operating system, and so on. (ahem). That’s something everyone should remember when asking for help with system problems: the more details you can provide, the better.

You did mention that these crashes don’t happen in Firefox, meaning you already know the smart short-term workaround for any browser problem: try another browser.

Anyway, you’ve got two likely culprits here: a corrupted add-on or a bad Flash plug-in. I suspect the latter, so let’s start with that.

You’ll need to uninstall the Flash Player plug-in and its ActiveX component, which you can do with a small utility from Adobe. Reboot after you’ve run the utility.

Next, close Internet Explorer and reset it to its default settings (which will also remove any problematic add-ons). Now, click Start, type Internet Options, and then press Enter. Click the Advanced tab, then click the Reset button at the bottom of the window. (o not select the box marked “Delete personal settings.” Click Reset to complete the process. (Note: This process works for Vista and Windows 7.)

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By Lincoln Spector
June 29, 2010

yahootoolbarSAN FRANCISCO – If Yahoo is your home page, your search engine, and your e-mail service of choice, you can install the Yahoo Toolbar (free) and pretty much get a new version of what you already have. The only advantage is that it’s always there, even when you’re not visiting a Yahoo Web page. Whether that’s worth sacrificing some browser real estate for one more toolbar is a question you’ll have to ask yourself.

On the other hand, if you don’t live in a Yahoo world, I can answer this question for you: It’s not worth it.

The Yahoo Toolbar gives you a button to take you to the Yahoo main page, and a pull-down menu for Mail, My Yahoo, Games, and other pages. There’s also a search field.

Most of the Toolbar is taken up by something called My Apps–a row of icons for various Yahoo and non-Yahoo web sites. Click an icon, and the Yahoo Toolbar will take you to the appropriate page. Click the down arrow next to the icon, and you’ll get a pop-up window of site-related information. For instance, click the Mail arrow, and up comes a glimpse of your inbox. Yahoo Toolbar defaults to displaying six such apps: Bookmarks, Mail, Weather, Facebook, Finance, eBay, and Travel. You can remove any of these, and add more from a selection of 186 others. Newsfeed apps are often RSS feeds, and these can be very convenient; click the down arrow, then pick a story.

One nice feature: When you install the Toolbar, you’ll be asked if you want to install the Yahoo Mail Plug-in. If you pick that option, it becomes your default mail application, not only for Internet Explorer but for any program that uses the default mail setting, such as Windows Explorer, Microsoft Word, and WinZip. This enormous convenience solves one of Web mail’s biggest problems. Just one word of advice: If you’re mailing a file from Windows Explorer, don’t select Send To, then Mail Recipient. Select Send To, then E-mail with Yahoo! You’ll get better results.

Another installation option allows you to install the Toolbar into Firefox as well as Internet Explorer.

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June 11, 2010

genius-mouseA VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) mouse is one of the latest offerings from Genius. Tagged with a suggested retail price of P850, the Genius Navigator 380 integrates two functions – that of a mouse and an Internet phone. It comes bundled with a software that can support up to six Instant Messengers (Skype, MSN, Yahoo, GoogleTalk, QQ and AIM) and even combines them all into one window. It features seven buttons for the phone functions: phone on/off, list up/down, volume up/down and OK for call. It has a LED light that blinks to alert the user that someone is calling. The user then simply picks up the mouse and opens it up like a clamshell mobile phone to receive the voice call.

Genius is exclusively distributed in the Philippines by MSI-ECS.

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By JR Raphael
May 26, 2010

nokiayahooSAN FRANCISCO – Screw Android 2.2. Forget the new iPhone. Nokia and Yahoo have some news.

Nokia and Yahoo, in case you haven’t heard, have just announced a new mobile partnership. The two companies will join forces to “offer people rich experiences that keep them connected to their world and the world around them.”

Translated out of PR speak, that means you’ll soon find Yahoo’s mail and instant messaging services preinstalled on Nokia phones. And Nokia will soon power Yahoo’s maps and navigation services.

Yippee?

Nokia and Yahoo’s Mobile Partnership

The Nokia-Yahoo alliance is an attempt for the two companies to better compete in the mobile market, at least in terms of America: Though Nokia performs well internationally, its phones struggle to compete with the likes of Apple, Android, and RIM here in the States. And Yahoo — well, we all know about Yahoo.

So it’s understandable that the two yahoos — Yahoo and Nokia, that is — would want some help. But it’s hard to imagine that turning to each other is going to make much difference.

Regardless of what kind of cell phone fanboy you are, there’s plenty of exciting innovation in the air these days. Android is growing in leaps and bounds, with Google’s revelation of its new Froyo operating system fueling the fire. And ol’ Stevie J. over at Apple is up to his old e-mail tricks again, reportedly telling iPhone-lovers they “won’t be disappointed” with what he has up his sleeve for this year’s upcoming Worldwide Developers Conference.

But when’s the last time you’ve heard anyone get excited about anything on the way from Nokia? Or Yahoo?

Can you imagine this conversation taking place at a cell phone retailer this summer?

Customer: “Gosh, I just can’t decide which phone to get. The latest Droid is awesome, but the new iPhone looks pretty cool, too.”

Salesperson: “Well, sir, this Nokia 5230 now features built-in Yahoo Mail and Yahoo Messenger.”

Customer: “HOLY HAMBURGERS! Forget those other phones. Give me Nokia NOW!”

Even the “holy hamburgers” exclamation seems more plausible than the sudden interest in a Nokia-Yahoo device.

But hey, maybe I’m missing something. Maybe Yahoo has some grand plan up its sleeve to turn Nokia into a U.S. mobile market leader. You know, like inserting misplaced exclamation points into its slogans. Or encouraging its executives to publicly offer business advice to companies that outperform them.

If I were Google or Apple right now, I’d certainly be shaking in my boots. With laughter, that is.

Good times, Yahoo. Good times.

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By Ian Paul
May 24, 2010

google-webmSAN FRANCISCO – Google on Wednesday introduced a new, open source video format called WebM that Google hopes will become “a world-class media format for the open web.” In other words, WebM is meant to be a video format that is not encumbered by patent claims from other technology companies and will be free to use by anyone who wants to put video on the Web.

An open video format is seen as an important development for Web technologies, since HTML 5, the next version of the language that governs the Web, will include the capability to embed video onto a Web page without the need for a browser plugin like Microsoft’s Silverlight or Adobe’s Flash.

The fear is that without an open video format that is free for anyone to use, the cost of producing Web video content would be out of reach for the average Web developer and smaller companies. But there are already signs that patent claims could be made against WebM, making it just as encumbered as other video formats.

Patent Pools

At the heart of the WebM project is the VP8 video codec, which Google has released for public use under a royalty-free license. Competing against VP8 to become the default video codec for the Web is H.264 — a codec favored by Apple.

The problem with H.264 is that it is subject to individual patent claims held by more than 800 different technology companies such as Adobe Systems, Apple, Microsoft, Panasonic, Yahoo, Yamaha, and many, many others. All of these companies have thrown their patents into what is called a patent pool that is managed by a company called MPEG LA. The purpose of the pool is to stop technology companies with conflicting patents claims from suing each other, and to assert the rights of patent holders against third parties. At the moment, H.264 can be used at no charge until 2016 to encode Web video that is free to end users, but there is no guarantee what will happen with H.264′s licensing terms after that.

MPEG LA

The problem with the VP8 codec is that it may violate some of the patents covered in the H.264 patent pool.   In fact, MPEG-LA may go so far as to create a patent pool for the VP8 codec, according to All Things D.
Larry Horn, CEO of MPEG LA, told the blog via e-mail that the patent pool management company is “looking into the prospects” of creating a patent pool for VP8.   In other words, those 800-plus technology companies could assert their patent rights over VP8, ending its current status as an unencumbered video codec.

Jobs Hits ‘Send’

Despite potential patent issues with VP8 and WebM, most browser makers are looking to support the WebM format as a native video codec. Mozilla Firefox, Opera, and Google Chrome will all support the WebM format as will Microsoft’s Internet Explorer. The only major holdout among browser makers is Apple.

While Cupertino has remained officially silent on the issue, Apple CEO Steve Jobs reportedly sent one of his famously terse e-mails in response to a question about VP8 and WebM, according to the Register. Instead of a one word response — as is typical of most purported Jobs e-mail messages — the Apple chief only sent a link to a highly technical critique of the VP8 codec by Jason Garrett-Glaser, a video codec expert.

It’s hard to know what to make of Jobs’ meaning by including the link — assuming it really was Jobs who responded in the first place. Glaser clearly doesn’t like VP8 as a codec, calling it “significantly weaker” than H.264 compression. So it could be that Jobs doesn’t think much of VP8 as a technology; however, Glaser also says in his critique that one of VP8′s features is a “patent time-bomb waiting to happen” and that “VP8 copies way too much from H.264″ to be considered patent-free.

It’s not clear whether Jobs is just unimpressed with WebM and VP8 or whether the Apple chief was signaling support for forming a patent pool around VP8. Either way, don’t count on seeing WebM support in Safari any time soon.
As for VP8, it’s anybody’s guess as to whether WebM will remain patent-free, and whether Google will back its new project with legal support should MPEG LA come knocking.

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By JR Rapahel
May 4, 2010

google-yahoo-logosSAN FRANCISCO – Yahoo, oh Yahoo. Sometimes, you just make it too easy.

The company that’s given us more punchlines than Kate Gosselin on a dance floor is back at it again. This time, Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz is dishing out advice to Google, saying she thinks the search giant — you know, the one that’s soared while Yahoo has floundered — may be in trouble.
Rimshot, anyone?

Yahoo’s Bartz on Google

Ms. Yahoo’s remarks come to us by way of an interview with the BBC News published on Thursday. In the interview, Bartz says Google will have to “do a lot more than search” if it wants to stay in the game.
Per the BBC:

“Google will have ‘a problem’ if it does not diversify its business, the head of Yahoo has told BBC News. … Ms. Bartz made the comments when asked if Yahoo’s sprawling network of sites and services had a defined brand image.”

But wait — it gets even better:

“‘Google is going to have a problem because Google is only known for search,’ said Ms. Bartz. ‘It is only half our business; it’s 99.9 percent of their business. They’ve got to find other things to do. Google has to grow a company the size of Yahoo every year to be interesting.’”

Yeah, Carol: Google ought to start acquiring some companies and developing new services. Because Android, Buzz, Voice, Chrome the browser, Chrome the OS, and the other 4.2 billion endeavors they’ve launched lately really aren’t enough.
Maybe a branding campaign involving c!onfusingly pla!ced punctua!tion would help, too.

The Yahoo Business Saga

Now, to be fair, Yahoo has been slightly less of a joke since Bartz took the company over last January. Prior to that point, as you may remember, Yahoo was immersed in an exhausting but always amusing Ross-and-Rachel-like love story with Microsoft.
Walking through the whole saga would take a good hour of our time, but put simply, Yahoo repeatedly rejected acquisition offers by Microsoft because it felt they were too low. By the end of the ordeal, Yahoo’s stock value was significantly lower than what Microsoft would have paid. A botched deal with Google and numerous public management squabbles provided a nice side show as well.

In a sad final twist, former CEO (and now appropriately titled “Chief Yahoo”) Jerry Yang all but begged Microsoft to come back to his doorstep. Less than two weeks later, under continued pressure from stockholders, Yang stepped down.
Bartz was able to move beyond that blemish and strike up a search partnership with Microsoft this year. And recently, she’s managed to show subtle signs of a slow recovery.
Her company, however, is still far from a model business. Even since finalizing the deal with Microsoft, Yahoo’s market share has continued to slip. So Bartz giving advice to Google is kind of like Kirk Cameron coaching Brad Pitt on box office success. Or, you know, Steve Jobs preaching about the importance of open platforms.
Yahoo, oh Yahoo. What we do without y!ou?

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Twitter: Ready to Reveal All?

By Fei on April 27, 2010

By Neil McAllister
April 27, 2010

twitter_logoSAN FRANCISCO – The unthinkable has happened: Twitter has decided to make money. Longtime users of the microblogging service, which for years has operated without a viable business model, are anguished at the prospect of paid ads appearing among their tweets. But advertising is just the tip of the iceberg. Twitter’s vast and ever-growing data store will be the true profit center, say company execs — both for Twitter and for independent developers.

Exactly to what extent Twitter plans to make its data available to outside parties remains unclear, but the company’s APIs are already accessible for developers to access its services, and last October it signed deals with Google and Microsoft to allow tweets to appear alongside search results. Now Twitter is reportedly developing “analytical products” aimed at marketers who want to mine the Twittersphere for insight into public opinion about companies, products, and brands — and it’s encouraging others to do the same.

[ Keep up with app dev issues and trends with InfoWorld's Fatal Exception and Strategic Developer blogs. | Follow the latest news in software development with InfoWorld's Developer World newsletter. ]
In so doing, Twitter joins a growing number of online companies in creating a new kind of software platform. In the past, tool vendors have offered developers languages and code libraries that gave them access to computing functions in simple, standardized ways. In this new paradigm, however, a platform consists of more than just frameworks and APIs. It also comes prepackaged with a complete, rich data set, and often that data is the platform’s most valuable aspect. These new “data platforms” are creating exciting new opportunities for developers, though they are not without their challenges.

Data Mining Like Never Before

It’s easy to scoff at the idea of Twitter as a source of valuable data. Among consumers, the divide between the tweets and the tweet-nots is deep, and those who do not partake see little of interest in a service that allows users to post 140-character status updates. But Twitter is not alone in thinking it’s sitting on a goldmine. The U.S. Library of Congress recently announced plans to archive all public tweets since March 2006, presumably as an aid to future anthropological research.
The Twitter archive will add to the growing collection of data the U.S. and local governments have begun offering to the public. The most prominent example is Data.gov, a clearinghouse for data feeds from federal government agencies that was launched by the Obama administration last year. The site has already spawned a small commercial ecosystem as vendors offer number-crunching and analytical services to help companies and lobbyists make sense of the raw data.
Of course, Web apps that draw from online public data sources are nothing new. So-called mashups combine disparate data sources in novel ways — using Google Maps to plot sightings of the McDonald’s fast-food chain’s elusive McRib sandwich, for example. But companies are only now beginning to realize that high-volume Websites, such as Twitter, present opportunities to conduct data mining on a new and unprecedentedly massive scale.

Previously, only large retailers such as Amazon and Wal-Mart or portal providers such as Google and Yahoo have had access to such large data sets. So far these companies have held their cards close to their vests, and for good reason. Their customer data is a key component of their competitive advantage. Now Twitter and others — particularly, social networks such as Facebook and MySpace — are banking that smaller vendors are willing to pay to level the playing field, and they’re developing data platforms to make that happen.

Selling Out Users’ Privacy

Selling access to raw user data is not without peril, however. Privacy concerns are growing among users of online services. Earlier this week, regulators from 10 countries sent a letter to Google CEO Eric Schmidt urging his company to collect only a minimum of personally identifying information and to ensure that the data was protected by adequate security measures. Failure to do so, the letter implied, could threaten Google’s ability to legally conduct business in the co-signers’ countries.
Data platforms will likely make enforcing security more difficult. Twitter believes its data store contains information valuable to marketers, such as how much buzz a new movie premiere is getting or how successful a viral ad campaign has been. But Twitter users who assume nobody is listening except a few friends and family might also unwittingly tweet information of a more sensitive nature — their children’s names and where they go to school, for example. Recently, an activist site called PleaseRobMe demonstrated how easy it was to scan for tweets announcing that Twitter users had left their homes. Developers will need to tread carefully to avoid potential liability for similar searches.
Equally worrisome to many consumers is the ability to cross-reference multiple databases to produce a much more thorough profile of an individual than any one source could provide. Even if a data platform’s API makes only a limited amount of information available, there’s little to prevent developers from querying multiple sources and matching corresponding fields. If these and similar privacy concerns cause users to quit online services en masse, plans to launch new data platforms will have backfired.

Where Do Developers Fit In?

Data platforms present other concerns for developers, however. Even more than mobile platforms such as Apple’s iPhone, a data platform like Twitter’s is a walled garden. If Twitter cuts off a developer’s access to its data sources for any reason, that developer’s business is sunk. Rather than risking public exposure, then, the safer bet for independent code shops may be to develop “cloud middleware” around data platforms, including tools that facilitate unique kinds of analysis not foreseen by the original data vendors.
One problem with this approach, however, is that it inevitably pits developers in competition with their data platform vendors. For example, Twitter’s “analytical products” could overlap those built by its developer community, and Twitter may be in a better position to reach potential customers.

But this risk might not be as great as it sounds. Like many companies that have only recently begun reaching out to developers, Twitter’s relationship with its developer community is evolving. For example, rather than create its own iPhone client, earlier this month Twitter acquired Tweetie, a leading independent iPhone app for the platform. Just as Microsoft has purchased many startups over the years, being acquired may prove to be a viable strategy for developers offering novel products built on data platforms. The field of data mining social networks is yet very new; it’s a good bet there’s money to be made helping companies sort it all out.

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By Lexton Snol
January 20, 2009

LONDON – People spend longer on Microsoft’s website than on Apple’s, according to new data from Nielsen Online.

Nielsen spies on the amount of time people spend on the sites of the top web brands in the world.

Microsoft had more unique visitors (135,876,000) in December 2009 than Apple (63,825,000), and those people averaged over two hours there compared to Apple’s visitors (1.5 hours).
Although beaten in sheer visitor numbers by Google (155,683,000), Microsoft and Yahoo! (130,229,000) Facebook’s 109,905,000 visitors spent an average whopping six and a half hours scanning friends’ updates, photos and silly farming games.

The data in the graph shown here indicates that 63.8 million home and work Internet users visited at least one of the Apple-owned sites, and each person spent, on average, a total of 1 hour, 27 minutes and 45 seconds at one or more of their sites.

Original URL http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/news/index.cfm?newsid=1.0

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By Juan Carlos Perez
October 28, 2009

Channeling Aretha Franklin, Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz told investors and financial analysts on Wednesday that the company is working hard to regain the respect it has lost in the market.

Bartz, known for her no-nonsense demeanor and spicy vocabulary, spoke with more vehemence than usual, labeling her company’s 6% operating margin as “pathetic” and acknowledging Yahoo “somehow got boring” and confused users, clients and analysts about its mission.

But she promised that the company is at a turning point. “Today is the beginning of a journey back to respect,” Bartz said during her opening remarks, which were Web cast.

“We’re not here to ‘wow’ you today, but we’re here to intrigue you and impress you and we’re going to work really hard to do that,” she added.

The event, scheduled to last 7 hours, will focus on highlighting what Bartz described as the company’s impressive breadth, which sets it apart from competitors and will be at the core of its resurgence.

About a dozen high-ranking officials are scheduled to speak, including CTO and executive VP of Products Ari Balogh and executive VP of Yahoo North America Hilary Schneider.

Bartz acknowledged struggling herself with the question of what Yahoo is when she took over as CEO in January of this year, so the company went out and talked to many users in about 10 countries.

It found out its users consider Yahoo their “home on the Internet,” Bartz said.

“They come home to Yahoo. They tell us that,” she said.

That gives Yahoo a user base of a scale and diversity that’s unparalleled, allowing it to offer advertisers not only “a safe neighborhood” for their campaigns but also increasingly refined marketing insight.

“We are the largest communications engine in the whole world,” she said.

“We’re not a search company. We’re not a display [advertising] company. We’re a broad-based Internet technology company that serves up the most interesting content on the Internet to 600 million people. That’s awesome,” Bartz added.

Last but not least, Yahoo is highly motivated to stage a comeback. “We have fallen and we really want to get back up,” she said.

Yahoo, which has been on a years-long financial and technology slump, posted revenue of US$1.58 billion in this year’s third quarter, down 12% from the same period a year earlier, while net income rose 244% thanks in part to cost cutting, the company said last week.

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