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         Self Programming:     more books (100)
  1. Be the Person You Want to Be: Harness the Power of Neuro-Linguistic Programming to Reach Your Potential by John J. Jr Emerick, 1997-01-15
  2. The Human Factor at Work: A Guide to Self-Reliance and Consumer Protection for the Mind by Eric G. Oliver, 1993-07
  3. Self-Stabilizing Systems: 6th International Symposium, SSS 2003, San Francisco, CA, USA, June 24-25, 2003, Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science)
  4. Learn Programming and Mathematics with MATLAB by Yuri Rojan, 2005-04
  5. Winning Web Sites: Plan and Design Your Own (Self-Counsel Business Series) by Bob Whitcroft, 1997-12
  6. Self-Managed Networks, Systems, and Services: Second IEEE International Workshops, SelfMan 2006, Dublin, Ireland, June 16, 2006, Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science)
  7. Mond-Weir type second order symmetric duality in non-differentiable minimax mixed integer programming problems [An article from: European Journal of Operational Research] by S.K. Mishra, 2006-04-16
  8. Using Your Brain--For a Change: Neuro-Linguistic Programming by Richard Bandler, 1985-05
  9. An Introduction to Assembly Language Programming for 8086 Family: A Self-Teaching Guide by Thomas P. Skinner, 1985
  10. Computer programming in ANS MUMPS: A self-instruction manual for non-programmers by Arthur F Krieg, 1981
  11. Visicalc Programming: No Experience, Atari 800 and 1200 Xl Home Computers (Self-Instructional Disk and Book) by Shaffer & Shaffer, 1984-03
  12. Issues in programming for gifted instruction in the self-contained (regular) elementary classroom by Cameron Anderson, 1988
  13. The bases of FORTRAN: A self-training approach to computer programming by Robert E Smith, 1973
  14. The bases of COBOL: A self-training approach to computer programming by R. E Smith, 1974

101. All About Symbian Forums - Self Hosting Programming Languages
All About Symbian Forums Development OPL Questions self hosting programming languages. View Thread self hosting programming languages.
http://www.allaboutsymbian.com/archive/t-3733
All About Symbian Forums Development OPL Questions View Thread : Self hosting programming languages ryoohki :angel:
I'm interested in using a my 9290 to do a little programming
on-the-go.
So far the only one I know of that seems to fit the bill is ruby:
http://www32.tok2.com/home/tkhirano/
... but I haven't tried to install it yet.
cycle?
How is this done? Where do I start?
Is there a command line and how do I get to it?
How do I save a file as .txt?
BTW, my ROM is 3.35. This seems to be the highest for the 9290. Is there a way to tell what the latest on Nokia's website? Rafe For details of OPL and Opl Tutorials for the Nokia 9210 and 9290 see the Develop section of this site, there a chance to win a big prize too ;) http://www.allaboutsymbian.com/develop/opl/ Ewan Specifically, here's the tutorial you need to use to get the OPL Runtime and Enviroment installed on your 9290... http://www.allaboutsymbian.com/develop/opl/oplsdk.php

102. Important Comments By Dr. John Lilly
selfMetaprogram a special metaprogram which involves the self-programming aspects of the computer, which creates new programs, revises old programs, and
http://deoxy.org/h_lilly.htm
deoxy.org index updates forum chat news contact warning English to German English to Spanish English to French English to Italian English to Portug. German to English German to French Spanish to English French to English French to German Italian to English Portug. to English Random : Interview with Hakim Bey
From "Programming and Metaprogramming in the Human Biocomputer," 1967 Preface to the Second Edition In a well-organized biocomputer, there is at least one ... critical control metaprogram labeled "I" for acting on other metaprograms and labeled "me" when acted upon by other metaprograms. Beyond and above in the control hierarchy ... there may be other controls and controllers, which, for convenience, I call "supraself metaprograms." They are many or one depending on current states of consciousness in the single self-metaprogram mer. These may be personified as if entities , created as if a network of information transfer, or realized as if self traveling in the Universe to strange lands or dimensions or spaces. If one does a further unification operation on these supraself metaprograms, one may arrive at a concept labeled God, the Creator, the Starmaker

103. Jon Kirwan: PC Assembly Programming/Where To Get PC Assembly Tools
Here it is Win98 DDK s BINS_DDK.EXE. That file is a selfextracting program that you run to create BINS_DDK.CAB and BINS_DDK.INF.
http://www.easystreet.com/~jkirwan/pctools.html
PC Assembly Programming
Where to Get PC Assembly Tools
MASM 6.15 Available
I've been using PC assembler programming since IBM's first version of the assembler, in 1984, and Microsoft's own branded version since it was released somewhat later. Free is a very good price and Microsoft's assembler has been the tool of choice since the earliest PC days. There are plenty of source code files available and most of the good ones will have at least one version designed to work with Microsoft's assembler tool. Microsoft provides its professional assembler tool (ML and components) in a rather complicated way. You pick up the assembler itself from one file and then get the linker from another file. You may want to pick up the latest patches to the assembler from still another file. Worse, you may need to either get a setup program to help you access the assembler in the file it comes in or else you will have to handle some arcane details to do it manually. In short, it might help to have a guide. I hope this helps. I discuss the following tools, but this is a quick, one-stop shop for getting the pieces: (Sometimes, Microsoft changes the sites and breaks the links below. If so, try out the link to the MS Article. Often, that article has the updated link.)

104. Developer.* - Principled Programming
development of a sound style, which is the key to selfdocumenting code A highly developed programming style comes through the diligent incorporation of proven
http://www.developerdotstar.com/mag/articles/read_princprog.html
developer.* A Web Magazine for Software Developers
Home Articles Book Reviews Contributors ... Authors Wanted Get Started with RSS Not sure about RSS? developer.* has all the information you need. Click here for a brief RSS primer, links to reader software, and more. Click here for specific information about the developer.* RSS feed. Newsletter Subscribe
Your address never shared. Advertisements Applied Logic Engineering, Inc.
Software Consulting and Embedded Systems
Open Testware Reviews
In-depth and honest reviews of free test tools.
...
A platform-indendent, 100% Java, server-based, SOAP-enabled source code control and versioning system.
Link Exchange SourceJammer Software Reality Metalshell Arabian Developer Network ... Developers dex Article
Principled Programming By Daniel Read Posted June 30, 2001 ( View Article Comments Author’s note: This was the first essay about software development that I wrote, sometime in early 2001. I enjoyed writing it so much, that I decided to start the developer.* web site so that I could have a place to publish other writings. During the first two years of the site’s existence, "Principled Programming" was by far the most popular article. I had intentions at one time to expand to a list of about thirty principles, with the idea of collecting them into a book eventually. I still may do that someday. Looking back at these principles now, two years after writing them, I’m mostly happy with what I read. While I'm resisting the urge to do some re-writing on this one, I still agree 100% with the principles as stated, and hope that you’ll get something out of them.

105. Multi-type, Self-adaptive Genetic Programming For Complex Applications
Multitype, self-adaptive Genetic programming for Complex Applications. 2002. Multi-type, self-adaptive Genetic programming as an Agent Creation Tool.
http://hampshire.edu/lspector/darpa-selfadapt.html
Multi-type, Self-adaptive Genetic Programming for Complex Applications
A project supported by the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA) and the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL)
DARPA Program: Agent-Based Computing, Taskable Agent Software Toolkit (TASK) Principal Investigator: Lee Spector lspector@hampshire.edu School of Cognitive Science Hampshire College
Project Goals and Background
The aim of this project is to develop improved genetic programming techniques and to apply these techniques to difficult, unsolved computational problems. Of particular interest in this project are problems involving control and adaptation in heterogeneous, dynamic environments.
The proposed improvements to genetic programming techniques are intended to broaden the range of problems to which genetic programming can be applied, including problems with multiple data types and complex control requirements. A further goal is to decrease the need for expert configuration of genetic programming systems; ideally the system will "configure itself" as part of its evolutionary process. The methods by which such self-configuration will be achieved borrow heavily from evolutionary biology and it is also hoped that the system, considered as an "artificial life" model, will provide data that can inform the interdisciplinary study of evolutionary processes.
The improved genetic programming system will be tested on problems from several areas including the control of agents in complex environments and quantum computation (a recent research area at the intersection of computer science and quantum mechanics). Some of these problems, if solved, may have substantial practical applications. In addition, the improved genetic programming system should have applications to computational problems in almost any quantitative field (including all of those to which genetic programming has been previously applied). In the long term important results of this type of research may derive from insights that genetic programming and artificial life systems provide about the nature of evolution and about the ways in which nature's algorithms can be harnessed to solve human problems.

106. NLP FAQ And Resources
nlp is intended as a forum for practitioners of NeuroLinguistic programming (NLP) to It is a place for those who use NLP for self-improvement to share ideas
http://www.rain.org/~da5e/nlpfaq.html
The NLP FAQ and Resources
The home of the Alt.Psychology.NLP Newsgroup!
http://www.rain.org/~da5e/nlpfaq.html
This FAQ is maintained by Dale Kirby [ NLP Self-help ]. Please send comments, suggestions, questions, and additions to dale@da5e.com . Revised Wednesday, December 18, 2001.
Table of Contents
Answers to common questions:
The FAQ
Answers to common questions:
Q: What is the purpose of alt.psychology.nlp? A: There are many:
  • Alt.psychology.nlp is intended as a forum for practitioners of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) to share and discuss information with each other. Alt.psychology.nlp is also a forum for presenting and representing the attitudes and skills of some of its practitioners to the interested public. It is a place for those who use NLP for self-improvement to share ideas and ask questions of practitioners. It is a forum for discussing the wider implications of NLP; its future, its impact on other communications and therapy models (and vice versa), and its contributions to society at large.
Q: What is NLP?

107. Papers About Self And OO Programming
David Ungar. Adaptive optimization for self Reconciling High Performance with Exploratory programming (1994) Urs Hölzle. A Third
http://www.cs.ucsb.edu/labs/oocsb/self/papers/papers.html
A Self Bibliography
Retrospective
Programming as an Experience: The Inspiration for Self
Randall B. Smith and David Ungar
Language
Self: The Power of Simplicity
David Ungar and Randall B. Smith
Parents are Shared Parts: Inheritance and Encapsulation in Self
Craig Chambers , David Ungar, Bay-Wei Chang , and
Organizing Programs Without Classes
David Ungar, Craig Chambers Bay-Wei Chang , and
Implementation
Object Storage and Inheritance for Self
Elgin Lee
Customization: Optimizing Compiler Technology for Self, a Dynamically-Typed Object-Oriented Programming Language
Craig Chambers and David Ungar
An Efficient Implementation of Self, a Dynamically-Typed Object-Oriented Language Based on Prototypes
Craig Chambers , David Ungar, and Elgin Lee
Iterative Type Analysis and Extended Message Splitting: Optimizing Dynamically-Typed Object-Oriented Programs
Craig Chambers and David Ungar
Making Pure Object-Oriented Languages Practical
Craig Chambers and David Ungar
Optimizing Dynamically-Typed Object-Oriented Programming Languages with Polymorphic Inline Caches
Craig Chambers , and David Ungar
The Design and Implementation of the Self Compiler, an Optimizing Compiler for Object-Oriented Programming Languages

108. Resource Links On Self-Organisation, Complexity And Artificial Life
Library comprehensive AZ annotated links Complexity, self-Organisation insight Facilitated Systems - publications Neuro-Linguistic programming and Systems
http://www.calresco.org/links.htm
(Note: most downloadable software resources are now listed on our Major Software page, which includes all the famous names ;-) Agents Artificial Intelligence Artificial Life Attractors ...
Complexity Digest
- recent papers and news
Complexity in Human Systems
- IAIR Group
Complexity International
- all aspects
Dynamic Psychology
- complex mental processes
HyperPSYCOLOQUY
- connectionist psychology+other areas
InterJournal
- self-organizing systems
International Journal of Futures Studies
- complexity in the real world
Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation
- University of Surrey
Noetica
- cognitive psychology
Santa Fe Institute Bulletin
- complexity research updates
The Interscience Review
U.K. Non-Linear News - quarterly online paper Update Newsletter - The Center for Systems Science Virtual Physics - some complexity related articles
Subscriber and Offline Journals
These can require payment for online access (where available) and/or for printed copies. Adaptive Behaviour - abstracts online Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science - nonlinear science, free postscript Complex Systems - abstracts only Complexity - some online software Cybernetics and Human Knowing - self-organizing processes Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society - limited online Emergence: Complexity Issues in Organizations and Management - limited online European Journal of Economic and Social Systems (EJESS) - some pdf availability Interdisciplinary Description of Complex Systems - pdf available International Journal of Chaos Theory and Applications - abstracts online

109. Self Study Computer Programming Case Study -- ConceptSystems.com
Case Study self Study Computer programming. Figure 2. Pattern match of importance and achievement for conduct 1 of the selfstudy programming course.
http://www.conceptsystems.com/Consult/CaseStudies/ssComputerProgramming.cfm
SEARCH SITE document.write(tips[random_number]); document.write("Read More..."); Case Study: Self Study Computer Programming related case studies Systems requirements course The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a self-study training program in computer programming. Nine persons familiar with the subject matter generated 71 statements describing different programming concepts that needed to be learned. The resulting nine cluster map includes general programming issues on the left (use of resources, personal work style, coding basics, testing and debugging) and more technical concepts related to the computer language on the right. The clusters related to the basics of the language itself and the basics of programming in general were rated highest in importance. Figure 1. Concept map for a self-study course in computer programming. The results indicated that the training was not achieving what was expected. In four separate conducts of the training there was virtually no match between what was expected and what participants reported they achieved (outcome pattern matching r’s = -.079, -.046, -.059, and .128 respectively). For instance, although

110. Meatball Wiki: CommunityProgrammableWiki
Web programming MCAD/MCSD self-Paced Training Kit Developing Web programming. MCAD/MCSD self-Paced Training Kit Developing Web Applications with Microsoft Visual Basic .NET and Microsoft Visual C .NET, Second Edition.
http://www.usemod.com/cgi-bin/mb.pl?SelfProgrammingWiki

111. A Biological Programming Model For Self-Healing
A Biological programming Model for selfHealing. Selvin George, David Evans and Steven Marchette First ACM Workshop on Survivable
http://www.cs.virginia.edu/~evans/pubs/ssrs-abstract.html
A Biological Programming Model for Self-Healing
Selvin George, David Evans and Steven Marchette
First ACM Workshop on Survivable and Self-Regenerative Systems
, October 31, 2003. Abstract Biological systems exhibit remarkable adaptation and robustness in the face of widely changing environments. By adopting properties of biological systems, we hope to design systems that operate adequately even in the presence of catastrophic failures and large scale attacks. We describe a programming paradigm based on the actions of biological cells and demonstrate the ability of systems built using our model to survive massive failures. Traditional methods of system design require explicit programming for fault tolerance, which adds substantial costs and complexity to the design, implementation and testing phases. Our approach provides implicit fault tolerance by using simple programs constructed following guiding principles derived from observing nature. We illustrate our model with experiments producing simple structures and apply it to design a distributed wireless file service for ad hoc wireless networks. Complete Paper (10 pages) [ PDF
Swarm Project Page
David Evans - Publications
University of Virginia
...
evans@cs.virginia.edu

112. The Code Project - Perl Object Oriented Programming - PERL
A package is a selfcontained unit of user-defined variables and subroutines They provide a separate namespace within a Perl program that keeps subroutines and
http://www.codeproject.com/perl/camel_poop.asp
Click Here All Topics ASP.NET PERL General
Perl Object Oriented Programming
By khurt

The basics of Object Oriented Programming in Perl. Beginner UNIX, Windows Posted 6 Nov 2002 Updated 13 Nov 2002 Articles by this author views Search: Articles Authors Toolbox Broken links? VS.NET 2003 for $899 MSDN Univ. from $1950 Print version ... Send to a friend
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11 members have rated this article. Result: Popularity: 4.79 . Rating: out of 5.
Camel POOP
Most people are not aware of the fact that Perl has support for object-oriented programming. If you've used another object-oriented programming language such as Java or C++ or been exposed to object-orientation, then object oriented programming in Perl is nothing like that. To do real useful object-oriented programming in Perl, you only need to use three simple rules as put forth by Larry Wall in Object Oriented Perl. Object oriented programmers are familiar with the concept of object and classes, but I will review that here quickly. An object is a thing that provides access to or modification of data. A class is a description of the attributes of a particular kind of object and the manner in which those objects can be accessed and modified. A method is a means by which an object's data is accessed or modified. An object is an instance of a class. An example would be a Person class in an HR system. The

113. Programming And Computation
Monadic i/o and UNIX shell programming; Similarity between instruction scheduling and imperative functional programming; selfapplication as the fixpoint of call
http://okmij.org/ftp/Computation/Computation.html
previous next contents top
Programming and Computation

114. Designing And Programming Java In The Database (Self-assessment)
This selfassessment has been created to help you determine whether you have sufficient Java knowledge to benefit fully from the Designing and programming
http://www.sybase.com/detail/1,6904,1003249,00.html
Contact Us Login Worldwide Sites Argentina Asia Pacific Australia Austria Belgium Brazil Canada China Czech Republic Denmark Finland France Germany Hong Kong Hungary Italy Japan Korea Mexico Netherlands New Zealand Norway Poland Portugal Russia Slovak Republic South Africa Spain Sweden Switzerland Taiwan Turkey United Arab Emirates United Kingdom MySybase About Sybase Products Solutions ... eShop This document was: Excellent Needs Work Fair
Designing and Programming Java in the Database Self Assessment of Java prerequisites

This self-assessment has been created to help you determine whether you have sufficient Java knowledge to benefit fully from the "Designing and Programming Java in the database" course. The self-assessment consists of three parts:
  • General questions that indicate the area of Java knowledge required. If you can answer "yes" to these questions, you are probably ready for the course. A programming assessment. You should try to complete this application unless you are quite sure you have completed something at least this complex in the recent past. A set of multiple choice questions. This has two sets of questions:
  • 115. Designing And Programming Java In The Database (Self-Assessment JDBC Requirement
    This selfassessment has been created to help you determine whether you have sufficient JDBC knowledge to benefit fully from the Designing and programming
    http://www.sybase.com/detail/1,6904,1003258,00.html
    Contact Us Login Worldwide Sites Argentina Asia Pacific Australia Austria Belgium Brazil Canada China Czech Republic Denmark Finland France Germany Hong Kong Hungary Italy Japan Korea Mexico Netherlands New Zealand Norway Poland Portugal Russia Slovak Republic South Africa Spain Sweden Switzerland Taiwan Turkey United Arab Emirates United Kingdom MySybase About Sybase Products Solutions ... eShop This document was: Needs Work Fair Excellent
    Designing and Programming Java in the Database Self Assessment of JDBC prerequisites
    This self-assessment has been created to help you determine whether you have sufficient JDBC knowledge to benefit fully from the "Designing and Programming Java in the database" course. Even if you do not score highly in this assessment you may still wish to attend the class as there is only one module in the class on JDBC. The self-assessment consists of three parts:
  • General questions that indicate the area of JDBC knowledge required. If you can answer "yes" to these questions, you are probably ready for the "Designing and Programming Java in the database course". The next two parts will help you pinpoint any areas you need to revise. A programming assessment. You should try to complete this application unless you are quite sure you have completed something at least this complex in the recent past.
  • 116. An Introduction To Object-Oriented Programming In Python LG #56
    which belongs to a class.) This program (text version) ! /usr/bin/python house2.py Another house. class House def init(self, number, rooms
    http://www.linuxgazette.com/issue56/orr.html
    "Linux Gazette... making Linux just a little more fun!
    An Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming in Python
    By Michael Orr
    Somebody asked Michael Williams if he could do Python and Java versions of his article An Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming in C++ . Here's a Python version of the code. I'll comment on the differences between C++ and Python. Perhaps somebody else can write a Java version? I am assuming you know the basics of Python. If not, see the excellent Tutorial and the other documentation at http://www.python.org/doc/
    Houses and more houses
    To represent Michael's house (in section Classy! in the C++ article), we can use the following code: ( text version If we run it, it prints: My house is number 40 It has 8 rooms It has a garden What does this program do? First, we define what a generic house is in the class block. pass means "do nothing" and is required if the block would otherwise be empty. Then we create an instance (that is, a particular house) by calling the class name as if it were a function. The house is then stored in the variable This house initially has no attributesif we were to query my_house.number

    117. Programming: C Coding Tip: Self-manage Data Buffer Memory
    required for the buffers, which may cause several fundamental problems for constructing complex C programs. This article advocates a selfmanaging, abstract
    http://librenix.com/?inode=3832

    118. Chapter 14. Test-First Programming
    TestFirst programming. most recent call last) File C\docbook\dip\py\roman\stage1\romantest1.py , line 148, in testToRomanCase self.assertEqual(numeral
    http://diveintopython.org/unit_testing/stage_1.html
    You are here: Home Dive Into Python Test-First Programming
    Dive Into Python
    Python from novice to pro Find:
    Chapter 14. Test-First Programming
    roman.py , stage 1
    Now that the unit tests are complete, it's time to start writing the code that the test cases are attempting to test. You're going to do this in stages, so you can see all the unit tests fail, then watch them pass one by one as you fill in the gaps in roman.py
    Example 14.1. roman1.py
    This file is available in py/roman/stage1/ in the examples directory. If you have not already done so, you can download this and other examples used in this book. """Convert to and from Roman numerals""" #Define exceptions class RomanError (Exception): pass class OutOfRangeError(RomanError): pass class NotIntegerError(RomanError): pass class InvalidRomanNumeralError (RomanError): pass def toRoman (n): """convert integer to Roman numeral""" pass def fromRoman (s): """convert Roman numeral to integer""" pass This is how you define your own custom exceptions in Python . Exceptions are classes, and you create your own by subclassing existing exceptions. It is strongly recommended (but not required) that you subclass

    119. Salon Technology | Vernor Vinge, Online Prophet
    to upgrade themselves. selfprogramming computers will have, argues Vinge, a learning curve that points straight up. In a very short
    http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/1999/04/05/vinge/index1.html

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    Most writers, even science fiction writers, tend to reflect in their writing the status quo of the era in which they live. But the plot choices Vinge made in "A Deepness in the Sky" primarily, his decision to make the novel a "prequel" to "A Fire Upon the Deep" plunged him into a unique quandary. During the seven years Vinge spent writing "A Deepness in the Sky," the rate of technological change in his own world accelerated. But Vinge was reluctant to let real-world technological change contaminate his fiction: To do so, he worried, would run the risk of incorporating massive inconsistencies in his future-history timeline. For example, readers might find it strange to encounter an analog to the World Wide Web in "A Deepness in the Sky" when the best that "A Fire Upon the Deep" could manage was a lame incarnation of Usenet. "I had a big problem," says Vinge. "I had to back off from certain things, like anything Internet-like. It was a very big challenge, but it was fun."

    120. Interrupts, Programming Languages And Self-awarenes
    next up previous Next Formulas Up Machine selfawareness Previous Machine self-awareness. Interrupts, programming languages and self-awarenes.
    http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/selfaware/node5.html
    Next: Formulas Up: Machine self-awareness Previous: Machine self-awareness

    Interrupts, programming languages and self-awarenes
    Consider a persistent program driving a car that is subject to observation and modification by a higher level program. We mentioned the human example of noticing that cigarettes are wanted and available. The higher level program must observe and modify the state of the driving program. It seems that a clock interrupt activating the higher level program is all we need from the hardware. We need considerably more from the software and from the programming languages. A cursory glance at the interrupt handling facilities of C, Ada, Java, and Forth suggests that they are suitable for handling interrupts of high level processes by low level processes that buffer the transfer of information. Lisp and Smalltalk can handle interrupts, but have no standard facilities. My opinion, subject to correction, is that self-awareness of the kinds proposed in this note will require higher level programming language facilities whose nature may be presently unknown. They will be implemented by the present machine language facilities. However, one feature of Lisp, that programs are data, and their abstract syntax is directly represented, is likely to be necessary for programs that examine themselves and their subprograms. This feature of Lisp hasn't been much used except in macros and has been abandoned in more recent programming languagesin my opinion mistakenly.

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