November 2010 Archives

Hair Brain Idea of the Year

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Looking north through the entrance hall of the...It's the season.  Busy, busy, busy!

The last few weeks have been crazy:  the Haunted House extravaganza for Halloween (we do it up big here in the hood), a three day business trip to the east coast, a two week vacation to Budapest and Prague, returning home to put away the Halloween Haunted House and set up the Christmas decorations, create the holiday cards, the 2011 gift calendars, the newsletter, fold/stuff/stamp/seal/mail the cards and newsletters (huge task), jump online for the gift-giving rituals, then the Thanksgiving meal...

Today, the cleaning crew is finally back. Thank goodness!! (They missed last month because of vacation plans.)  The house is one giant dust bunny and fur ball all rolled into one.  My allergies have been insane.  I'm almost finished with the laundry now.  The last load of clothes is in the drier.

To finish the holiday gift shopping I had to run to the Apple Store to get the Sistoid Unit's gift.  (No worries.  She already knows what she's getting from me—an iPod Touch, so she can Facetime me and mother.)  The Apple Stores are always much too close to where I live!  This one is at Manhattan Village Mall.

No one in their right mind wants to go to a mall on Black Friday:  the crowds, the rudeness, the snatch and grab, the ill humor, the parking fiascos.  Manhattan Village Mall isn't a large mall at all, but the parking is always hell on earth!  I was so not looking forward to this quick one-stop shopping trip.  I got there and found a parking space with no difficulty!!  But then...

Oh!  For Pete's Sake!

Who in their right mind?!

What a wretched, horrid, bad, bad, bad idea!!!!!!!!!

On this, the worst day on earth to shop at a mall, the Manhattan Village Mall decided to have a full blown parade IN THEIR PARKING LOT?!  The high school marching band, the police cars, the fire trucks (yes, there were two of them in the parade), the little security Segway, the little three-wheeled security vehicles, throwing candy...

I couldn't even back out of my parking space.  The whole parking lot was grid locked.  People, blocked in the one way parking lane, were trying to turn around, which was so obviously impossible--three cars.  Now they were stuck!  Duh!  Nobody could move because of this stupid parade blocking the main artery of the parking lot!

Go ahead, call me Scrooge.  This was THE most hair brain idea of the year!  Who ever planned this on the busiest shopping day of the year had to be high on cocaine!

Insanity!

Time to fold the laundry.  :)

We Need a Populist Movement-Part 2: Governance

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Follow the money.

I personally think that our nation's government has never been so broken or dysfunctional in my lifetime. And I completely agree with Larry Lessig on the cause: Congress is beholden to corporate interests above all else because their expensive elections are funded by corporate donations. This is the root cause; therefore, fixing how elections are funded is step one--priority one.

To say I was flabbergasted and horrified by the Supreme Court's decision to allow corporations to make unfettered and undisclosed contributions to our elected officials would be an understatement!

I truly am naïve enough to believe deeply in "We the people..."  We are a noisy bunch, filled with conflicted interests and ideas, but basically I think people believe in taking care of people.  Corporate interests believe in increasing profits, and all too often their focus is just on this quarter.  The future be damned.

And, regrettably, those who run the increasing number of "too big to fail" transglobal companies in this nation (another huge mistake) are raking in disproportionate levels of income.  I'm sorry, but in the world according to Tim, unless one cures cancer or AIDS or provides humankind with a clean way to live fossil fuel-free or some other noble gift to our species, no one is worth an annual income of $10 million or more--no one: not me, not you, not anyone else.

So how to address this mess in which we find ourselves:  government caring more about monied interests than the average person on the street?  I'm advocating for a populist movement:  support the Fair Elections Now Act.  You can learn more about it at Fix Congress First.  Fix Congress First has no political agenda, no party affiliation.  It's only focus is correcting how we fund our elections.

Until we return government back to "We the people..." we will continue to see our elected officials serve as the puppets of monied interests and not the people of this nation.

In the next day or two I'll publish another in this series.

Related Posts at tt.us

 

The Earth... Shook... Under My Feet

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Well, we had a little earthquake last night: magnitude 2.4. I find them to have personalities. This one shook the house in what felt like a north/south direction and actually originated just a few miles south of the house, out in the bay itself.  (Click to enlarge.)

Related articles @ tt.us

• My Malaga Cove Time Lapse 1
• My Malaga Cove Time Lapse 2
• Sunset in Rancho Palos Verdes

 

We Need a Populist Movement-Part 1: Healthcare

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Deadly Spin Healthcare
I saw Keith Olbermann's show (see the clip at this link) where he hosted Michael Moore, producer of Sicko, and Wendell Potter, former Vice President of corporate communications at CIGNA, one of the United States' largest health insurance companies, and author of Deadly Spin. Potter apologized to Moore for his massive, industry-funded, carefully-crafted efforts to discredit him and his movie. Potter goes on to say that Sicko is indeed factually correct, and the insurance industry feared that the movie would create a populist uprising against the detestable insurance industry whose practices actually kill tens of thousands of decent, hard working Americans every year.

The fact that the insurance industry has been so successful in keeping Americans from embracing substantive, deep healthcare reform in this country astounds me beyond belief.  It's not even healthcare.  It's a gravy train for insurance investors.

This fabricated bogus label, "Obama-care," is such a farce!  Obama's successful healthcare initiative didn't go far enough!  Currently "Super Wealthy (and they're republicans as Deadly Spin reveals) Capitalist Assholes Getting Even Richer While You Die-care" is what we actually have until the healthcare reform kicks in.  The industry maximizes profits when they deny your claims.  And the loud-mouthed Tea Party wants to give these fat cats what they want?!  Another well-funded farce front group for monied interests.

What of the deficit? Fix it on the back of those making the most money.  Oh, but wait!  They will start squealing about losing jobs?!  What a hoax!  Always calling it anything but what it really is.

America needs a massive, populist movement that demands we balance the budget, not by hurting the average guy on the street, but by reeling in the defense department's out of control spending, among other "security" budgets, farm corn subsidies (which are wrecking the health of this nation!), etc..  Interestingly, this is exactly what a huge percentage of people on Twitter actually think according to this non-scientific survey by the New York Times on what Americans think we should do to balance the budget  (source:  link).  Click to enlarge.

 

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Real people all over this country are sick of capitalism running out of control and hurting the good, common people of this country.

Update:  Michael Moore published this (in part) to his blog on Thanksgiving day.  I don't know Michael, but I think he would be a fascinating person with whom to chat.

All that money spent smearing me because they thought you would get up from your theater seat and start a revolution.

It's a great compliment to you. They fear the power you have. But that's 'cause they're good at math. They know there will always be more of us than there are of them. And unless they can repeal "one person, one vote," they know they are doomed. In the meantime they will try to maintain the power they have by buying off politicians, dumbing us down, distracting us with Dancing/Ice Skating/Drinking with the Stars and getting us so scared we'll acquiesce to having naked pictures taken of us at airports this Thanksgiving weekend. Over the river and through the body scan, to grandmother's house we go...

So let us give thanks tomorrow that the richest 1% begrudgingly know that we are still, on paper at least, in charge. It is, I believe, a glimmer of hope of what we could possibly accomplish in the coming new year.

Source:  Last Thoughts Before the Turkey Comes Calling

 

In the next day or two I'll publish another "We the People...".

Related Posts at tt.us

 

Post Number: 2,500!!!

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Now, I've actually written a lot more than 2,500 posts here at tt.us over the past 6 years, but a good number of them never got published for one reason or another:  they became old news before I finished the post, I was venting and then reconsidered, I waxed insane and recanted...  The list goes on.

So what is Post #2,500 to herald? (I have no idea why I feel it deserves some level of distinction!)

After careful thought and consideration (not!) it turns out this post will be about current events:  The TSA.  I bring you this cartoon from The New Yorker with a concluding thought.

The thought:  Security is an illusion.  It simply doesn't exist.  And with the tawdry junk talk, the man who dropped his trousers and stood there in his underwear, the  poor man whose medical device was yanked from his body leaking urine all over him in front of everyone while he tried to get the TSA to stop before the incident happened, the other cancer survivor made to remove her prosthetic breast for inspection, the pilots union's worries of extended and excessive exposure to harmful levels of radiation from the imaging systems, the list could go on and on...   we have the security scanning option pictured above (source: The New Yorker).

How long will it take before some man or woman boards a plane with something explosive located in a body cavity?  What then, I ask?!

The absurdity needs to stop. Risk is everywhere. Get accustomed to it.

 

A House by the Park

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Mike Davidson (of Mike Industries) created a blog documenting his "first-hand chronology of the design, planning, and construction of a modern home in Seattle."  He leaves no stone unturned as he presents the cost of every aspect of the project, frequent posts throughout the project from planning to tear down to completion, complete with a time lapse of the entire event.

This isn't just a blog.  It's a journey! It's massive — lots of great pictures (fixtures, wiring...), lots of granular detail.

I've followed his journey on and off over the course of the year.  Now he has a gorgeous home in Seattle, with stunning views, and he let the world follow along.  Thinking about building?  You'll want to explore his blog, "A House by the Park."

Awesome!

 

Nifty Mac Über Tip

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Everyone knows that in 10.6 you can do a Quick Look on most files without opening them in the application that created them by simply selecting a file (one click) and then touching the spacebar. I love this feature and use it all of the time.  It was first introduced in 10.5.

But I didn't know that you can use the [Option] key to zoom in on the Quick Look and the [Option] + [Shift] keys to zoom out on a Quick Look and can even move around in zoomed images during Quick Look using two fingers on the Trackpad.

Nifty

 

Thank Goodness for MediaTemple

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My hosting service is MediaTemple. They have 24 hour phone support. They are awesome about helping the techno-illiterate, like me.

When I was in Budapest and Prague last week, I published 61 pictures, and my blog publishing platform on the MovableType side went berserk! Every time I would attempt to do anything, MT would log me out. I had never had this happen before and was clueless.

This morning, in my jet lag induced quasi-stupor, I decided I had to fix this problem. O horror!

Amazingly, I was able to determine that a specific table (mt_session) in my mySQL database for MT4 was corrupted and needed to be repaired. But I have no idea to repair a mySQL database table. In desperation I called MediaTemple.

As I feared, this was "outside the scope of support," but the guy did it anyway and walked me through what to do if (when) this happens again.

Awesome!  Now I can publish some of the pictures from Prague!

/div>

 

Can't I Change My Mind?

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I know I've sworn for decades (ok, at least in internet years) that I would never have a Facebook account.  I blogged about it.  I've given good reason for why I would never do it.  But, well...

Damn!

I'm using it as a tool to keep in touch with people I would otherwise never have the opportunity to keep up with in this busy world.  And, hopefully, with a new WP plugin, (thanks to Dan for the idea) every time I publish to my blog, the plugin will also cross publish to my Facebook wall.  It will take me some time to work out the kinks and learn the flow of Facebook.  We'll just see how it goes...

 

Budapest & Prague: Day Eight (Karlovy Vary)

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On the final day, our tour guide, Veronika, took us to Karlovy Vary, a beautiful little town nestled into the idyllic hills of the northwest Czech Republic. This is such an interesting place. You can see the mountains of Germany just a few miles away. One of the buildings was used in a James Bond movie. Many of the new hotels, owned by wealthy Russians, are completely empty. Hot springs abound, and this is a favored spa town. This is also the playground for the extremely wealthy: tragically, no street-side cafés or coffee shops dotting the riverwalk, only expensive jewelry stores and Moher china. (The factory is just a few miles away!)

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Budapest & Prague: Day Seven (Roaming about Prague)

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On the seventh day God rested, but Tim took to the streets of Prague shooting pictures at every turn. Here are just a few.

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Budapest & Prague: Day Six (Czech Castles)

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Today involved a lot of driving as we set out to see two castles with Margarita. We ended up going to three of them as the first one was (as is typical at this time of year) closed for the season—time for cleaning and maintenance. Rain was in the forecast, but, as you can see, instead, the entire day was blanketed with an intense fog that made everything look very mysterious. I loved it!

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Budapest & Prague: Day Five (Prague)

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Today was the first day in Prague, and our guide, Tony, who fluently speaks 5 different languages, started us at the Prague Castle and walked us down the hill to the Old Town Square, the location of the hotel—thank goodness!

Narrowing down the number of pictures I'm sharing in the next several posts (65 all total) was all but painful (I started with nearly 400 of the nearly 600 photos I shot in the Czech Republic.) Click on any picture below to see a larger version of it and read information about it. Hover your mouse over a picture to read a limited amount of information about the picture.

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Badapest & Prague: Day Four (Travel Day to Prague)

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Today began with a quick walk back to the Opera House district to take a picture of the Liszt statue.  Then, off to the airport to head to Prague.  This post (finally) contains some of the pictures I shot around Budapest.

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Budapest & Prague: Day Three (17,508 @ 8.45 in Budapest)

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Today was self-directed exploration.  The forecast called for rain, but that didn't stop me.  Rain jacket packed in the camera backpack, and off I went.  Thankfully, it never rained, and the overcast made for nice lighting.

The day began gray and a bit misty but quickly became just heavily overcast.  I walked over the Chain Bridge, shooting pictures along the way.  Then I took the Funicular up the steep, ancient city wall to the Old Palace area atop the hill and spent the day meandering about shooting pictures.

I thought about going into the underground labyrinth.  Budapest is full of caves.  But the entrance smelled incredibly musty, and the acoustics were very, very loud.  A group of incredibly rambunctious children would have entered at the same time I pondered going in; so, that settled it.  I wasn't in the mood for all of that energy.

After a late Hungarian lunch, with a very friendly waiter who wanted his picture taken, back to Pest.  At this point the sun began to peek out from the clouds and cast an interesting setting light on the beautiful old buildings across the Danube in Pest.  After a quick rest, I was off to the eclectic part of town where the Opera House is, the theater section, and an area where people from the university hang out in unique cafe's and restaurants.

I had dinner at Bohemia.  This area really is unique in the heart of the city:  a park lined with cafes where one would expect to find a street.  The main feature of the park is a large statue of Franz Liszt.

Today I walked 17,508 steps which accounted for 8.45 miles.  I was exhausted!

Budapest & Prague: Day Two (Budapest)

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Today we spent over 5 hours on a private tour of Budapest.  Our guide, Karyn, and driver were excellent, making for a spectacular experience.  Here's just a bit...

The Jewish Ghetto
I think one of the most powerful things that will remain with me from today was hearing about and seeing the Jewish history in the Jewish Ghetto--the area where the Jews were basically imprisoned in Budapest during the Nazi occupation.  You could still see a small area of the Nazi wall that once forced over a million Jewish people to live and die in such a small confined area.  And these were the Jewish people that were spared death in the concentration camps.  The Jewish people in the Hungarian countryside were all sent to the gas chambers.

Shoes Memorial
The Shoe Memorial was very powerful and horrifically disturbing.  Along the edge of the riverwalk of the Danube, near the Parliament, is a small area of bronzed shoes.  This memorial honors the memory of the men, women, and children that the Nazis marched to the river's edge in 1944 and 1945, made them take off their shoes and coats, and then shot them so their bodies would fall into the Danube to be washed away by the swift currents.

I have such a hard time understanding how things could ever get like that.  Then I remember that genocide still takes place today.  What of humanity?

St. Stephen's Basilica
When I arrived at the hotel last night, I went walking briefly, on a quest for dinner.  (By the way, the Goulash Soup and Hungarian Pancakes at the Bazilika restaurant at St. Stephen's square are to die for!!) I stumbled onto St. Stephen's Basilica and a violinist performing in the square.  Today, I went inside the basilica.  To say it is gorgeous is a huge understatement!

St. Stephen was the countries first king.  He was given his crown by the Pope de jour and was canonized.  Basically, he was the head of the Catholic church and the state.  His crown, handed down to every subsequent king, was smuggled to US forces during the conquest of Hungary during the World War in an effort to save it from looting and was actually stored at Fort Knox.  President Jimmy Carter returned it, amid great fanfare, to the Hungarian people during his presidency.

The Citadel & the Nearby Baths
The Citadel, once a fort that was used by Hungarian enemies to shell the city (some of the soviet guns are still on display there) is a popular park in Hungary that overlooks the Pesh side of the river.  The views from here are spectacular.

Near the Citadel is one of the area's several baths.  Intensely hot water naturally comes from deep in the earth and is channeled into baths in several parts of the city.  (The Hungarians also use it for heating.) In one area, the water comes up from the ground at an astounding 181º!  Doctors frequently write prescriptions for treatments at the baths, and many people go to them for day spa treatments.  The baths are frequented by those seeking relief from rheumatoid arthritis.

The Old Palace
Atop the hills of Buda sits the 1,400 room Royal Palace.  It, like so much of the city, was once occupied by the Nazis.  Outside it appears grand and spectacular.  Now an art gallery, inside, it is anything but.  On the other side of the old city center is the impressive cathedral, the Matthias Church, and the Fisherman's Bastion with 7 turrets, one for each of the founding tribes.  The pictures of Pesh from up here, across the Danube, are remarkable.

Communism
According to our guide, the Hungarian people feel they are better off today, even with the global recssion, than they were during communism.  When the communist ruled Hungary, they could not travel freely.  They could only eat Hungarian food (International foods were banned; so, they didn't have Chinese or Mexican restaurants and didn't even know what those foods tasted like.  Two Mexican restaurants now thrive in Budapest.)

The communists strongly discouraged the arts, but today the artistic community once again thrives.  Perhaps the arts are now seen as a statement of freedom and self expression against so many years of oppression. Extremely talented musicians of all ages were frequently seen and heard playing their instruments on the streets--the great classic literature as well as beautiful ethnic musical styles I had never heard (or instruments I had never seen) before.

The National Opera House, partially owned at one time by Franz Liszt who happened to live just a block or two down the street in an extremely gorgeous and large home, is heavily subsidized by the government.  Tickets are between 2 and 35 euro, making attending the opera less expensive than going to a movie.  As a result, performances at the Opera House are always sold out.

Bullet Holes and Bombed Buildings
The city is undergoing a great transformation.  Many of the old and spectacularly gorgeous buildings, once nationalized, fell into a horrid state of disrepair but are being privatized and restored today.  The New York Building is an example, as well as the hotel in which I am staying, The Four Seasons, formerly The Gresham Building.  The architectural styles of their history are nothing short of stunning.  Many of the buildings are completely redone on the inside and look new on the outside, having been cleaned of a century or more of dirt.

Some of these buildings still have large bullet holes in them from the world war.  And in between some of these stunningly gorgeous buildings, many of which are old mansions from wealthy eras gone by, you can find hideous (typical soviet styled) buildings built by the communists to replace the buildings that were completely bombed out during the World War.  Soviet architecture was all about utility and function, not form.

From the moment I arrived, I often felt as though I were in Paris.  Karyn said that the influence of the French baroque architectural style has been significant here.  In fact, Budapest, on the Pesh side, is commonly referred to as the Hungarian Paris.  Several Hollywood movies have been filmed here when the story is said to be in Paris, because the city is virtually indistinguishable from Paris and the cost of filming, and living, here is so affordable--by comparison, it's still astoundingly cheap!  A 2 bedroom, 1 bath apartment in the prime city center near the Opera House would sell for only about 250,000 euro, even today!

Gruesome History
This small nation has lost over half of its population and land size "by being on the wrong side of just about every war in history." I was surprised to learn that it originally was not land locked!  The reminders of their history are everywhere, from the bullet riddled buildings, the old soviet styled architecture that replaced the buildings bombed out by the Nazis, the "graveyard of old soviet statues" (now on the outskirts of town) that once littered the city, to the ancient walled old palace center in Buda.

These people have a broader historical perspective we in the US would do well to understand.

Cleveland, Yes: Ohio
Interestingly, Budapest, the capitol city of Hungary, is by far the largest city in the country of Hungary. The second largest Hungarian community lives in Cleveland, Ohio, the result of two enormous waves of immigration into the United States, making the size of the Hungarian community in Cleveland almost as large as their nation's capitol. I was unaware of how many Hungarian people have been assimilated in the US entertainment industry:  Tony Curtis (who recently passed away), Liberace, and Zsa Zsa Gabor.  One of my mother's favorite perfumes (Estée Lauder) is made by the Lauder family, a prominent, wealthy Hungarian family.

Nobel Prizes
The Hungarians take great pride in and place significant emphasis on education.  Even though Hungary is a relatively small country, they are delighted to claim the greatest number of Nobel Prizes per capita of any nation in the world.

Temperament
I found the temperament of the Hungarian people to be delightful.  Here in Budapest, many people now speak English fluently.  They are friendly and well aware, for better or worse, of American culture. (For example:  The hotel desk clerk made frequent jokes about me being Mike Tyson and said he was going to spread the rumor that Mike Tyson was in the building.)

The people seemed to enjoy being outside (The weather today was utterly flawless!) and appear to be in no hurry at all.  Many people were strolling about downtown, in the parks, and along the River Danube.  The people at the hotel have gone out of their way to be helpful and accommodating.  Despite the horror of their history, maybe even because of it, they seem happier and more optimistic than people in the US.

Nightfall on the Danube
The city is beautifully lit at night. However, the lighting source, unlike any I've ever encountered before, casts an unusual and intense orange tint to all of the images I shot.  I had to color correct them all for tungsten lighting to get the correct color balance.  None the less, the city view is gorgeous along the river.

Budapest & Prague: Day One (Travel Day to Budapest)

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Today was a travel day:  from Los Angeles through Paris and on to Budapest via Air France and then Malev.  The food on the Air France flight was the best I've ever had on a plane.  Superb!  The temperature on the plane was so hot though, I couldn't sleep at all.  During breakfast I asked the flight attendant if he could please turn the heat down.  He immediately did.  Goodness!  I should have asked hours earlier!

Charles de Gaulle is such an enormous airport—no, I mean HUGE!  During the time I walked from terminal 3E to 3D I aged about 3 weeks!  It seemed like miles and miles!

Apparently luggage never makes it from Paris to Budapest on time.  A lady originally from Budapest, who now lives in Florida, said her luggage has never made it on the plane with her from any country, and she's tried every possible connection in search of a solution to this problem.  The paperwork process for getting your lost luggage is rather amusing!  Hopefully my luggage will arrive in the night. (It did:  at 3:00AM.)

The hotel, The Four Seasons, formerly the Gresham Building, an insurance company, is utterly spectacular, with the perfect location—a stunning view of the Danube and Buda on the other side of the river.  (The picture in this post is from the lobby.)  I am eager to start taking pictures!

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This page is an archive of entries from November 2010 listed from newest to oldest.

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I believe we need to return government to "of the people, by the people, and for the people"—not a radically new idea, really.

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