These Startups Offer Sleek Technological Innovations for the Elderly

Whether we’re talking about Snapchat, Twitter, or Uber, most start-ups focus on technologies for young folks. But Katy Fike, a 35-year-old former investment banker who holds a Ph.D. in gerontology (aka, the study of aging), thought an important opportunity to offer innovative services for the elderly was being missed.
So she, along with Stephen Johnston, who once worked in the mobile phone industry, she started Aging2.0, a start-up incubator that supports businesses working on solutions to the challenges facing the elderly. Fike told Cat Wise of the PBS NewsHour, “The past products for seniors have been what we call big, beige and boring.” The inventors and start-ups working with Aging2.0 aim to change that.
Lively is one such company, offering technology that lets family members unobtrusively check on elderly relatives who live independently. Users place sensors throughout the house that indicate when the elderly person is engaging in his or her regular routine — walking the dog, going to exercise class, and taking medications, for example. If the user misses one of the regular portions of his or her routine, the Lively website will indicate this so a remote family member can check in to see if everything is okay.
Other new technology products targeted toward the elderly include BrainAid, a web-based application that offers memory exercises, and Sabi, a company designing walking canes, pill boxes and pill splitters to be more attractive and user-friendly. Through Lift Hero, elderly people can arrange for rides from off-duty EMTs and medical professional drivers so they know they’ll arrive at their destination safely.
Aging2.0 is based in San Francisco at The Institute on Aging, a nonprofit senior center, so entrepreneurs can learn from the people they’re designing for, and get advice from seniors such as 81-year-old June Fisher, a product design lecturer at Stanford and Aging 2.0’s Chief Elder Executive. “We see real potential to bring in the technology folks, bring in the investors, bring in the designers, because I think the more smart brains we have thinking about and looking for new solutions, the better we will all be,” Fike said. Now that’s putting our elders’ wisdom to good use.
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This Novel Concept Works to Cook Up Successful Eateries

Many gifted cooks, encouraged by the praise of enthusiastic and well-fed family members, dream of starting their own restaurants. But between purchasing food, renting a commercial space, paying fees for licensing, decorating the interior, paying the waitstaff, and the countless other expenses associated with opening an eatery, it’s an understatement to say that being a restauranteur is expensive.
And for low-income people, the costs associated with getting into the food business can be prohibitive. That’s why there are now about 150 kitchen incubators across the country,” according to Melissa Pandika of Ozy Magazine.
These kitchen incubators help low-income people share their culinary gifts and navigate the complex laws and paperwork required to sell food to the public. They work much like business incubators for entrepreneurs — providing workspace, support, and mentorship to participants.
One successful kitchen incubator is La Cocina, located in the Mission District of San Francisco. La Cocina’s executive director Caleb Zigas noticed that many immigrant and low-income women were running food businesses illegally, whipping up batches of burritos or empanadas at home and selling them on street corners. Why not help them form a legitimate business, he thought, “transitioning from informal to formal,” as the motto on La Cocina’s homepage states.
La Cocina screens prospective low-income restaurateurs to help those most likely to succeed on the basis of solid business plans, enthusiasm, and delicious food. Each year, La Cocina admits 12 new businesses  to begin a six-month training period, followed by a two-to-five-year period of support as the chefs get their businesses up and running. Since La Cocina started in 2005, 15 businesses have successfully launched, including Veronica Salazar’s El Hurache Loco, which employs 19 people and earned $1.2 million its first year.
Zigas told Pandika, “A program like ours really recalibrates the opportunity index. You can say to the people who live in your city, ‘It’s hard but anybody can do it.’ That’s often not true because so many opportunities require wealth and capital. We try to eliminate that.” So the next time you enjoy authentic street tacos, Ethiopian delicacies, or Vietnamese spring rolls, you might have a kitchen incubator to thank.
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How an Innovative Parking Program May Cut Downtown Traffic by One Third

In most towns and cities, parking meters are considered the third rail of urban politics. Just the mention of meters and rate increases spawned recent protests in Chicago, Buenos Aires and Cape Verde, an island off the coast of Africa. Others have gone further: When Coogee, a resort town outside of Sydney, Australia, proposed installing meters, protesters tried to earn a spot in the Guinness World Records book by making the largest human-formed “NO” ever recorded. And when the town of Lewes, in East Sussex, England, installed meters in 2004, someone in the area responded by blowing up 14 meters, causing more than £20,000 worth of damage. As Donald Shoup, a professor of urban planning at the University of California, Los Angeles, and one of the leading thinkers on parking, puts it: “I think people use the reptilian cortex of the brain to think about parking. It’s the most primitive part of the brain, for making fight or flight decisions, and it deals with territorial decisions. Parking is a territorial issue.”

No one likes to pay for parking — even Shoup. But when cities don’t charge a reasonable rate at meters, we end up with more traffic on the road and fewer people shopping at neighborhood businesses.
Here’s why: Most towns and cities, when they install meters, charge the same amount for every neighborhood, no matter the time of day. That might seem fair at first glance, but it goes against the basic principle of supply and demand. While the supply always stays the same, different neighborhoods draw different numbers of people, and that demand changes by the time of day, day of week and by the month and season.
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And getting prices wrong causes major problems. If, for example, a city starts charging a high meter rate in a small shopping district that receives only a modest amount of traffic, many people will refuse to pay and just drive right past. As Shoup points out, that has major detrimental effects: “Businesses will lose customers, and drivers will not take advantage of spaces that are available.” Los Angeles recently experienced this exact problem. “When they doubled the price of parking in the city,” Shoup says, “you could see entire blocks that were empty.”
If, on the other hand, you charge a below-market rate for a popular district, you have the opposite problem — people will stay parked in the spots all day. Phil Lesser, a business owner in San Francisco’s popular Mission District and the vice president of government/media relations for the Mission Merchants Association, says his fellow business owners fear that exact problem: “Street parking has always been a key component of commercial corridors. If [customers] come down and can’t find a spot and leave, that doesn’t help the merchants.”
Beyond that, the cheap on-street prices means that drivers will just keep circling the block until a space becomes free, which not only contributes to pollution but also creates traffic problems: Studies have shown that as much as 30 percent of all traffic in downtown areas is caused by drivers hunting for parking spaces. That traffic is further exacerbated in the evenings, because parking is often free after 6 p.m. What happens when parking is free? Drivers start hunting for spaces at 5:30 and 5:45 p.m., circling the block in the middle of rush hour — making things particularly hellish for traffic-mired cities. Shoup and his students did a parking study in one small neighborhood in Los Angeles that found that the highest levels of space-hunting happened between 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. “The city’s parking policy was congesting traffic at the very time people wanted to drive home,” he says. “The city is telling you to idle in traffic at the very time people want to go home.”
The solution, argues Shoup, is a pretty simple one: Make prices for on-street parking dynamic, or more like the prices for hotels or flights. An area that sees a ton of interest — a popular shopping district during the afternoon, for example — would have higher meter rates than a quieter neighborhood. A few blocks away, on a quieter street, the rates would be cheaper, enticing people to the area. Those prices would fluctuate, depending on the time of day and the season of the year to ensure that a few parking spaces are always available.
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In 2011, San Francisco implemented a dynamic-pricing pilot program in a few neighborhoods with the help of a $19.8 million federal grant. The program, which the city dubbed “SFpark,” installed smart meters that would change pricing for morning, afternoons and evenings, with the goal of trying to reach a target of having streets around 85 percent full. Today, if you want to park down by the popular Ferry Building on Saturday afternoon, you can expect to pony up $4.50 per hour. Willing to walk a few blocks? You might only pay $1.00 per hour.
Lesser of the Mission Merchants Association says that the business owners were initially “wary” of the plan, as were many people — San Francisco residents feared that the new rate system was an attempt to jack up rates and boost parking revenue. That hasn’t come to pass. Rates, which used to average $2.73 per hour across the city, now average only $2.41 — a drop of 12 percent. Depending on the neighborhood and time of day, the rate varies from $0.25 per hour  to $6.00 per hour. Every few weeks, the parking authority tweaks the rates to try to hit their targeted ratio. “After 13 rate changes, we’ve seen zero complaints,” says Jay Primus, manager of the program. “In a town like San Francisco, people would let us know [if they had complaints].”
Revenue from the parking meters is up slightly, but the new system — which makes it finally easy to find and pay for a space — has drastically cut down on parking tickets. “We dramatically reduced the number of parking tickets, which is great for our customers,” Primus says. “Anecdotally, what we’ve heard is that people are much happier because, finally, parking is easier to find and easier to pay for.” The shop owners, too, have welcomed the program. “Anything that will help people find parking and get them out of their cars — we’re all in favor of that,” says Lesser. “We’d like it if all our neighbors could live above us and walk or bike to us, but the automobile is still an integral part to people’s lives.”
Primus and SFpark are currently finalizing a report on the pilot program’s results, which will be released in June. While Primus is unable to reveal the data until then, he does tell me that San Francisco has become a popular stop for delegations from American and international cities struggling to manage their own parking. Los Angeles, Berkeley, Calif., and Seattle have started small pilots with the help of local and federal grants, while Rio de Janeiro — which is currently trying to clean up its infrastructure for the 2016 Olympic Games — sent representatives who were enthused by SFpark. “They made the pitch to the mayor [of Rio], and the mayor just loved it,” says Shoup, who also met with the Rio representatives. “They recommended 7,000 meters, and the mayor said no — 20,000. They just put out a request-for-proposal. A parking system would be a legacy of the Games.”
In the end, instituting a supply-and-demand system for parking might be the easiest and cheapest way to reduce traffic. “Every big city has parking,” Primus says, “and almost every city has parking management infrastructure — and changing how a city manages that system is a very powerful way to achieve their goals. It’s easy in a sense that it’s more policy- and technology-based, and not infrastructure. It’s cheaper than building a subway network.”
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How One Brilliant Idea Could Help Solve Two Big Problems in San Francisco

The San Francisco’s Mayor’s office posed a challenge: What can be done to utilize the more than 506,000 tons of clothes and other textiles that end up in California landfills each year? Paula Luu had a great answer.

As a part of Improve SF — an initiative aimed to create opportunities for citizens and government officials to work together to solve problems in the community — Luu came up with an idea for a business called Coming Home Goods, an organization that upcycles post-consumer textiles such as clothing, blankets, towels and more into home furnishings like handmade rugs, quilts and pillow covers. But that’s not all this business does. It also focuses on helping alleviate another issue that plagues the community: Unemployment among the formerly incarcerated.

“The idea for creating Coming Home Goods grew from the genuine need to divert textile waste from our landfills and address the high unemployment rates among the formerly incarcerated,” Luu wrote on the Goodwill San Francisco blog. “By giving those who are re-entering society the opportunity and tools to empower themselves, they become productive and positive additions to our communities, tax dollars are saved and families stay intact.”

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In California, 70 to 80 percent of formerly incarcerated individuals are unemployed, and 78 percent of offenders end up back in prison within three years of their release. Not only is it difficult for these individuals to find work, but it’s almost impossible for them to build a stable career. To change this statistic, Coming Home Goods, which is set for launch later in 2014, has teamed up with Goodwill of San Francisco to not only repurpose their textile waste — items that are stained or not fit for resale — into useable, sellable items, but also to also connect with the formerly incarcerated through their Re-Entry Program Navigator, a transitional employment program.

Once Luu has a team in place, they will design and develop a number of products which can be duplicated and sold. Luu will train the formerly incarcerated individuals in how to make these products, hopefully providing them with stable jobs and income that can help them break the cycle of prison and poverty. The added bonus? Helping the environment. “My hope is that Coming Home Goods will serve as model for other businesses like this to follow,” Luu said. “A sustainable future depends on businesses finding profitable ways to lift and protect the people and places that make the Bay Area one of the best places in the world to live.”

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If You’re Going to San Francisco, Here’s Why You Might Need to Bring Your Own Water Bottle

The city by the bay is definitely an eco-trendsetter. After all, it was the first to institute a ban on plastic bags way back in 2007. (Several other cities and an entire state later followed suit.) It also diverts everything from recyclables to compostables and even unwanted clothes from landfills. And now, it might prohibit the disposable plastic water bottle as well.
The easy-to-transport drinking vessel is currently on the endangered species list in San Francisco. The city’s Board of Supervisors unanimously approved a measure that would ban the sale of plastic water bottles 21 ounces or smaller at events held on city property. If approved a second time by the board and the city’s mayor, the ban would go into effect starting on October 1 for indoor events and in 2016 for outdoor events, SFGate reports.
“We all know with climate change, and the importance of combating climate change, San Francisco has been leading the way to fight for our environment. That’s why I ask you to support this ordinance to reduce and discourage single-use, single-serving plastic water bottles in San Francisco,” said City Supervisor David Chiu, the author of the ordinance. “I want to remind people that not long ago, our world was not addicted to plastic water bottles. Before (the 1990s), for centuries, everybody managed to stay hydrated.”
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Could your city be next to take on this bottled environmental scourge?

How You Can Help the Homeless with a Push of a Button

A San Francisco-based startup has created a new online platform called HandUp that allows donors to directly help a homeless person through text messaging or web donations.
Here’s how it works: When a homeless person signs up on HandUp, they get an online profile that lists their needs, such as food, clothing or medical care. Check out HandUp member, Alvin, from the video above. After being hit by a car, he lost his front teeth and now needs dental work. He says with a new smile, he’ll try to find a job in retail so he can also finally buy the Christmas presents he owes his daughter. Donors can help Alvin — or any of the other 100 homeless people on the site — by signing up for HandUp’s secure SMS system or through the website. 100 percent of donations go straight to the member’s HandUp account. Credits can than be redeemed through HandUp’s partner, Project Homeless Connect, where members can pick up their listed necessities.
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Strong Winter Storm Bears Down On Northeastern USJohn Moore/Getty Images
Co-founder Rose Broome told Fast Company that she started the site after realizing she wanted a more efficient way to help the homeless: “Last year, I saw a woman sleeping on the sidewalk and it hit me — why can’t I push a button and transfer resources from my phone?” Since its launch, more than 100 homeless San Franciscans have set up profiles on the site. While the service is only in San Francisco, HandUp has plans to expand their service nationwide, meaning it could soon be easier than ever to help someone in need.

Don’t Put Away That Drill! Share It Instead

America’s sharing economy continues to grow, with more people renting their houses and cars. Now tool libraries are proliferating too, offering people a chance to borrow tools that they might only need for a quick project, and to learn from others about how to use them. According to Cat Johnson of Shareable, there are 60 tool libraries around the world, including the West Seattle Tool Library and Makeshift Society in San Francisco.
Some of these tool libraries offer shared workspace for handy types and classes about do-it-yourself projects. Makeshift Society recently crowd-funded a Brooklyn location that will have a lending library of tools creative workers use, such as cameras.
Gene Homicki, who co-founded the West Seattle Tool Library, found that software used for book-lending libraries didn’t work for tool libraries, so he wrote a new program called myTurn whose motto is “Rental, Sharing and Lending Made Easy.” “We have an economy that’s uneven and sputtering at times, and we have this locked-up value that’s just sitting, whether in an attic, garage, or gathering dust in a warehouse,” Homicki told Johnson. He said the tool library offers a way to “get those things out of storage, and unlock their value.” So the next time you consider buying a sander for a one-time project, look into a tool library instead.
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These Workers Are There When We Need Them. Now We’ve Got to Keep Them Safe

Day laborers—those workmen for hire you might see gathered on a street corner—are often the targets of abuse, sometimes asked to work under unsafe conditions for low pay. Many become victims of wage theft, and because many of them are immigrants or have only a limited grasp of English, they have little recourse. According to a report by Baruch College, many day laborers employed to repair the damage caused by Hurricane Sandy became sick from contact with hazardous materials. But as Claudia Torrens reports for the Associated Press, several organizations across the country are working to make conditions fairer and safer for day laborers.
The Latin Union of Chicago hosts a worker’s center to help day laborers negotiate work contracts and educate them about safety. “In street corners the agreement is only verbal. We are more organized in the center,” Jose Luis Gallardo of the Latin Union told Torres. “We want to prevent wage theft. We want both the contractor and the day laborer to sign the work agreement.” Similar organizations are found in San Francisco, Seattle, and Los Angeles.
day-laborer-1Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
New York City has three such centers, including the new Workers Justice Project in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. This nonprofit has helped 500 registered workers raise their average annual wage from $20,000 to $46,800. Representatives from this and other centers visit day laborers, educate them, and hand out gloves and masks to keep them safe.
These centers don’t only help the workers—they also help the employer find the right people for the job. Allan Suarez, whose company All Renovation works with the Workers Justice Project to find temporary help, told Torrens, “We have full faith that if we tell them we need a specific person they will bring us someone with that experience. It alleviates us from going out and trying to find someone when we have these good connections.”
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This Paper Can Heal Veterans

Artists Drew Matott and Drew Cameron started The Combat Paper Project in 2007 as a way to help veterans returning from war process their experiences by turning their old uniforms into meaningful art. Combat Paper volunteers with veterans to show them how to cut up their uniforms, beat them to a pulp, and turn them into beautiful paper which they then cover with stories and images.
The two Drews met in 2004 when Cameron returned from a deployment to Iraq and took one of Matott’s papermaking workshops in Burlington, Vt. Cameron continued his involvement in papermaking, and eventually hit upon the idea of making paper out of his old uniform. The experience was so powerful for him that he decided to offer it to others. Matott and Cameron began traveling the country, offering papermaking workshops for soldiers. Since then, Combat Paper has started paper mills in San Francisco, Nevada, New York and New Jersey.
In November, Combat Paper NJ received a $125,000 grant from the Wounded Warrior Project and a $135,000 grant from Impact 100 Garden State. Combat Paper NJ will use the money to expand its classes and develop mobile paper-making facilities to reach more veterans throughout the state. David Keefe, an Iraq War veteran and the director of Combat Paper NJ told Ralph J. Bellantoni of the Courier News, “We deconstruct, reclaim and communicate. It’s the perfect marriage of concept and medium. It transforms the material, the artist and the viewer.”
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Why Austin, Texas, Is One of the Best Places in America to Be a Stray

Faith Wright begins each day by scanning a list from the Austin Animal Center in Central Texas. The list indicates how many dogs and cats the shelter plans to put down because of space constraints. She then figures out how many kennels she has available to house them, and how quickly she’ll have to move before their hour of euthanasia arrives. It is quite literally a matter of life and death.
Wright, who is the operations manager of the advocacy group Austin Pets Alive! (APA!), and her team split up, rushing to pick up animals before their time runs out. By 10 a.m. on a sunny Monday in May, her team had taken in four puppies, two orphaned and unweaned kittens that were rushed to the “baby bottle nursery,” and four adult dogs that had been found roaming the streets abandoned and afraid.
It was a pretty typical morning for the APA!, whose work in the state capital puts it at the forefront of the national “no-kill” movement. The grassroots effort to place all adoptable dogs and cats into a loving home began in the 1980s in San Francisco, and no-kill shelters have since spread to about 500 cities and towns across the country.
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“What makes Austin stick out is its size,” Nathan Winograd, director of the No Kill Advocacy Center in Oakland, Calif., says. Austin holds the title of largest no-kill city in the country. “This is a community that takes in in the neighborhood of 23,000 animals a year…and yet it has managed to maintain a save rate [over] 90 percent for several years.”
But there are still thousands of adoptable animals being put down in Austin each year. “I’m looking at the 10 percent that aren’t making it out and that’s where my sense of urgency comes from,” says Wright.
APA! saves animals that most shelters in the United States would abandon as lost causes. For instance, each year the organization treats nearly 250 cats infected with ringworm. The disease is curable, but it’s also highly contagious, so at other shelters, these animals are typically put down. “It’s so dumb because they just need time,” says a teary-eyed Brittany Dell’Aglio-Mitchell, the ringworm ward manager at APA!
She explains how the cats in her care can, with a little boost, go on to enjoy healthy and happy lives. “Like so many animals, they just need time, and they need somebody to have their back,” she says.
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Dell’Aglio-Mitchell leads a team of volunteers who regularly scrub every enclosure in the ringworm ward at the Town Lake Animal Center — APA!’s headquarters — and bathe the cats in sulfur dip, a common treatment for ringworm. It’s not a job for the faint-of-heart. “I smell like rotten eggs,” she says, shrugging. “My car smells like rotten eggs.”
The tradeoff for the stench: the impressive drop in Austin’s kill rate, which was hovering at 85 percent 15 years ago. The success — among the most drastic turnarounds in the country — means less time and expense for local animal control officials. It also means a moral triumph for pet advocates, who see the mass slaughter of animals as senseless. They note that an estimated three to four million cats and dogs are euthanized each year in the U.S. “The overpopulation crisis and the millions of animals that are euthanized every year is a manmade problem, and the only solution comes from us, the people,” says Jason Walthall, co-president of the San Francisco Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. “If we all band together and put a little effort into this, the problem can be solved, and the United States can become a no-kill nation in a very short period of time.”
Ellen Jefferson, executive director of APA! and the person most responsible for its success, has that goal in mind. Jefferson, a veterinarian, moved to Texas from Virginia in 2001 and started volunteering at Town Lake. But she soured on the place when she realized that nearly every pet she worked with failed to leave the shelter alive. At the time, APA! had managed to bring the city’s kill rate down to about 50 percent, but its progress had stalled.
Jefferson started her own group in Austin, called Emancipet, to provide spaying and neutering services to pet owners at low cost. Then in 2008, she approached APA! and urged them to hit the gas. “When we started, we had no resources, no money, no building, no staff,” she recalls. But the no-kill message began to resonate, and APA! began to grow.
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“Nobody wanted these animals to die,” but unless people are provided with ways to help, there is no way to save lives on such a large scale, says Jefferson. “All you have to do is create opportunities and then people come forward like crazy.”
Today, APA! stays open 24 hours a day, and volunteers remain crucial to its operation. They comfort the cats in the feline leukemia ward, where remote-controlled toys, operated by cat lovers who log on to an online portal, bob back and forth. They tend to kittens in the baby bottle nursery (they name the kittens alphabetically, and last year they went through the alphabet 27 times). They take dogs on field trips and work on building-improvement projects from painting to plumbing. Some do their most valuable work at home, producing videos of foster pets and updating online marketing materials to raise community awareness of the animals in need of homes.
The problem with being a no-kill shelter is that the facilities fill up fast. At times, Town Lake has had more animals coming in than going out through adoptions, leading to overcrowding. APA! has eased the problem by opening new adoption centers and asking staff and volunteers to foster pets. The group has been criticized for emphasizing quantity over quality in its adoptions just to make room for more animals, but APA! says it has a return policy that allows people to bring back their adopted pet for any reason. In 2013, its return rate was 6 percent, which the organization notes is well below the national average.
Jefferson and her colleagues are now focusing on expansion. They helped to establish San Antonio Pets Alive! in 2012, and within a year, the save rate in that city 80 miles southwest of Austin grew from 30 percent to 80 percent. They’ve also launched American Pets Alive!, holding annual conferences to encourage groups outside of Central Texas to reduce their kill rates.
Haley Pollock, who became a regular APA! volunteer a year ago and works primarily with rescue dogs, thinks pet owners are the real winners in the no-kill movement. “These guys have helped me as much as I’ve helped them,” Pollock says, petting her latest foster pet up for adoption, an 8-year-old Australian shepherd mix named Cowboy. “That’s the amazing thing about rescue dogs. You go in thinking you are saving their lives, but really, they give back as much as you give.
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