• Millennial parents are obsessed with high-tech baby gear
    www.businessinsider.com
    This year's hottest new consumer tech product isn't a personal robot or a self-driving car it's a crib.The $800 Elvie Rise, which debuted in January at the annual CES tech trade show, is an app-controlled bouncer that automatically repeats a baby's unique preferences and can transform into a bassinet after an infant falls asleep. Why exactly should you shell out for a "smart bouncer" when other products do basically the same job for hundreds of dollars less? Elvie says it comes down to infant safety: In a company survey of American parents, a majority of respondents with newborns said they were using products that didn't meet some federal safe-sleep guidelines. Elvie's claims implicitly suggest that dropping nearly a grand on a product that's meant to be used for only six months of a child's life isn't only sensible but also the responsible thing to do.Elvie is far from the only company cashing in on parental anxiety. Baby-product peddlers have learned that it pays to remind new parents of the myriad dangers that lurk around every corner and threaten their helpless bundles of joy. If they play their cards right, companies can position their wares as the answer to a parent's darkest fears.Savvy entrepreneurs are also taking advantage of the growing overlap between evergreen parental anxieties and the distinctly modern impulse to always be optimizing through gadgets and apps. CES launched its annual BabyTech Summit in 2016, where the now legendary Snoo smart bassinet debuted the following year with a $1,200 price tag. Since then, the baby-tech market has boomed with products such as the Owlet Dream Sock (an app-linked "smart sock" that lets parents track their baby's vital metrics) and the Nanit Plus smart baby monitor (whose night-vision-equipped video camera can track an infant's breathing), as well as a slew of WiFi-enabled breast pumps (including a nearly $400 model from Elvie). Between 2018 and 2019, submissions to CES's Best of Baby Tech Awards increased by 88%. And in 2024, EMARKETER found that products for babies and children had the fastest-growing digital ad spend of any market category. These days, it's hard to avoid the tens of thousands of moms who have taken to TikTok to show off their favorite devices.As more millennial and Gen Z "digital natives" become parents, it's no surprise that devices providing real-time data on a baby's squirms, temperature shifts, and even bowel movements are hot commodities. But while this information is reassuring to some parents, it can exacerbate anxiety in others particularly those already struggling during the fraught, sleep-deprived months of early parenthood. Instead of fueling connection, some of the products might even make parents less attuned to their kids and to themselves.From the very beginning, the baby-tech industry has been sown in the threat of worst-case scenarios. The first commercial baby monitor a simple radio-based device landed in American nurseries in 1938, a mere six years after the nation was rocked by the kidnapping and murder of the aviator Charles Lindbergh's 20-month-old son. In the 1980s and '90s, the devices became commonplace as fear spread about cases of sudden infant death syndrome in babies' cribs. By the early 2000s, baby monitors were getting regular tech upgrades, from cameras and two-way communication to heart-rate and temperature monitoring and even REM sleep cycle detection. Though these updates weren't necessarily filling a void in what parents needed, they quickly found a market.Becca Susong, a Chattanooga, Tennessee, pediatrician and perinatal care consultant, says fear of SIDS continues to be a major driver behind parents' interest in purchasing the WiFi-connected, app-paired baby monitors that emerged after the rise of smartphones. Some parents especially those with neonatal intensive care unit experiences or past health scares say they feel reassured by features like oxygen and heart-rate tracking. But there's no clear evidence linking baby monitors to a decrease in cases of SIDS, so the American Academy of Pediatrics actually cautions against monitoring for it at home."I tend not to recommend getting the high-tech kind," Susong says about baby monitors, citing their high costs and unnecessary bells and whistles. Instead, she redirects the discussion to sleep safety like using a firm mattress with nothing else in the crib and putting the baby on their back to sleep tangible, science-backed methods for averting SIDS."I think they give people a sense of control over something that feels very uncertain," says Emily Guarnotta, a Long Island clinical psychologist who specializes in perinatal mental health. "SIDS is terrifying because it's so unpredictable."Eventually, baby-tech merchants got a little carried away by the market possibilities. A $3,000 self-driving AI stroller? Yours for the taking, courtesy of the Canadian startup Glxkind.Guarnotta says she's observed that type A, control-seeking parents are particularly prone to look for reassurance from baby-monitoring devices. "There are many times when fear of something happening is already present, and then a product comes along or is recommended, and you think, 'This is going to help me. This will make me feel better and keep my baby safe,'" she says. "It can turn into a vicious cycle you get some relief from using the product, but then the anxiety returns, and the cycle repeats."David Lesner, a 39-year-old software engineer who lives in Israel, acknowledges that part of the initial appeal of a smart baby monitor was the gadgetry itself. Before his 11-month-old son was born, he spent countless hours descending into Reddit rabbit holes to figure out which models parents liked best. But Lesner says that even his final, meticulously considered pick the Nanit Pro is less than perfectly accurate. While he's never experienced one of the monitor's false alarms that his baby had stopped breathing or moving, he says he knows others who have. "It can be very terrifying," Lesner says. "Those three seconds that you are going from one room to another to see that your child is fine can be like an eternity."Not even a few false alarms could deter Logan Blackburn-Issitt, a 41-year-old entrepreneur in the West Midlands, England, who used infant-movement-detection devices with all six of his children. The four older kids, now between 7 and 13, slept on an Angelcare sensor pad, which sounds an alarm if it doesn't detect movement for 20 seconds. The youngest, 3-year-old twins, wore Snuza Hero movement monitors clipped onto their diapers. If Blackburn-Issitt or his partner forgot to switch off the pad when they lifted their babies out of the crib, or if the Snuzas got jostled out of place, the devices would blare. But if anything, these occasional mishaps only fortified his peace of mind. "If the babies stopped breathing, we would be alerted quickly," he says.Eventually, baby-tech merchants got a little carried away by the market possibilities. A $3,000 self-driving AI stroller? Yours for the taking, courtesy of the Canadian startup Glxkind, which launched its first of two smart-stroller systems in 2023. (But be warned: There's a waitlist for its anchor product, the Ella.) How about a Bluetooth-connected diaper sensor that spares caretakers from sniff-checking for number twos? Look no further than the Korean startup Monit, whose smart-baby-monitor system was the talk of the 2019 BabyTech Summit though the high-tech poo detector proved a little too weird to gain market traction. Or what about an AI-powered changing pad? The startup Woddle is on a mission to bring fresh data insights to the changing table. But it's still to be determined whether there's a real market for a tech-infused mat for changing diapers.Combining a gloss of scientific credibility with promises of safety and efficiency, the allure of baby-tech innovation outstrips its occasional silliness. The industry meets its target customers at the intersection of some of our most deeply entrenched habits. Millennials, who now make up the largest share of new parents, have entered their child-rearing years amid the proliferation of network-connected home appliances, wearable fitness-tracking devices, and urban infrastructure designed to make everyday tasks more efficient and convenient. In the past several years alone, the "Internet of Things" has evolved from a novel subcategory of consumer products to a term that encompasses so much of what we buy and use that it barely warrants distinction. Add a dose of standard-issue parental worry to this tech-propelled drive toward optimization, throw in a revolving cast of parenting experts and influencers, and you have a consumer base that's perfectly primed to seek solace in stuff.In an ideal world, new parents would become more confident in reading and responding to their baby's cues without feeling the need to rely on gadgets and apps.Of course, there are baby-product innovations that have seriously improved people's lives. Balance bikes, for instance, have been found to better prepare kids for riding a real bicycle than the training wheels most of us grew up with. And countless articles and testimonials have praised everything from the Snoo bassinet to the Doona car-seat-stroller combo as life-changing.But optimizing everything doesn't always make life easier. Ellie Messinger-Adams, a Southern California mom of two in her mid-30s, used Wyze baby-monitoring cameras for both of her children, now 6 and 3, until about a year ago. While the cameras provided momentary reassurance that her kids were alive and well in the middle of the night, checking them wound up becoming something of a compulsion. "We don't have any of the cameras hooked up anymore, and it sort of feels like freedom," she says."If a mom is already feeling overwhelmed, distressed, or excessively worried, adding the responsibility of monitoring data and interpreting its meaning could make things worse, increasing hypervigilance and potentially worsening anxiety or postpartum OCD," Sogand Ghassemi, a perinatal psychiatrist who practices in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, says. In an ideal world, new parents would become more confident in reading and responding to their baby's cues without feeling the need to rely on gadgets and apps. And it's not only the parents whose emotional well-being stands to benefit from a more intuitive dynamic of communication and care. "Over time, this supports the baby's ability to develop self-soothing skills, which is important for resilience," Ghassemi tells me.When it came to raising her own two children, Guarnotta, the Long Island psychologist, was firmly "anti-baby monitor," she says. It's a matter of personal preference, she tells me. Seeing other parents obsess over surveilling their babies was enough to convince her she was better off going the old-fashioned route: listening for cries and responding to them. A fancy, camera-equipped monitor wouldn't be able to tell her anything she couldn't hear for herself."I'm already an anxious person," Guarnotta says. "I didn't really want any part of that."Kelli Mara Korducki is a journalist whose work focuses on work, tech, and culture. She's based in New York City.
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  • From AI to Artisans: How MEAN Merges Computational Design with Middle Eastern Craftsmanship*
    www.archdaily.com
    From AI to Artisans: How MEAN Merges Computational Design with Middle Eastern Craftsmanship*Save this picture!NEOM 3d Printed Canopies. Image Courtesy of MEAN*Named one of ArchDaily's Best New Practices in 2024, MEAN (Middle East Architecture Network)* is redefining the architectural landscape of the region by merging computational design, digital fabrication, and material research with local heritage. Founded in 2016, the studio takes a forward-thinking approach, developing site-specific architectural solutions that balance technological innovation with cultural continuity. Their work spans projects of various scales, from experimental furniture like the Mawj Chair to urban-scale interventions such as The Adaptive Majlis, a digitally fabricated reinterpretation of traditional cooling and social spaces. By integrating advanced tools like parametric design, AI, and 3D printing with local materials, MEAN* is crafting a new architectural language that reflects both the aspirations of the future and the depth of the past.In this conversation, MEAN's founder Riyad Joucka discusses the studio's philosophy and the challenges of defining a Middle Eastern architectural identity today. He emphasizes the importance of moving beyond nostalgia, focusing instead on the logic behind vernacular forms and adapting them for contemporary needs. He also highlights MEAN's commitment to material research, such as exploring 3D-printed sand composites and bio-based resins, as well as their collaborations with local craftsmen to bridge the gap between digital fabrication and traditional artistry.Save this picture!Read on to discover how MEAN navigates the intersection of heritage and innovation, using cutting-edge technologies to shape the future of regional architecture. Related Article Creating Architecture in an Uncivil Time: In Conversation with Ali Karimi of Civil Architecture ArchDaily (Nour Fakharany): MEAN aims to develop a "new character and identity of Middle Eastern architecture." How would you define this identity in today's evolving architectural landscape?MEAN Architects (Riyad Joucka): There's no single definition of "Middle Eastern" architectureit's a diverse, layered vernacular shaped by centuries of cultural exchange and evolving civilizations. Today, architecture in the region stands at a crossroads between heritage and innovation. At MEAN, we're not interested in nostalgia or fleeting trendswe focus on redefining regional architecture through technology and material research, while staying deeply rooted in culture and context. The goal is to develop an adaptive architectural languageone that respects tradition but continues to evolve with time.Save this picture!(NF): What does it mean to you to create a "native architectural language" that balances heritage with avant-garde technologies?RJ: It's not about copying traditional formsit's about understanding why they worked and how they can evolve. We look at vernacular strategies like passive cooling, spatial relationships, and material logic, then reinterpret them through parametric design, AI, and digital fabrication. The result is usually a future-forward yet deeply contextual architecture- architecture that represents the ambitions of the future and reflects the heritage of the past.Save this picture!(NF): What role do material research and experimentation play in your design philosophy, especially when working in the Middle East's unique environmental conditions?RJ: Materiality plays a major role. The Middle East has a harsh but resource-rich environment, and we explore regionally available materials in new wayslike 3D-printed sand composites or bio-based resins. It's not just about sustainability but also rethinking how materials shape cultural identity.Save this picture!(NF): How does your practice utilize computational design and digital fabrication to enhance your ability to preserve local character, ecology, and history? Can you share a project that exemplifies this approach?RJ: Computational design enables us to analyze and integrate complex environmental and historical factors, while digital fabrication transforms these insights into precise, tangible forms. As part of my Fellowship in Practice at Zayed University, my project, The Adaptive Majlis, embodies this approachit reinterprets traditional cooling strategies and social spaces through 3D-printed modular components, seamlessly merging heritage with advanced fabrication techniques.Save this picture!(NF): Can you discuss a project that best represents MEAN's ability to merge local context with state-of-the-art technology?RJ: Our Mawj Chair is a small-scale but powerful example. Inspired by ocean waves, it was designed using computational fluid dynamics and 3D-printed as a seamless form. It reflects how technology can amplify local inspiration rather than dilute it.Save this picture!(NF): How does MEAN collaborate with local craftsmen, suppliers, and communities to ensure authenticity?RJ: We see digital fabrication and craftsmanship as partners in the design process from its early beginnings.. We collaborate with regional artisans to integrate details and finishes into our computational designs, bridging high-tech precision with traditional artistry.Save this picture!(NF): What do you see as the biggest challenges and opportunities for architecture in the Middle East over the next decade?RJ: The biggest challenges are climate adaptation, cultural preservation, and economic sustainabilitybut these are also opportunities. With novel emergent technologies like AI, 3D printing, and new materials, we can create regionally responsive, future-ready spaces that push architecture forward without erasing its identity.Image gallerySee allShow lessAbout this authorNour FakharanyAuthorCite: Nour Fakharany. "From AI to Artisans: How MEAN Merges Computational Design with Middle Eastern Craftsmanship*" 12 Mar 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1027870/from-ai-to-artisans-how-mean-merges-computational-design-with-middle-eastern-craftsmanship-star&gt ISSN 0719-8884More interviews from ourYouTube ChannelSave!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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  • Rolling Greens Villas / buerger katsota architects
    www.archdaily.com
    Rolling Greens Villas / buerger katsota architectsSave this picture! Alex Shoots BuildingsArchitects: buerger katsota architectsAreaArea of this architecture projectArea:360 mYearCompletion year of this architecture project Year: 2024 PhotographsPhotographs:Alex Shoots BuildingsManufacturersBrands with products used in this architecture project Manufacturers: Geberit, Sto, Miele, ORAMA, ABB, Agglotech, Artemide, Bauder, Ceramica Vogue, Cisal, Daikin, Exalco, FIBRAN, Knauf, Penetron, REHAU, Villeroy & Boch Lighting Design: ProlightMore SpecsLess SpecsSave this picture!Text description provided by the architects. The Villas in the Rolling Greens neighborhood are set in the unique landscape of Navarino Dunes within the Costa Navarino Resort in Messinia, Greece. Their innovative architectural design combined with sustainable construction, created nineteen prototypical holiday villas that embrace the views, adapt to the scale of the landscape, and blend harmoniously with the surrounding environment and aesthetics of Costa Navarino.Save this picture!Save this picture!The design of each single story semi-detached (3 bedroom) and detached (4 bedroom) villa is an exercise in horizontality. They exemplify sophistication and comfort, through a timeless architectural design combining elegant aesthetics, refined detailing and bespoke proportions, manifested throughout the whole residential experience.Each villa's inhabitation is organized in-between the 'horizons' of a solid platform and a cantilevering roof. Its discreet positioning on the sloping plot benefits and is benefited by the topography.Save this picture!On the plane of the habitable platform, the entrance to the villa is located at the beginning of an axis seamlessly connecting indoors and outdoors, front and back. The private spaces -bedrooms and en-suite wet units- are located within solid volumes, offset to each other. The living room, kitchen and courtyards, are perceived as a flowing space meandering between openable floor-to-ceiling glazed surfaces and enclosed volumes, uniting the indoor and outdoor to a relaxed and informal whole.Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!Extending horizontally beyond the roof, the villa's platform offers a generous sunbathing area, reaches the swimming pool, visually incorporates the golf course panorama and perfectly aligns with the horizon of the Ionian Sea. The outdoor dining, cooking and lounge area complement the fully openable indoors spaces, and a sunken fire pit offers a peaceful corner to appreciate the captivating surroundings.Save this picture!The roof being flat and planted, essentially the building's fifth 'facade', converses with and complements the surrounding lush mediterranean vegetation. It also incorporates solar collectors and skylights, acting as a climatic moderator, contributing to the thermal comfort of the residence, while providing generous shaded spaces for all-day outdoor living below.Save this picture!Project gallerySee allShow lessAbout this officeMaterialsMaterials and TagsPublished on March 12, 2025Cite: "Rolling Greens Villas / buerger katsota architects" 12 Mar 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1027754/rolling-greens-villas-buerger-katsota-architects&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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  • VFX AD In BLENDER
    www.youtube.com
    VFX AD In BLENDER Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/b_4fan/ Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/nadir.ho.1 Telegramhttps://t.me/Blend4fun https://drive.google.com/file/d/1npbrCmV1fLYWS3zG6MqjlNCrrQnHtrht/view?usp=sharing :" ! . . (Particle System) . . . ." (Tags): (Blender) (3D Design) (Perfume Ad) (Ad Design) (3D Animation) (Camera Tracking) (Particle System) (Flower Petals) (Leaves) (Masking) (Product Design) (Product Ad) (Blender Tutorial) (Blender Tutorial) (3D Ad) (Perfume Advertisement) (Professional Perfume Ad) (Blender Perfume Ad Design) (How to Design a Perfume Ad) (Creative Perfume Ad) (Perfume Ad Rendering) (Realistic Perfume Ad)"Watch how I created a stunning 3D perfume ad using Blender! In this video, I'll walk you through the steps of designing a luxurious perfume bottle amidst a grand building, animating it to emerge from the building and move towards the camera, before soaring away and disappearing behind the structure.We'll start by tracking points in the video to extract precise camera movement, then import the 3D perfume model and apply realistic materials. Next, we'll create a particle system to generate flower petals and leaves that propel from the bottle's base like a rocket, adding a captivating visual effect. Finally, we'll use masking techniques to seamlessly hide the bottle behind the building, creating an illusion of depth and realism.This video is perfect for anyone interested in learning 3D product advertisement design with Blender, whether you're a beginner or a professional. I'll explain each step in detail, providing valuable tips and tricks for achieving professional-looking results." (Tags):Blender3D DesignPerfume AdAd Design3D AnimationCamera TrackingParticle SystemFlower PetalsLeavesMaskingProduct DesignProduct AdBlender Tutorial3D AdPerfume AdvertisementProfessional Perfume AdBlender Perfume Ad DesignHow to Design a Perfume AdCreative Perfume AdPerfume Ad RenderingRealistic Perfume Ad
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  • Unreal Engine Watch Dogs Style Hacking System Tutorial - Part 1
    www.youtube.com
    Project Files: https://www.patreon.com/posts/124184767 .In this unreal engine tutorial, we are going to implement a watch dogs style hacking system which allows player to distract NPCs by making noises on hackable devices such as alarms, mobile phones etc. Here, we will implement a hackable object and when we are close to one of those objects, we will see an interaction tip to hack and when we press the hack key, it will make a sound. An NPC will hear the sound and check on it. In this episode, we will implement the hackable object and how to interact with that. In next episode, we will implement NPC reaction to the noise caused by the hacked object. Full C++ RTS Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNTm9yU0zou5_PYxEdjNbAgbVRn-daOga . // ! https://www.patreon.com/codelikeme Patrons will have access to project files of all the stuff I do in the channel and other extra benefitsJoin this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClb6Jh9EBV7a_Nm52Ipll_Q/join Like my facebook page for more content : https://www.facebook.com/gamedevelopersclub/ Follow me on twitter : https://twitter.com/CodeLikeMe2 Follow me on reddit : https://www.reddit.com/user/codelikeme #CodeLikeMe #unrealengine #ue5 #ue4 #indiegamedev
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  • Free blender files
    i.redd.it
    submitted by /u/deepak365days [link] [comments]
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  • Rumor: GTA 6's now-deleted store page on a Swiss marketplace has seemingly confirmed that the game will cost $100. There is no evidence, however, that...
    x.com
    Rumor: GTA 6's now-deleted store page on a Swiss marketplace has seemingly confirmed that the game will cost $100.There is no evidence, however, that the listed price was chosen by Rockstar: https://80.lv/articles/rumor-gta-6-s-listing-on-a-swiss-marketplace-suggests-the-game-will-cost-usd100/
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  • Check out @pigmachinee's delicious 3D bowl of soup that looks like a painting. The Maya-made project was inspired by @alaiganuza's works: https://80.l...
    x.com
    Check out @pigmachinee's delicious 3D bowl of soup that looks like a painting.The Maya-made project was inspired by @alaiganuza's works: https://80.lv/articles/yummy-maya-made-3d-soup-that-looks-like-painting/
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  • Check Out This New Procedural Staircase Generator For Blender
    cgshares.com
    Mult Labs, the creator of theVoxandFolds Modifier, has released Staircase Generator, a new procedural solution for Blender that will enable you to create and customize realistic-looking staircases both regular and spiral their steps, and railings.Powered by Geometry Nodes, the tool comes with 70+ customizable settings, enabling you to tweak each staircase to match your exact needs, eight pre-made presets, and automatic step calculation, where the solution calculates the number of steps in a staircase based on the specified step height or width and mesh slope. Whats more, the generator allows for real-time adjustments, ensuring fast feedback.You can purchase the add-on by clicking this link. Be sure to also check out Mult Labs robust node setup that allows you to effortlessly generate traditional European-style buildings.Dont forget to join our80 Level Talent platformand ournew Discord server, follow us onInstagram,Twitter,LinkedIn,Telegram,TikTok, andThreads, where we share breakdowns, the latest news, awesome artworks, and more.Source link The post Check Out This New Procedural Staircase Generator For Blender appeared first on CG SHARES.
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  • BlizzCon Will Not Be Held In 2025 But Will Return Next Year
    cgshares.com
    Blizzard announced that BlizzCon, its annual gaming convention, will return in 2026, meaning that the event will not take place this year.In a recent announcement, the gaming company detailed that BlizzCon will be held in the Anaheim Convention Center in California on September 12 and 13, 2026. Blizzard didnt mention the 2025 convention, which implies that the event will skip this year the second time in a row after the cancellation of BlizzCon in 2024.The company shared some details of the upcoming event, briefly covering the planned activities: For 2026, alongside BlizzCon staples like Opening Ceremony, in-depth panels, the Darkmoon Faire, friendly competition, hands-on gameplay, and more, we aim to meaningfully elevate this iconic celebration and create an unforgettable experience for all who take part in it.BlizzardBlizzCon has a long history that dates back to 2005. In recent years, the event has experienced several interruptions. In 2020, it was canceled because of the pandemic; the next, BlizzCon returned only in an online format; and in 2022, the event was also canceled during a period of legal litigation. BlizzCon showcases Blizzards game franchises, such as StarCraft, Warcraft, Overwatch, Heroes of the Storm, and more, and provides exclusive previews and game-related announcements.Dont forget to join our 80 Level Talent platform and our new Discord server, follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, Telegram, TikTok, and Threads, where we share breakdowns, the latest news, awesome artworks, and more.Source link The post BlizzCon Will Not Be Held In 2025 But Will Return Next Year appeared first on CG SHARES.
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