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The Behavioural ArchitectsB-MAT Model (Behavior = Motivation + Ability + Trigger) Focus: Designed by BJ Fogg, this model...
22/02/2026

The Behavioural Architects

B-MAT Model (Behavior = Motivation + Ability + Trigger)

Focus:

Designed by BJ Fogg, this model emphasizes that a behavior occurs when there is sufficient motivation, ability to perform it, and a prompt (trigger) to act.

Key Components:

Motivation:

The desire or willingness to perform the behavior.

Ability: The capacity or ease with which one can perform the behavior.

Trigger (or Prompt):

A call to action that cues the behavior.

Best For:

Creating, designing, and improving simple actions, app interactions, or quick nudges.

COM-B Model (Capability + Opportunity + Motivation = Behavior)

Focus:

Part of the Behaviour Change Wheel, this model argues that behavior is a result of the interaction between hysical/psychological capability, physical/social opportunity, and automatic/reflective motivation.

Key Components:

Capability: Physical skills and psychological knowledge.

Opportunity: Environmental factors and social influences.
Motivation:

Brain processes that energize and direct behavior (habit, desire).
Best For:

Deeply understanding complex behaviors and designing comprehensive interventions.

Key Differences

Complexity: B-MAT is more concise, while COM-B is more detailed and deeply rooted in psychological theory.

Application:

B-MAT acts as a checklist for "why didn't they do it" (i.e., not enough motivation, too hard, no prompt), whereas COM-B is used to thoroughly map barriers and facilitators for long-term change.

Triggers vs. Context: B-MAT heavily emphasizes the importance of the prompt or trigger. COM-B places more emphasis on environmental and social opportunities.

https://bjfogg.typeform.com/callwithBJFogg?utm_source=behaviormodel&typeform-source=www.behaviormodel.org

GGiải Pháp Tiếng Anh 0911227638

CHÚC MỪNG NĂM MỚI - Jubilant 2026 To You -Lunar New Year, which called Tết Nguyên Đán in Vietnamese, is the most importa...
17/02/2026

CHÚC MỪNG NĂM MỚI

- Jubilant 2026 To You -

Lunar New Year, which called Tết Nguyên Đán in Vietnamese, is the most important celebration in Vietnamese culture.

The name Tết Nguyên Đán is Sino-Vietnamese for Feast of the First Morning.

It is the Vietnamese New Year marking the arrival of spring based on the Lunar calendar.

Tết is also an occasion for pilgrims and family reunions.

Traditionally, every house is usually decorated by apricot blossom in the central and southern parts of Vietnam or peach blossom in the northern part.

In addtion, kumquat tree and marigold are also popular decorations in the north and central.

In Tet holiday, some traditional dishes is indispensable sush as chung cake, dried candied fruits, Vietnamese sausage, soups or stewed food.

The foods that the Vietnamese eat at Tet are varied and diverse, but the people throughout the country all want to have the best and the most beautiful looking food on this occasion to offer their ancestors and to treat their friends and guests.

On the New Year’s Eve, Vietnamese people have a spectacular celebration which involves the whole nation—some may gather around TV and watch the Tao Quan show, some may go out for fireworks observation.

The first day of Tết is reserved for the nuclear family.

Children receive a red envelope containing lucky money from their elders.

Vietnamese people are aloso spent their time to meet friends and realatives.

Besides, Tet is known as an occasion for traditional festivals. It was held from January to March according to the lunar calendar.

Giải Pháp Tiếng Anh 0911227638

😄Let's buckle up 😄This is a big list, but here you go:Examples that follow the structure “What is your ____ name?” 'sYou...
08/02/2026

😄Let's buckle up 😄

This is a big list, but here you go:

Examples that follow the structure

“What is your ____ name?”

'sYourName ?

Crisis Team Leader

I’ll keep them clean, consistent, and varied.

What is your first name?

What is your last name?

What is your full name?

What is your middle name?

What is your legal name?

What is your preferred name?

What is your nickname name?

What is your given name?

What is your birth name?

What is your family name?

What is your maiden name?

What is your married name?

What is your chosen name?

What is your professional name?

What is your stage name?

What is your pen name?

What is your artist name?

What is your screen name?

What is your display name?

What is your profile name?

What is your username name?

What is your login name?

What is your account name?

What is your gamer name?

What is your streamer name?

What is your online name?

What is your alias name?

What is your code name?

What is your secret name?

What is your spy name?

What is your superhero name?

What is your villain name?

What is your fantasy name?

What is your character name?

What is your roleplay name?

What is your avatar name?

What is your RPG name?

What is your D&D name?

What is your wizard name?

What is your warrior name?

What is your elf name?

What is your dragon name?

What is your pirate name?

What is your cowboy name?

What is your samurai name?

What is your ninja name?

What is your robot name?

What is your AI name?

What is your android name?

What is your alien name?

What is your space name?

What is your planet name?

What is your galaxy name?

What is your star name?

What is your cosmic name?

What is your celestial name?

What is your mythic name?

What is your god name?

What is your goddess name?

What is your titan name?

What is your hero name?

What is your legend name?

What is your folklore name?

What is your fairy name?

What is your pixie name?

What is your witch name?

What is your warlock name?

What is your sorcerer name?

What is your mage name?

What is your oracle name?

What is your prophecy name?

What is your destiny name?

What is your fate name?

What is your spirit name?

What is your soul name?

What is your inner name?

What is your shadow name?

What is your alter name?

What is your ego name?

What is your dream name?

What is your vision name?

What is your future name?

What is your past name?

What is your childhood name?

What is your school name?

What is your class name?

What is your student name?

What is your teacher name?

What is your mentor name?

What is your leader name?

What is your boss name?

What is your manager name?

What is your employee name?

What is your coworker name?

What is your colleague name?

What is your partner name?

What is your team name?

What is your group name?

What is your club name?

What is your organization name?

(Continuing the same structure and consistency…)

What is your company name?

What is your business name?

What is your brand name?

What is your product name?

What is your service name?

What is your project name?

What is your startup name?

What is your venture name?

What is your enterprise name?

What is your corporation name?

What is your app name?

What is your website name?

What is your domain name?

What is your blog name?

What is your channel name?

What is your podcast name?

What is your show name?

What is your series name?

What is your episode name?

What is your segment name?

What is your book name?

What is your novel name?

What is your story name?

What is your poem name?

What is your chapter name?

What is your article name?

What is your paper name?

What is your thesis name?

What is your research name?

What is your study name?

What is your experiment name?

What is your theory name?

What is your model name?

What is your concept name?

What is your idea name?

What is your plan name?

What is your strategy name?

What is your mission name?

What is your vision name?

What is your goal name?

What is your task name?

What is your job name?

What is your role name?

What is your title name?

What is your position name?

What is your rank name?

What is your level name?

What is your status name?

What is your identity name?

What is your label name?

============= ===

What is your favorite color?

What is your favorite food?

What is your favorite drink?

What is your favorite fruit?

What is your favorite vegetable?

What is your favorite snack?

What is your favorite dessert?

What is your favorite candy?

What is your favorite chocolate?

What is your favorite ice cream?

What is your favorite meal?

What is your favorite breakfast?

What is your favorite lunch?

What is your favorite dinner?

What is your favorite cuisine?

What is your favorite restaurant?

What is your favorite fast food?

What is your favorite homemade dish?

What is your favorite recipe?

What is your favorite spice?

What is your favorite herb?

What is your favorite seasoning?

What is your favorite soup?

What is your favorite salad?

What is your favorite sandwich?

What is your favorite pizza?

What is your favorite pasta?

What is your favorite burger?

What is your favorite topping?

What is your favorite sauce?

What is your favorite beverage?

What is your favorite soda?

What is your favorite juice?

What is your favorite smoothie?

What is your favorite coffee?

What is your favorite tea?

What is your favorite milkshake?

What is your favorite energy drink?

What is your favorite mocktail?

What is your favorite cocktail?

What is your favorite season?

What is your favorite weather?

What is your favorite temperature?

What is your favorite time of day?

What is your favorite day of the week?

What is your favorite month?

What is your favorite holiday?

What is your favorite celebration?

What is your favorite tradition?

What is your favorite memory?

What is your favorite childhood memory?

What is your favorite place?

What is your favorite city?

What is your favorite country?

What is your favorite destination?

What is your favorite vacation spot?

What is your favorite beach?

What is your favorite mountain?

What is your favorite park?

What is your favorite landmark?

What is your favorite room?

What is your favorite space?

What is your favorite building?

What is your favorite view?

What is your favorite scenery?

What is your favorite nature spot?

What is your favorite trail?

What is your favorite road trip?

What is your favorite journey?

What is your favorite adventure?

What is your favorite hobby?

What is your favorite activity?

What is your favorite sport?

What is your favorite exercise?

What is your favorite workout?

What is your favorite game?

What is your favorite board game?

What is your favorite card game?

What is your favorite video game?

What is your favorite mobile game?

What is your favorite app?

What is your favorite website?

What is your favorite platform?

What is your favorite social media?

What is your favorite emoji?

What is your favorite meme?

What is your favorite trend?

What is your favorite challenge?

What is your favorite filter?

What is your favorite feature?

What is your favorite movie?

What is your favorite film genre?

What is your favorite actor?

What is your favorite actress?

What is your favorite character?

What is your favorite TV show?

What is your favorite series?

What is your favorite episode?

What is your favorite documentary?

What is your favorite scene?

What is your favorite song?

What is your favorite music genre?

What is your favorite band?

What is your favorite singer?

What is your favorite album?

What is your favorite playlist?

What is your favorite lyric?

What is your favorite instrument?

What is your favorite sound?

What is your favorite concert?

What is your favorite book?

What is your favorite author?

What is your favorite novel?

What is your favorite genre?

What is your favorite character arc?

What is your favorite chapter?

What is your favorite quote?

What is your favorite poem?

What is your favorite line?

What is your favorite ending?

What is your favorite subject?

What is your favorite class?

What is your favorite lesson?

What is your favorite topic?

What is your favorite skill?

What is your favorite talent?

What is your favorite ability?

What is your favorite strength?

What is your favorite habit?

What is your favorite routine?

What is your favorite tool?

What is your favorite gadget?

What is your favorite device?

What is your favorite technology?

What is your favorite software?

What is your favorite program?

What is your favorite feature update?

What is your favorite shortcut?

What is your favorite setting?

What is your favorite mode?

What is your favorite outfit?

What is your favorite clothing item?

What is your favorite shoes?

What is your favorite accessory?

What is your favorite style?

What is your favorite brand?

What is your favorite fabric?

What is your favorite color combo?

What is your favorite look?

What is your favorite trend?

==============HOBBIES ===

What is your hobby?
What is your main hobby?
What is your current hobby?

The Chief Risk Officer (CRO) is a C-suite executive responsible for identifying, assessing, and mitigating an organization's financial, operational, strategic, and compliance risks to ensure long-term stability and adherence.

They develop risk policies, foster a risk-aware culture, and report to the board/CFO to ensure strategic decisions align with the company's risk appetite.

Key Responsibilities

Risk Identification & Assessment: Proactively identifying internal and external risks, including technical/cyber, competitive, and reputational threats.

Policy & Strategy Development:

Creating frameworks, policies, and countermeasures to manage and mitigate risks.

Compliance & Regulatory Oversight:

Ensuring the organization adheres to laws, regulations, and industry standards.

Strategic Advisory:

Embedding risk management into business strategy, including mergers, acquisitions, and new product development.

Reporting & Communication:

Providing regular reports to the board and senior management regarding the risk profile.

Required Skills and Qualifications

Analytical & Strategic Thinking: Ability to analyze complex risks and understand their impact on the business.

Industry Knowledge:

Deep understanding of financial, regulatory, and technological landscapes.

Leadership & Communication:

Ability to communicate complex risks to stakeholders and foster a risk-aware culture.

Experience:

Extensive experience in risk management, compliance, or finance.

p/s: eX:

The Dave Obey amendment, first introduced by Representative David Obey (D-Wis.) in 1997-1998, is a legislative provision that strictly prohibits the export of the F-22 Raptor fighter aircraft to any foreign government.

This amendment was included in every Department of Defense Appropriations Act since 1998.

Content of the Amendment

The core text of the amendment, which appeared in the 105th Congress (1997-1998) H.Amdt.295 to H.R.2266, states:

"None of the funds made available in this Act may be used to approve or license the sale of F-22 advanced tactical fighter to any foreign government."

Key Details Regarding the Amendment

Purpose:

The amendment was intended to protect advanced U.S technologies, particularly stealth capabilities, from being acquired by other nations.

Targeted Sales:

It prevented the Air Force from taking any action to sell the aircraft, including studying potential modifications to make it exportable, even to close allies like Japan, Israel, and Australia.

Longevity:

While it was an annual provision, it was consistently renewed, making it a permanent to F-22 foreign sales for over a decade.

Impact on Production:

The ban was part of a larger, contentious debate about whether to keep the F-22 production line open, with some arguing that selling the plane abroad could have funded further production.

The amendment was largely seen as a safeguard against compromising the F-22's , as the aircraft was not designed with foreign military sales in mind.

NOTES from DaveObey

Experience burned into me the conviction that access to education ought to be based on how much you are willing to learn and how hard you are willing to work, not on how many dollars your family has in their bank account.

You don't have to dislike people you disagree with and it doesn't mean you shouldn't be able to have bipartisan friendships in this place.

Life's too short to have it any other way.

There is a sign that hangs on my wall that says, 'What is it you want me to do to somebody else that is more important than what you want me to do for you?

Experience taught me that working families are often just one pay check away from economic disaster. And it showed me first-hand the importance of every family having access to good health care.

The primary training center for F-22 pilots (including Captains transitioning to the ) is the Formal Training Unit (FTU) located at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia, managed by the 71st Fighter Squadron.

Following the destruction of Tyndall Air Force Base by Hurricane Michael in 2018, the F-22 schoolhouse was temporarily moved to Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, before permanently to Langley.

Key F-22 Training Details

The Schoolhouse:

The 71st Fighter Squadron (formerly flying T-38s as adversaries) handles the F-22 Basic Course, while the 71st Fighter Generation Squadron manages training.

Training Pipeline:

Classroom & Simulators: Initially, students spend months on academic studies and simulator training.

Flight Training:

The Basic Course involves roughly eight months of training, covering advanced handling, basic fighter maneuvers (BFM), beyond-visual-range intercepts, and air combat tactics.

Duration:

The full Basic Course syllabus is intensive, lasting up to months.

Academic :

While flight training is at Langley, some simulator and academic training facilities may still be utilizing infrastructure in the Florida Panhandle during the transition.

Pilot Requirements & Progression

Captains selected to fly the F-22 usually come from other fighter platforms (such as the F-15 or F-16) or directly from Introduction to Fighter Fundamentals (IFF).

Prerequisites:

High-performance fighter experience, top-secret clearance, and often, high-ranking performance in Undergraduate Pilot Training.

Post-Training:

After graduating from the FTU, pilots are assigned to operational units, such as the 27th Fighter Squadron at Langley or units in Alaska, Hawaii, and Nevada.















www.onelifeenglish.edu.vn

Ai Cũng Có Thể Thông Thạo Tiếng Anh         Atomic Habits isn't another motivational book about willpower or discipline....
09/01/2026

Ai Cũng Có Thể Thông Thạo Tiếng Anh



Atomic Habits isn't another motivational book about willpower or discipline. James Clear, a habit optimization expert, has written a practical framework for understanding how habits work and how to design tiny changes that compound into remarkable results over time.

The core premise is deceptively simple: improving by just 1% every day leads to being 37 times better in a year through compounding. Conversely, getting 1% worse daily leads to declining to nearly zero. Small habits don't feel significant in the moment, but they're the difference between who you are and who you could become.
Reading it felt like someone finally explaining the instruction manual for human behavior I'd been missing my whole life.
Seven Lessons That Rebuilt My Life One Small Change at a Time

1. Your Identity Drives Your Habits (Not the Other Way Around) — Most people focus on what they want to achieve (outcome-based habits) or what they need to do (process-based habits), but Clear argues the most powerful approach is identity-based habits—becoming the type of person who does that thing. Instead of "I want to run a marathon," it's "I am a runner." Every action you take is a vote for the type of person you're becoming. This hit me hard because I'd been setting goals while maintaining an identity that contradicted them. I said I wanted to be healthy while thinking of myself as "someone who's bad at exercise." Clear showed me I needed to let go of old identities and start proving to myself through tiny actions that I was becoming someone different. Now when I work out, I'm not just exercising—I'm casting a vote for "I am someone who moves their body daily."

2. Environment Design Beats Willpower Every Time — Clear demolishes the myth that successful people have more discipline. Instead, they design environments where the right choice is the easy choice. Make good habits obvious (put your workout clothes by your bed) and bad habits invisible (hide the junk food). I'd been relying on willpower to overcome terrible environmental design—keeping cookies on the counter while trying to eat healthy, keeping my phone by my bed while trying to sleep better. Redesigning my environment felt like cheating, but it worked. I had to let go of the belief that struggle equals virtue and accept that making things easier for myself was actually strategic, not weak.

3. The Two-Minute Rule: Make It So Easy You Can't Say No — Any habit can be scaled down to a two-minute version: "Read before bed" becomes "read one page." "Do yoga" becomes "unroll my yoga mat." Clear's insight is that the hardest part is starting—once you've begun, continuing is much easier. I'd been setting the bar so high that starting felt impossible, then berating myself for not starting. The two-minute rule taught me to let go of perfectionism and embrace "good enough to start." I told myself I only had to write one sentence. Put on my running shoes (not actually run). Floss one tooth. Sounds ridiculous, but once I started, I usually kept going. And even when I didn't, one sentence was infinitely better than zero.

4. Habit Stacking: Anchor New Habits to Existing Ones — Clear introduces a simple formula: "After [current habit], I will [new habit]." After I pour my morning coffee, I'll drink a glass of water. After I close my laptop at night, I'll write three things I'm grateful for. This works because you're leveraging the neural pathways of established habits rather than trying to remember disconnected new behaviors. I'd been treating each new habit as an isolated act of willpower, which is why they never stuck. Stacking them onto existing routines made them automatic. I had to let go of the fantasy that I'd magically remember to meditate "sometime during the day" and accept that it needed a specific trigger—in my case, right after I brush my teeth in the morning.

5. Never Miss Twice: The Rule That Saves You from Spirals — Clear's most powerful rule for maintaining habits: never miss twice. Missing once is a mistake. Missing twice is the start of a new habit—a bad one. Life happens, you'll break your streak, and that's okay. What matters is getting back on track immediately, not waiting until Monday or next month to start over. This rule saved me from my usual pattern: miss once, feel guilty, miss again, decide I've already ruined it so why bother, quit entirely. Now when I miss a workout, I do something physical the next day even if it's just a five-minute walk. I had to let go of all-or-nothing thinking and embrace the messy middle where consistency matters more than perfection.

6. Focus on Systems, Not Goals — Goals are about the results you want to achieve. Systems are about the processes that lead to those results. Clear argues that goals are useful for setting direction, but systems are what get you there. Winners and losers have the same goals—what separates them is their systems. I'd been living in a constant cycle of achievement and disappointment: reach goal, feel briefly satisfied, lose the habit, return to baseline, set new goal. Clear taught me to let go of goal obsession and fall in love with the system. Now I don't focus on "lose twenty pounds"—I focus on being someone who makes nutritious choices most of the time. The results take care of themselves when the system is solid.

7. The Plateau of Latent Potential: Why Most People Quit Too Soon — Clear illustrates how habits seem useless at first. You work hard but see no results, hanging out in the "Valley of Disappointment." Then suddenly, after crossing an invisible threshold, the results compound dramatically. Most people quit in the valley, right before the breakthrough. Ice doesn't melt at 30°F or 31°F—nothing seems to happen until you hit 32°F, then suddenly everything changes. This explained every time I'd given up: three weeks into a new habit, seeing no results, deciding it wasn't working. I had to let go of the expectation of immediate results and trust the process long enough for compounding to work. Now when I feel discouraged, I remember I might be at 31°F, one degree from the breakthrough I can't see yet.

================================

📉 The End of an Era. The Beginning of a Legacy. 📈

Today, we witness a historic milestone as Warren Buffett officially steps down from his role as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway. For over 60 years, "The Oracle of Omaha" hasn't just built a company; he has built a philosophy.

He proved that you can be the most successful person in the room without losing your integrity, your sense of humor, or your focus on the long game.

As we celebrate his legendary career, here are 5 leadership takeaways from the man who taught us that wealth is built on character:

1. Hire for Integrity First 🛡️ Buffett famously said: "We look for three things in a person: intelligence, energy, and integrity. And if they don't have the last one, the first two will kill you." Skills can be taught, but character is the foundation of any great organization.

2. Delegate to the Point of "Abdication" 🤝 Buffett’s leadership style was one of extreme trust. He hired the best people and then stayed out of their way. He believed that if you give smart people the autonomy to act like owners, they will perform like owners.

3. Protect Your Reputation at All Costs 💎 In his 1991 testimony to Congress, he gave his team a warning that still echoes today: "Lose money for the firm, and I will be understanding. Lose a shred of reputation for the firm, and I will be ruthless." Profits are temporary; trust is forever.

4. Simplify Your Focus 🎯 Buffett didn’t believe in "busy-ness." He believed in the "Circle of Competence." Know what you are good at, stay within it, and say "no" to almost everything else so you can say "yes" to the things that truly matter.

5. Measure Success by How Many People Love You ❤️ Perhaps his most profound leadership lesson: "I measure success by how many people of those I want to have love me actually do love me." True leadership isn't just about the balance sheet; it’s about the human impact you leave behind.

Warren, thank you for teaching us that nice guys can finish first. Enjoy your well-earned retirement—the world of business will never be the same! 🍨🏦

Hồng Gấm Lê

Tiếng Anh Dễ Hơn Tiếng Việt

There is a familiar moment many people experience late at night when everything finally goes quiet. The phone is down, t...
28/12/2025

There is a familiar moment many people experience late at night when everything finally goes quiet. The phone is down, the day is done, and instead of relief, the mind gets loud. Old mistakes replay. Future worries line up. Promises to do better tomorrow stack up next to guilt about what did not get done today. Society talks a lot about motivation, but not enough about how often people are trapped inside their own thinking. Unfu*k Yourself cuts straight through that mental gridlock. I came across this book during a period when overthinking felt productive but action felt risky, when insight was abundant but movement was scarce. What grabbed me was how blunt and unsympathetic the book was toward mental excuses, while still being deeply practical. These are the 7 beautiful lessons I carried from the book, lessons that challenged my comfort with thinking and forced me back into action.

1. Thinking is often the hiding place for fear. The book makes it clear that overthinking is rarely about intelligence. It is about avoidance. When action feels uncomfortable, the mind creates endless analysis as a substitute. This lesson reframes rumination as resistance. Awareness of this pattern exposes how often thinking is used to delay discomfort rather than solve real problems.

2. You are not your thoughts, but you are responsible for your actions. One of the strongest messages in the book is that thoughts come and go, but action is a choice. Waiting for the mind to feel calm or confident before acting gives thoughts too much authority. The book emphasizes separating internal noise from external behavior. You can act effectively even when your thoughts are chaotic.

3. Self talk shapes limits more than circumstances do. The language people use internally becomes the framework for what they believe is possible. The book highlights how phrases like I cannot or I am not ready quietly define identity. Changing language is not about positivity, it is about accuracy. When self talk shifts, perceived limits often shrink.

4. Comfort is often the enemy of progress. The book challenges the idea that feeling good should come before doing hard things. Comfort keeps people stuck in familiar cycles that feel safe but unfulfilling. Growth requires choosing discomfort with intention. This lesson reframes discomfort as a signal of movement rather than a sign of failure.

5. Responsibility restores personal power. Blame and excuses feel relieving in the moment, but they remove agency. The book pushes responsibility as a tool for freedom rather than pressure. Owning outcomes, even imperfect ones, puts control back where it belongs. Responsibility becomes the bridge between intention and change.

6. Action interrupts negative mental loops. The book emphasizes that movement often quiets the mind more effectively than insight alone. Waiting to feel different before acting keeps people stuck. Acting first creates evidence that the mind can respond to. This lesson reinforces that clarity often follows action, not the other way around.

7. Discipline is choosing long term relief over short term comfort. The final lesson centers on commitment. Discipline is not punishment, it is alignment with future self respect. The book reframes discipline as an act of care rather than force. Each choice to act builds trust with yourself, making future action easier.

What makes Unfu*k Yourself memorable is its refusal to comfort overthinking. It does not ask you to understand yourself better before moving forward. It asks you to move, even while understanding is incomplete. Long after finishing the book, its message lingers clearly: your life changes not when your thoughts improve, but when your actions finally do.

















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