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Member You - Techno Gypsies - Freemasons Of The Third Millennia?
Tube Cuts Made Easy - A Cutting-Edge Technology increasing information and the rapidly evolving technologies have enabled the Techno Gypsies complete freedom of movement.Dynasties fall, empires break, seasons pass—but one thing that never ends is mankind’s technological progress. To prove it one more time and this time, with remarkable prospects, laser tube processing has come to make things easier for the tube-cutting industry. Laser cuts being a reality now, production efforts have sharply shrunk to a minimum of 50%; and quality has spiked like never before.Who would want to rely on high-frequency systems or flying cutoff machines to cut tubes and pipes anymore, when the same job is done faster and better with lasers? Now that doesn’t await an answer of course. For, the arrival of lasers has changed the face of tube fabrication. The flexibility of laser application has enhanced tube-cutting production both in quality and quantity, and with a speed much higher than what would have been possible in other manual processes.Using lasers to cut tubes and pipes has been a practice since the 1970s; but, today it is being applied to many other manufacturing processes. As demand grew, manual processes fell short of meeting expectations, thereby giving way to laser cutting systems. Designs and techniques, which seemed an impossibility, are now being created on a dedicated tube processing The reasons for the patronage of the Renaissance: prestige-pleasure-piety drifted significantly to today’s reasons: profit and information control. While the driving motivators have changed, similarity exists in the outlook of today’s patrons. The ‘A’ list being comprised of large enterprises with ongoing IT needs. These are the long term patrons. The alternative is to work for one of the smaller enterprises with immediate, but short work duration, needs, or take a risk with a start-up. The start-ups have a certain cachet and appeal as each of them, theoretically, has the potential of becoming a major player and large enterprise- if they develop and market reliable, innovative products with staying power. This is becoming increasingly difficult to do- unless the founders of the start-up can develop a truly upsetting technology surpassing existing capabilities. The kernel of thought behind many start-ups is the desire to solve an isolated problem. By the time they get a solution to market, if they ever do, others have already worked out a patch or the newer versions of software eclipse the need for their solution. Failures are many among start-up companies. Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old soft Construction World Today skilled programmers, installers and operators in information technology routinely change jobs as skill sets ascend, peak and wane in the face of new capabilities in technology. These Techno Gypsies move from start-up, to existing enterprise to start-up, all as demand for their skills shifts and changes. Like technology, their skills are in a constant state of growth as they master the challenges of increasing processing speed, storage capacity and the demand for ever increasing information.Take any home building project which may require customized construction, customer satisfaction is a must and without which, the trust that has been placed in the builder slips away drastically.Thinking on the type of construction in mind, you as the customer are required to hunt for a good builder and Construction Company with high reputation along with good customer testimonials. Such companies tend to build a trustworthy feeling by looking at their profile. Not only that, on time delivery of quality work as expected, confirms their dedication and sincerity towards the way your construction project will be handled.But the point is still the same, looking and surfing on the internet for such a construction company can sometimes be very hectic especially when it brings out even more confused or depressed results. What are you going to do next? The job becomes even more complicated when you are trying hard to find out the list of all construction companies near your home and you are not able to decide “should I hire them or not?”. The solution is right here for you, www.constructionworld.us, the largest builder’s and Construction Company’ As the builders of the great information edifices of our age, they bear an uncanny resemblance to the freemasons of the thirteenth and succeeding centuries. The term freemason came to refer to working masons as early as 1325 who were permitted to move from town to town at a time when the feudal system bound most peasants to the land. As used in this article the term freemason, refers to the operational Stone Masons and their guilds, not the Speculative Intellectual Freemasonry which continues to this day. Recognizing the unbridled need for these skilled artisans, the rulers allowed their free movement at a time when maintaining control and power depended upon keeping the peasants tied to the land. What caused these conservative rulers to risk allowing free movement and other privileges to the stone masons? The freemasons possessed the skills necessary to create the palaces, cathedrals, battlements, and castles, along with the requisite sculpted works and ornaments. In this regard the freemasons were both artisans and artists. In a time of rampant illiteracy at all levels of society, these skills must have seemed almost magical. As the late medieval transitioned into the Renaissance period the Stone Masons were the elite of the work force. In many instances the occupational Stone masons were exempted from taxation or regulation by the king or (later) local municipalities. Free indeed! Unlike the other existing crafts and guilds the freemasons routinely collected in large groups to work on the large building projects of the day. The other trades tended to be solitary, competing for a local market in jealously guarded territories. The freemasons regularly moved upon the completion of one castle, battlement or cathedral on to the next great project. As they spread from this project to the next, experience and knowledge were shared and developed. While at a site, the freemasons regularly set up a common tent for mutual protection. As the works of the era tended to consume years, tents inevitably gave way to stronger lodging. In time, the term lodge came to describe freemasons in a particular locality. Freemasons were semi-nomadic. Projects lasted years, occasionally decades. At the end of a project the assembled masons generally moved on to other great works. Skilled artisans, the freemasons were4 dependent upon the sponsors of the great work, patrons if you will, for funding and livelihood. The initial sources were limited: either the nobility or the Church. As the Renaissance dawned a new class began to acquire wealth and with it, power. Successful merchants families such as the Medici’s began to commission the Stone Masons to build their ornate houses. This new class became the leader in patronage of the arts. Two main systems of patronage existed in Renaissance Italy. A wealthy person could take an artist into his household and in return the artist would supply the patron’s artistic needs. In the second, a patron (whether an individual or an organization,) would commission a single work from an artist and employ him only until it was completed. Only a few works were complicated or large enough to require years of labor. Accordingly, commission artists were always working on three fronts: first on their artistry; second, on the current patron’s assignment, and; third, looking for their next meal. As the Renaissance progressed, artists were universally dependent upon patrons for their very sustenance. Lucky indeed were the few artists who had a single patron such as the Borgia’s, Medici’s or, a Pope. For the rest of the artists there evolved a system of patronage networks. Florence, perhaps, had the greatest of these. At the dawn of the information age at the end of the second millennium, a new class of artists and artisans appeared. This group includes programmers and IT techs of every manner handling hard and software. Like their forbearers they began the massive works of the third millennium, the information edifices. The more things change the more they stay the same. The skill sets of the Techno Gypsies appear magical to the tech illiterate. With the exception of a Babbage or a few other visionaries, no one was computer literate until well into the twentieth century. These early literati had the demeanor and secrecy of high priests as they served room sized machines that would be unable to compete with today’s palm sized Blackberry’s. Just as the Stone Mason’s abilities to build larger, stronger edifices grew with experience, so the skills and ranks of the techies grew. The jealously guarded monster machines grew smaller and able to do more. The strangle hold of the mainframe was broken. Now the demand for skilled help rose to new levels. No longer was the limited (but still better than everyone else’s,) knowledge of the mainframe jockeys enough. As tech evolved the demand for professional grew with it. Computer techs spread from the confines of the Fortune 500 to virtually every business in the U.S. In today’s corporate setting the Techno Gypsies are the only group of employees who move freely and frequently between jobs. It is not unusual for some of them to think of job length in terms of weeks rather than the years other employees are expected to spend before moving. Corporate leaders and the venture capitalists that fund new companies use a starkly different mobility standard for Techno Gypsies than any other group of employees. The modern need for ever increasing information and the rapidly evolving technologies have enabled the Techno Gypsies complete freedom of movement. The reasons for the patronage of the Renaissance: prestige-pleasure-piety drifted significantly to today’s reasons: profit and information control. While the driving motivators have changed, similarity exists in the outlook of today’s patrons. The ‘A’ list being comprised of large enterprises with ongoing IT needs. These are the long term patrons. The alternative is to work for one of the smaller enterprises with immediate, but short work duration, needs, or take a risk with a start-up. The start-ups have a certain cachet and appeal as each of them, theoretically, has the potential of becoming a major player and large enterprise- if they develop and market reliable, innovative products with staying power. This is becoming increasingly difficult to do- unless the founders of the start-up can develop a truly upsetting technology surpassing existing capabilities. The kernel of thought behind many start-ups is the desire to solve an isolated problem. By the time they get a solution to market, if they ever do, others have already worked out a patch or the newer versions of software eclipse the need for their solution. Failures are many among start-up companies. Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old softw Tying A Company Mission and Vision Statement with a Guiding Principal ard the freemasons were both artisans and artists. In a time of rampant illiteracy at all levels of society, these skills must have seemed almost magical. As the late medieval transitioned into the Renaissance period the Stone Masons were the elite of the work force. In many instances the occupational Stone masons were exempted from taxation or regulation by the king or (later) local municipalities. Free indeed!“Quality means the world to us” says Motorola. “The world on time” states Federal Express.“Quality, Service, Cleanliness and Value” says McDonald’s Restaurants.Ever wonder where those great mottos for major companies come from? “They aren’t mission statements, nor vision statements; not exactly an advertising slogan, though it can serve as an effective motto in advertising” says Don Midgett, author of Mission and Vision Statements: Your Path to a Successful Business Future. Your guiding principle is a brief statement that distills the attitudes of you and your employees and sets your company’s image for your services or product.“If asked to write the mission statement for the Polaroid Corporation, it would say some-thing like: “Design, build and market photographic products giving instant gratification to amateur photographers,” Curtis W. Page, PhD writes in Asking ‘Just Right’ Business Questions.”The key phrase is instant gratification. All of Polaroid’s efforts, whether seen internally or externally, are organized around the idea that there is a vast market for photographers who get their pleasure from the finished photograph, not the process leading to it.” Unlike the other existing crafts and guilds the freemasons routinely collected in large groups to work on the large building projects of the day. The other trades tended to be solitary, competing for a local market in jealously guarded territories. The freemasons regularly moved upon the completion of one castle, battlement or cathedral on to the next great project. As they spread from this project to the next, experience and knowledge were shared and developed. While at a site, the freemasons regularly set up a common tent for mutual protection. As the works of the era tended to consume years, tents inevitably gave way to stronger lodging. In time, the term lodge came to describe freemasons in a particular locality. Freemasons were semi-nomadic. Projects lasted years, occasionally decades. At the end of a project the assembled masons generally moved on to other great works. Skilled artisans, the freemasons were4 dependent upon the sponsors of the great work, patrons if you will, for funding and livelihood. The initial sources were limited: either the nobility or the Church. As the Renaissance dawned a new class began to acquire wealth and with it, power. Successful merchants families such as the Medici’s began to commission the Stone Masons to build their ornate houses. This new class became the leader in patronage of the arts. Two main systems of patronage existed in Renaissance Italy. A wealthy person could take an artist into his household and in return the artist would supply the patron’s artistic needs. In the second, a patron (whether an individual or an organization,) would commission a single work from an artist and employ him only until it was completed. Only a few works were complicated or large enough to require years of labor. Accordingly, commission artists were always working on three fronts: first on their artistry; second, on the current patron’s assignment, and; third, looking for their next meal. As the Renaissance progressed, artists were universally dependent upon patrons for their very sustenance. Lucky indeed were the few artists who had a single patron such as the Borgia’s, Medici’s or, a Pope. For the rest of the artists there evolved a system of patronage networks. Florence, perhaps, had the greatest of these. At the dawn of the information age at the end of the second millennium, a new class of artists and artisans appeared. This group includes programmers and IT techs of every manner handling hard and software. Like their forbearers they began the massive works of the third millennium, the information edifices. The more things change the more they stay the same. The skill sets of the Techno Gypsies appear magical to the tech illiterate. With the exception of a Babbage or a few other visionaries, no one was computer literate until well into the twentieth century. These early literati had the demeanor and secrecy of high priests as they served room sized machines that would be unable to compete with today’s palm sized Blackberry’s. Just as the Stone Mason’s abilities to build larger, stronger edifices grew with experience, so the skills and ranks of the techies grew. The jealously guarded monster machines grew smaller and able to do more. The strangle hold of the mainframe was broken. Now the demand for skilled help rose to new levels. No longer was the limited (but still better than everyone else’s,) knowledge of the mainframe jockeys enough. As tech evolved the demand for professional grew with it. Computer techs spread from the confines of the Fortune 500 to virtually every business in the U.S. In today’s corporate setting the Techno Gypsies are the only group of employees who move freely and frequently between jobs. It is not unusual for some of them to think of job length in terms of weeks rather than the years other employees are expected to spend before moving. Corporate leaders and the venture capitalists that fund new companies use a starkly different mobility standard for Techno Gypsies than any other group of employees. The modern need for ever increasing information and the rapidly evolving technologies have enabled the Techno Gypsies complete freedom of movement. The reasons for the patronage of the Renaissance: prestige-pleasure-piety drifted significantly to today’s reasons: profit and information control. While the driving motivators have changed, similarity exists in the outlook of today’s patrons. The ‘A’ list being comprised of large enterprises with ongoing IT needs. These are the long term patrons. The alternative is to work for one of the smaller enterprises with immediate, but short work duration, needs, or take a risk with a start-up. The start-ups have a certain cachet and appeal as each of them, theoretically, has the potential of becoming a major player and large enterprise- if they develop and market reliable, innovative products with staying power. This is becoming increasingly difficult to do- unless the founders of the start-up can develop a truly upsetting technology surpassing existing capabilities. The kernel of thought behind many start-ups is the desire to solve an isolated problem. By the time they get a solution to market, if they ever do, others have already worked out a patch or the newer versions of software eclipse the need for their solution. Failures are many among start-up companies. Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old soft All About Indoor-Outdoor Area Rugs bility or the Church. As the Renaissance dawned a new class began to acquire wealth and with it, power. Successful merchants families such as the Medici’s began to commission the Stone Masons to build their ornate houses. This new class became the leader in patronage of the arts.Style, durable, fun and affordable is all about Indoor and Outdoor area rugs of today that are in trend. They have been rebel for outdoor decor and they are ideal for your home’s “inner-self” as well! Today our choices are just not limited to gritty, weather beaten mats and tired old Astroturf squares for our patio or poolside area. Now options are available for dressing up your outdoor areas with panache or go for even more casual feel.You can try a western theme for your barbecue, may be think about a patriotic feel for the fourth of July. Indoor and Outdoor area rugs come in a very huge variety of designs and they could be altered in a matte of moment. Whatever area rug design you choose, area rugs a versatile and add a nice touch for your outdoor living area.Today’s indoor and outdoor area rugs are a get through concept. Imagine a area rug that’s functional, attractive, available in many sizes and could hold out the outdoor things, kids, pets and other indoor activities. Indoor and Outdoor area rugs could do just that and could be done in style. The variety that’s accessible would have you outfitting your complete house with these go anywhere floor coverings!Area rugs for Indoor and outdoors are stron Two main systems of patronage existed in Renaissance Italy. A wealthy person could take an artist into his household and in return the artist would supply the patron’s artistic needs. In the second, a patron (whether an individual or an organization,) would commission a single work from an artist and employ him only until it was completed. Only a few works were complicated or large enough to require years of labor. Accordingly, commission artists were always working on three fronts: first on their artistry; second, on the current patron’s assignment, and; third, looking for their next meal. As the Renaissance progressed, artists were universally dependent upon patrons for their very sustenance. Lucky indeed were the few artists who had a single patron such as the Borgia’s, Medici’s or, a Pope. For the rest of the artists there evolved a system of patronage networks. Florence, perhaps, had the greatest of these. At the dawn of the information age at the end of the second millennium, a new class of artists and artisans appeared. This group includes programmers and IT techs of every manner handling hard and software. Like their forbearers they began the massive works of the third millennium, the information edifices. The more things change the more they stay the same. The skill sets of the Techno Gypsies appear magical to the tech illiterate. With the exception of a Babbage or a few other visionaries, no one was computer literate until well into the twentieth century. These early literati had the demeanor and secrecy of high priests as they served room sized machines that would be unable to compete with today’s palm sized Blackberry’s. Just as the Stone Mason’s abilities to build larger, stronger edifices grew with experience, so the skills and ranks of the techies grew. The jealously guarded monster machines grew smaller and able to do more. The strangle hold of the mainframe was broken. Now the demand for skilled help rose to new levels. No longer was the limited (but still better than everyone else’s,) knowledge of the mainframe jockeys enough. As tech evolved the demand for professional grew with it. Computer techs spread from the confines of the Fortune 500 to virtually every business in the U.S. In today’s corporate setting the Techno Gypsies are the only group of employees who move freely and frequently between jobs. It is not unusual for some of them to think of job length in terms of weeks rather than the years other employees are expected to spend before moving. Corporate leaders and the venture capitalists that fund new companies use a starkly different mobility standard for Techno Gypsies than any other group of employees. The modern need for ever increasing information and the rapidly evolving technologies have enabled the Techno Gypsies complete freedom of movement. The reasons for the patronage of the Renaissance: prestige-pleasure-piety drifted significantly to today’s reasons: profit and information control. While the driving motivators have changed, similarity exists in the outlook of today’s patrons. The ‘A’ list being comprised of large enterprises with ongoing IT needs. These are the long term patrons. The alternative is to work for one of the smaller enterprises with immediate, but short work duration, needs, or take a risk with a start-up. The start-ups have a certain cachet and appeal as each of them, theoretically, has the potential of becoming a major player and large enterprise- if they develop and market reliable, innovative products with staying power. This is becoming increasingly difficult to do- unless the founders of the start-up can develop a truly upsetting technology surpassing existing capabilities. The kernel of thought behind many start-ups is the desire to solve an isolated problem. By the time they get a solution to market, if they ever do, others have already worked out a patch or the newer versions of software eclipse the need for their solution. Failures are many among start-up companies. Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old soft The Go Zone and Great Investing Opportunities information edifices.The gulf coast was pounded two years ago with Hurricanes Katrina and Rita respectively. Many people lost their homes and everything they owned in those homes. The damage was so bad that the President declared areas hit hardest by the storm as Disaster Areas. Because of this declaration and the complete devastation in some areas of the storm, there are now opportunities for some people to invest in commercial real estate and benefit greatly due to this tragic disaster.The Go Zone, or Gulf Opportunity Zone is an incentives based program to lure investors into this part of the country and invest in the building and rebuilding of commercial properties. Areas most hard hit by the hurricanes, known as the Core Disaster Area, makes up the locales of the Go Zone. These parishes were the ones where the devastation was the greatest. Buildings were under water, high winds created problems by sending foreign objects into the buildings shattering glass and the very structure of the building. High winds tore roofs from buildings as well as doors and other parts susceptible to wind damage. Instead of having standing buildings when the skies finally cleared and the waters receded, there were sticks, stones, and structures that were no The more things change the more they stay the same. The skill sets of the Techno Gypsies appear magical to the tech illiterate. With the exception of a Babbage or a few other visionaries, no one was computer literate until well into the twentieth century. These early literati had the demeanor and secrecy of high priests as they served room sized machines that would be unable to compete with today’s palm sized Blackberry’s. Just as the Stone Mason’s abilities to build larger, stronger edifices grew with experience, so the skills and ranks of the techies grew. The jealously guarded monster machines grew smaller and able to do more. The strangle hold of the mainframe was broken. Now the demand for skilled help rose to new levels. No longer was the limited (but still better than everyone else’s,) knowledge of the mainframe jockeys enough. As tech evolved the demand for professional grew with it. Computer techs spread from the confines of the Fortune 500 to virtually every business in the U.S. In today’s corporate setting the Techno Gypsies are the only group of employees who move freely and frequently between jobs. It is not unusual for some of them to think of job length in terms of weeks rather than the years other employees are expected to spend before moving. Corporate leaders and the venture capitalists that fund new companies use a starkly different mobility standard for Techno Gypsies than any other group of employees. The modern need for ever increasing information and the rapidly evolving technologies have enabled the Techno Gypsies complete freedom of movement. The reasons for the patronage of the Renaissance: prestige-pleasure-piety drifted significantly to today’s reasons: profit and information control. While the driving motivators have changed, similarity exists in the outlook of today’s patrons. The ‘A’ list being comprised of large enterprises with ongoing IT needs. These are the long term patrons. The alternative is to work for one of the smaller enterprises with immediate, but short work duration, needs, or take a risk with a start-up. The start-ups have a certain cachet and appeal as each of them, theoretically, has the potential of becoming a major player and large enterprise- if they develop and market reliable, innovative products with staying power. This is becoming increasingly difficult to do- unless the founders of the start-up can develop a truly upsetting technology surpassing existing capabilities. The kernel of thought behind many start-ups is the desire to solve an isolated problem. By the time they get a solution to market, if they ever do, others have already worked out a patch or the newer versions of software eclipse the need for their solution. Failures are many among start-up companies. Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old soft Undisclosed Tip To Less Business Arguments increasing information and the rapidly evolving technologies have enabled the Techno Gypsies complete freedom of movement.In the Tittha Sutta, some monks remarked to the Buddha that there are many followers of other teachings with differing opinions, who bicker with one another on what is and is not the truth. The Buddha described the situation with a story... Once, a king gathered men blind from birth before an elephant. To some, he "showed" a tusk, and to others the trunk, body, foot, hind, tail and tuft. Next, he asked what they "saw". Those who touched the head said it was like a winnowing basket, while the tusk was like an iron rod, the trunk like a plow pole, the body like a granary, the foot like a post, the hind like a mortar, the tail like a pestle, and the tuft like a broom. The blind men then argued and fought over their "views" of what the elephant was really like. The Buddha remarked that those who are blind to the Dharma (the truth, or the way to the truth) do not know what is beneficial or harmful - thus do they argue over it.To argue with animosity is harmful. It makes one blind to the truth to be seen with calm and clear introspection. The Buddha himself discusses the Dharma peacefully, even with the quarrelsome. Arguments often arise over varied perspectives. Two blind men might even "see" the same part of an elephant di The reasons for the patronage of the Renaissance: prestige-pleasure-piety drifted significantly to today’s reasons: profit and information control. While the driving motivators have changed, similarity exists in the outlook of today’s patrons. The ‘A’ list being comprised of large enterprises with ongoing IT needs. These are the long term patrons. The alternative is to work for one of the smaller enterprises with immediate, but short work duration, needs, or take a risk with a start-up. The start-ups have a certain cachet and appeal as each of them, theoretically, has the potential of becoming a major player and large enterprise- if they develop and market reliable, innovative products with staying power. This is becoming increasingly difficult to do- unless the founders of the start-up can develop a truly upsetting technology surpassing existing capabilities. The kernel of thought behind many start-ups is the desire to solve an isolated problem. By the time they get a solution to market, if they ever do, others have already worked out a patch or the newer versions of software eclipse the need for their solution. Failures are many among start-up companies. Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old software in the same manner. Like the commissioned artist, the Techno Gypsies have to work on three fronts: first, developing new skills; second, on their current project, and; third, looking for their next meal. Initially the IT techies believed they would stay for protracted terms at whatever enterprise they were working for. Some still do. The advent of rapid changes in hardware and software, increased storage capacity and faster and faster processing times created obsolescence as quickly as it created opportunity. In modern times the patrons of the Techno Gypsies are the established business enterprises along with the venture capitalists that facilitate the growth of new technologies and companies. Particularly in the start-up segment, people try to commercialize the next ‘best thing.’ A significant number of these new ventures fail; for a variety of reasons. The venture capitalists and the founders of these new ventures absorb the financial losses while the Techno Gypsies move on to a new patron, where they can apply the skills honed at the last job to a new one. In no other modern enterprise is such freedom with respect to the transfer of intellectual property tolerated. This movement has created a Gypsy-like motion among techies. Many now think in terms of projects rather than jobs; expecting them to last a measured number of weeks instead of months and years. As they continue to build and expand the information infrastructure, it is reasonable to contemplate on organized group emerging among the Techno Gypsies within the next few years rivaling that of the freemasons. In any start-up time and money are in chronic short supply. For the new enterprise to survive, let alone succeed, it is necessary for the founders to have the skills or bring in a leader with the skills necessary to focus on the commercial necessities: viable product, timely development, attracting financing at each stage on commercially acceptable terms, building market acceptance as the product is being developed, and transitioning from development to production and sales.. These skills differ markedly yet compliment the ones necessary for product conception and actual development. Give yourself an edge when it comes to the success of your start-up. © 2007, Charles B. Van Duzer
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