==== This Issue Sponsored By ====
HP & Microsoft Network Storage Solutions Road Show http://www.winnetmag.com/roadshows/nas ==================== 1. Commentary: Next Versions of Visual Studio .NET to Accompany Major Platform Shifts 2. Announcements - Get the eBook That Will Help You Get Certified! - Need Help Managing Your Storage Investment? 3. Events - New--Mobile & Wireless Road Show! 4. New and Improved - Access Software Development Information 5. Contact Us - See this section for a list of ways to contact us. ==== Sponsor: HP & Microsoft Network Storage Solutions Road Show ==== Missed the Network Storage Solutions Road Show? If you couldn't make the HP & Microsoft Network Storage Solutions Road Show, you missed Mark Smith talking about Windows-Powered NAS, file server consolidation, and more. The good news is that you can now view the Webcast event in its entirety at: http://www.winnetmag.com/roadshows/nas ==================== Editor's Note: We'd like your opinion about .NET UPDATE! To improve the editorial quality of this email newsletter and determine the best delivery format, we need your feedback. Please take some time to answer our online survey. The survey gives you the opportunity to provide feedback in one online survey about all the Windows & .NET Magazine Network newsletters to which you subscribe. We appreciate your time, and we look forward to reading your comments. To answer the survey go to http://websurveyor.net/wsb.dll/12237/EditorsEmail.htm == 1. Commentary: Next Versions of Visual Studio .NET to Accompany Major Platform Shifts == by Paul Thurrott, thurrott@winnetmag.com Beginning with the release of Visual Studio .NET 2003 earlier this year, Microsoft has started to tie its development tool releases to major platform releases. Microsoft released Visual Studio .NET 2003 with Windows Server 2003. The next two versions of the company's server OS will accompany SQL Server 2004 (code-named Yukon) and Longhorn. And if the next few versions of Visual Studio .NET are any indication, we have some exciting advances to look forward to in Microsoft's platform technology. Visual Studio .Next The next release of Visual Studio .NET, code-named Whidbey, is currently in alpha release, and Microsoft will release it publicly in October at the Professional Developers Conference (PDC) in Los Angeles. From a developer's perspective, Whidbey is a minor upgrade from Visual Studio .NET 2003, and it will take advantage of technological advances coming in the next version of SQL Server, Yukon. As a platform wave (if you'll pardon the Microsoft speak), Yukon will offer exciting technologies that will directly affect users at every level of the Microsoft food chain. You might have heard that Yukon will form the basis for Windows Future Storage (WinFS), the NTFS-based file system that Microsoft will ship as part of Longhorn, for example. But Yukon doesn't just unify Microsoft's storage technologies. And the database product that will result from this project will make SQL Server more accessible to developers, resulting in more elegant end-user applications and services. One of the biggest advances coming in Yukon is the ability to programmatically access databases and other Yukon features by using any .NET programming language. Today, developers must write low-level T-SQL code to access the database or create components in high-level languages such as Visual Basic or C# that access T-SQL code behind the scenes. Either way, programmers are forced to learn multiple languages --say, Visual Basic (VB) and T-SQL--to efficiently access data, or split projects among multiple developers, each with a specialty in certain areas. This situation has significantly raised the expertise needed to program data-backed applications and services, limiting their deployment. In Yukon, this restriction is gone. Instead of being forced to learn new languages, such as T-SQL, to access the database, developers will be able to use their language of choice to query the database, write stored procedures, and perform other data-related tasks. So if you're writing code in Visual Basic .NET, you'll have new APIs--available to that language--that let you access the database. This way, developers can continue building on their core competencies but get experience in new areas. Suddenly, what was hard is now much easier. Because Yukon is so integrated with .NET, that version of SQL Server will also drop its proprietary front-end tools and give developers a special version of Visual Studio .NET, in the box, that's geared to data access. This change means that users familiar with SQL Server will be able to seamlessly move to the full Visual Studio .NET, and vice versa, lowering the learning curve. Yukon and Visual Studio .NET Whidbey will ship by mid-2004, Microsoft says. Visual Studio .Longhorn Looking further ahead, the Orcas release of Visual Studio .NET will target Longhorn, a wave of products that will include new versions of Windows, Windows Server, Microsoft Office, the Windows .NET Framework, and other products. Most of the primary platform work in Longhorn will occur in the Windows OS, and the new Office version will build on those capabilities and no doubt require Longhorn to run. Microsoft is still being vague about Longhorn, but the company notes that Visual Studio Orcas will support Longhorn features such as "managed interfaces, enhanced UI features, the Longhorn trustworthy computing and security model, new application model, improved communication and collaboration, integrated data storage, and innovations in presentation and media." Visual Studio .Office In the meantime, we have Visual Studio .NET 2003 and, soon, a new set of development tools for Office 2003 that Microsoft will ship in September as a free add-on for Visual Studio .NET 2003 users. Dubbed Visual Studio Tools for the Microsoft Office System 2003, this package lets developers write new types of applications that target Microsoft Excel 2003 and Microsoft Word 2003 by using standard .NET languages. This add-on helps Visual Studio developers move seamlessly to Office without having to learn new tools, although this version supports only a few Office 2003 applications and not the whole suite. Applications written for Word and Excel are hosted directly in the task pane area and thus don't get in the user's face or require major UI work. And of course these applications can take advantage of the new .NET features, including an improved security model. In the end, all of these Visual Studio advances point to a future of .NET managed code strewn across all of the platforms, applications, and services we access daily. Microsoft might have backed off of its notion that .NET should be center of its platform strategy, but there is little doubt that .NET will exist--and flourish--at every level of the Microsoft ecosystem. For developers, end users, administrators and, yes, Microsoft, this is a good thing. ==== 2. Announcements ==== (from Windows & .NET Magazine and its partners) Get the eBook That Will Help You Get Certified! The "Insider's Guide to IT Certification," from the Windows & .NET Magazine Network, has one goal: to help you save time and money on your quest for certification. Find out how to choose the best study guides, save hundreds of dollars, and be successful as an IT professional. The amount of time you spend reading this book will be more than made up by the time you save preparing for your certification exams. Order your copy today! http://winnet.bookaisle.com/ebookcover.asp?ebookid=13475 Need Help Managing Your Storage Investment? Planning and managing your storage deployment can be costly and complex. Check out Windows & .NET Magazine's Storage Administration Web site for the latest advice, news, and tips to help you make the most of your storage investment. You'll find problem-solving articles, eye-opening white papers, a technical forum, and much more! http://www.storageadmin.com ==== 3. Events ==== (brought to you by Windows & .NET Magazine) New--Mobile & Wireless Road Show! Learn more about the wireless and mobility solutions that are available today! Register now for this free event! http://www.winnetmag.com/roadshows/wireless ==== 4. New and Improved ==== by Carolyn Mader, products@winnetmag.com Access Software Development Information LogicLibrary announced it has reached an agreement with Microsoft that lets Visual Studio .NET developers search a central library of software development assets (SDAs) to identify assets that match business and technical requirements for Windows .NET Framework-based application development. Under the agreement, Logidex .NET Library will integrate with Visual Studio .NET integrated development environment (IDE). Users can connect to a Logidex .NET Library hosted on Microsoft Developer Network (MSDN). For information about availability and pricing, contact LogicLibrary at 412-471-4710 or sales@logiclibrary.com. http://www.logiclibrary.com ==== Sponsored Links ==== Ultrabac FREE live trial-Backup & Disaster Recovery software w/ encryption http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;5945485;8214395;x?http://www.ultrabac.com/default.asp?src=WINTxtLAug03tgt=./ CrossTec Free Download - NEW NetOp 7.6 - faster, more secure, remote support http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;5930423;8214395;j?http://www.crossteccorp.com/tryit/w2k.html =================== ==== 5. Contact Us ==== About the newsletter -- letters@winnetmag.com About technical questions -- http://www.winnetmag.com/forums About product news -- products@winnetmag.com About your subscription -- winnetmagupdate@winnetmag.com About sponsoring UPDATE--emedia_opps@winnetmag.com ==================== This email newsletter is brought to you by Windows & .NET Magazine, the leading publication for IT professionals deploying Windows and related technologies. Subscribe today. http://www.winnetmag.com/sub.cfm?code=wswi201x1z Manage Your Account To unsubscribe from this email newsletter, send an email message to mailto:WinInfo-UPDATE_Unsub@list.winnetmag.com. You are subscribed as #EmailAddr#. Manage your email newsletter account on our Web site. Simply log on to change your email address, update your profile information, and subscribe or unsubscribe to any of our email newsletters. http://list.winnetmag.com/cgi-bin3/flo?y=eNee0CFYDW0CBo0rvS0Al Copyright 2003, Penton Media, Inc. End of Article
====================
1. Commentary: Next Versions of Visual Studio .NET to Accompany Major Platform Shifts
2. Announcements - Get the eBook That Will Help You Get Certified! - Need Help Managing Your Storage Investment?
3. Events - New--Mobile & Wireless Road Show! 4. New and Improved - Access Software Development Information
5. Contact Us - See this section for a list of ways to contact us.
==== Sponsor: HP & Microsoft Network Storage Solutions Road Show ====
Missed the Network Storage Solutions Road Show? If you couldn't make the HP & Microsoft Network Storage Solutions Road Show, you missed Mark Smith talking about Windows-Powered NAS, file server consolidation, and more. The good news is that you can now view the Webcast event in its entirety at: http://www.winnetmag.com/roadshows/nas ==================== Editor's Note: We'd like your opinion about .NET UPDATE! To improve the editorial quality of this email newsletter and determine the best delivery format, we need your feedback. Please take some time to answer our online survey. The survey gives you the opportunity to provide feedback in one online survey about all the Windows & .NET Magazine Network newsletters to which you subscribe. We appreciate your time, and we look forward to reading your comments. To answer the survey go to http://websurveyor.net/wsb.dll/12237/EditorsEmail.htm == 1. Commentary: Next Versions of Visual Studio .NET to Accompany Major Platform Shifts == by Paul Thurrott, thurrott@winnetmag.com Beginning with the release of Visual Studio .NET 2003 earlier this year, Microsoft has started to tie its development tool releases to major platform releases. Microsoft released Visual Studio .NET 2003 with Windows Server 2003. The next two versions of the company's server OS will accompany SQL Server 2004 (code-named Yukon) and Longhorn. And if the next few versions of Visual Studio .NET are any indication, we have some exciting advances to look forward to in Microsoft's platform technology. Visual Studio .Next The next release of Visual Studio .NET, code-named Whidbey, is currently in alpha release, and Microsoft will release it publicly in October at the Professional Developers Conference (PDC) in Los Angeles. From a developer's perspective, Whidbey is a minor upgrade from Visual Studio .NET 2003, and it will take advantage of technological advances coming in the next version of SQL Server, Yukon. As a platform wave (if you'll pardon the Microsoft speak), Yukon will offer exciting technologies that will directly affect users at every level of the Microsoft food chain. You might have heard that Yukon will form the basis for Windows Future Storage (WinFS), the NTFS-based file system that Microsoft will ship as part of Longhorn, for example. But Yukon doesn't just unify Microsoft's storage technologies. And the database product that will result from this project will make SQL Server more accessible to developers, resulting in more elegant end-user applications and services. One of the biggest advances coming in Yukon is the ability to programmatically access databases and other Yukon features by using any .NET programming language. Today, developers must write low-level T-SQL code to access the database or create components in high-level languages such as Visual Basic or C# that access T-SQL code behind the scenes. Either way, programmers are forced to learn multiple languages --say, Visual Basic (VB) and T-SQL--to efficiently access data, or split projects among multiple developers, each with a specialty in certain areas. This situation has significantly raised the expertise needed to program data-backed applications and services, limiting their deployment. In Yukon, this restriction is gone. Instead of being forced to learn new languages, such as T-SQL, to access the database, developers will be able to use their language of choice to query the database, write stored procedures, and perform other data-related tasks. So if you're writing code in Visual Basic .NET, you'll have new APIs--available to that language--that let you access the database. This way, developers can continue building on their core competencies but get experience in new areas. Suddenly, what was hard is now much easier. Because Yukon is so integrated with .NET, that version of SQL Server will also drop its proprietary front-end tools and give developers a special version of Visual Studio .NET, in the box, that's geared to data access. This change means that users familiar with SQL Server will be able to seamlessly move to the full Visual Studio .NET, and vice versa, lowering the learning curve. Yukon and Visual Studio .NET Whidbey will ship by mid-2004, Microsoft says. Visual Studio .Longhorn Looking further ahead, the Orcas release of Visual Studio .NET will target Longhorn, a wave of products that will include new versions of Windows, Windows Server, Microsoft Office, the Windows .NET Framework, and other products. Most of the primary platform work in Longhorn will occur in the Windows OS, and the new Office version will build on those capabilities and no doubt require Longhorn to run. Microsoft is still being vague about Longhorn, but the company notes that Visual Studio Orcas will support Longhorn features such as "managed interfaces, enhanced UI features, the Longhorn trustworthy computing and security model, new application model, improved communication and collaboration, integrated data storage, and innovations in presentation and media." Visual Studio .Office In the meantime, we have Visual Studio .NET 2003 and, soon, a new set of development tools for Office 2003 that Microsoft will ship in September as a free add-on for Visual Studio .NET 2003 users. Dubbed Visual Studio Tools for the Microsoft Office System 2003, this package lets developers write new types of applications that target Microsoft Excel 2003 and Microsoft Word 2003 by using standard .NET languages. This add-on helps Visual Studio developers move seamlessly to Office without having to learn new tools, although this version supports only a few Office 2003 applications and not the whole suite. Applications written for Word and Excel are hosted directly in the task pane area and thus don't get in the user's face or require major UI work. And of course these applications can take advantage of the new .NET features, including an improved security model. In the end, all of these Visual Studio advances point to a future of .NET managed code strewn across all of the platforms, applications, and services we access daily. Microsoft might have backed off of its notion that .NET should be center of its platform strategy, but there is little doubt that .NET will exist--and flourish--at every level of the Microsoft ecosystem. For developers, end users, administrators and, yes, Microsoft, this is a good thing. ==== 2. Announcements ==== (from Windows & .NET Magazine and its partners) Get the eBook That Will Help You Get Certified! The "Insider's Guide to IT Certification," from the Windows & .NET Magazine Network, has one goal: to help you save time and money on your quest for certification. Find out how to choose the best study guides, save hundreds of dollars, and be successful as an IT professional. The amount of time you spend reading this book will be more than made up by the time you save preparing for your certification exams. Order your copy today! http://winnet.bookaisle.com/ebookcover.asp?ebookid=13475 Need Help Managing Your Storage Investment? Planning and managing your storage deployment can be costly and complex. Check out Windows & .NET Magazine's Storage Administration Web site for the latest advice, news, and tips to help you make the most of your storage investment. You'll find problem-solving articles, eye-opening white papers, a technical forum, and much more! http://www.storageadmin.com ==== 3. Events ==== (brought to you by Windows & .NET Magazine) New--Mobile & Wireless Road Show! Learn more about the wireless and mobility solutions that are available today! Register now for this free event! http://www.winnetmag.com/roadshows/wireless ==== 4. New and Improved ==== by Carolyn Mader, products@winnetmag.com Access Software Development Information LogicLibrary announced it has reached an agreement with Microsoft that lets Visual Studio .NET developers search a central library of software development assets (SDAs) to identify assets that match business and technical requirements for Windows .NET Framework-based application development. Under the agreement, Logidex .NET Library will integrate with Visual Studio .NET integrated development environment (IDE). Users can connect to a Logidex .NET Library hosted on Microsoft Developer Network (MSDN). For information about availability and pricing, contact LogicLibrary at 412-471-4710 or sales@logiclibrary.com. http://www.logiclibrary.com ==== Sponsored Links ==== Ultrabac FREE live trial-Backup & Disaster Recovery software w/ encryption http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;5945485;8214395;x?http://www.ultrabac.com/default.asp?src=WINTxtLAug03tgt=./ CrossTec Free Download - NEW NetOp 7.6 - faster, more secure, remote support http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;5930423;8214395;j?http://www.crossteccorp.com/tryit/w2k.html =================== ==== 5. Contact Us ==== About the newsletter -- letters@winnetmag.com About technical questions -- http://www.winnetmag.com/forums About product news -- products@winnetmag.com About your subscription -- winnetmagupdate@winnetmag.com About sponsoring UPDATE--emedia_opps@winnetmag.com ==================== This email newsletter is brought to you by Windows & .NET Magazine, the leading publication for IT professionals deploying Windows and related technologies. Subscribe today. http://www.winnetmag.com/sub.cfm?code=wswi201x1z Manage Your Account To unsubscribe from this email newsletter, send an email message to mailto:WinInfo-UPDATE_Unsub@list.winnetmag.com. You are subscribed as #EmailAddr#. Manage your email newsletter account on our Web site. Simply log on to change your email address, update your profile information, and subscribe or unsubscribe to any of our email newsletters. http://list.winnetmag.com/cgi-bin3/flo?y=eNee0CFYDW0CBo0rvS0Al Copyright 2003, Penton Media, Inc. End of Article
Editor's Note: We'd like your opinion about .NET UPDATE! To improve the editorial quality of this email newsletter and determine the best delivery format, we need your feedback. Please take some time to answer our online survey. The survey gives you the opportunity to provide feedback in one online survey about all the Windows & .NET Magazine Network newsletters to which you subscribe. We appreciate your time, and we look forward to reading your comments. To answer the survey go to http://websurveyor.net/wsb.dll/12237/EditorsEmail.htm
== 1. Commentary: Next Versions of Visual Studio .NET to Accompany Major Platform Shifts == by Paul Thurrott, thurrott@winnetmag.com
Beginning with the release of Visual Studio .NET 2003 earlier this year, Microsoft has started to tie its development tool releases to major platform releases. Microsoft released Visual Studio .NET 2003 with Windows Server 2003. The next two versions of the company's server OS will accompany SQL Server 2004 (code-named Yukon) and Longhorn. And if the next few versions of Visual Studio .NET are any indication, we have some exciting advances to look forward to in Microsoft's platform technology.
Visual Studio .Next The next release of Visual Studio .NET, code-named Whidbey, is currently in alpha release, and Microsoft will release it publicly in October at the Professional Developers Conference (PDC) in Los Angeles. From a developer's perspective, Whidbey is a minor upgrade from Visual Studio .NET 2003, and it will take advantage of technological advances coming in the next version of SQL Server, Yukon. As a platform wave (if you'll pardon the Microsoft speak), Yukon will offer exciting technologies that will directly affect users at every level of the Microsoft food chain. You might have heard that Yukon will form the basis for Windows Future Storage (WinFS), the NTFS-based file system that Microsoft will ship as part of Longhorn, for example. But Yukon doesn't just unify Microsoft's storage technologies. And the database product that will result from this project will make SQL Server more accessible to developers, resulting in more elegant end-user applications and services. One of the biggest advances coming in Yukon is the ability to programmatically access databases and other Yukon features by using any .NET programming language. Today, developers must write low-level T-SQL code to access the database or create components in high-level languages such as Visual Basic or C# that access T-SQL code behind the scenes. Either way, programmers are forced to learn multiple languages --say, Visual Basic (VB) and T-SQL--to efficiently access data, or split projects among multiple developers, each with a specialty in certain areas. This situation has significantly raised the expertise needed to program data-backed applications and services, limiting their deployment. In Yukon, this restriction is gone. Instead of being forced to learn new languages, such as T-SQL, to access the database, developers will be able to use their language of choice to query the database, write stored procedures, and perform other data-related tasks. So if you're writing code in Visual Basic .NET, you'll have new APIs--available to that language--that let you access the database. This way, developers can continue building on their core competencies but get experience in new areas. Suddenly, what was hard is now much easier. Because Yukon is so integrated with .NET, that version of SQL Server will also drop its proprietary front-end tools and give developers a special version of Visual Studio .NET, in the box, that's geared to data access. This change means that users familiar with SQL Server will be able to seamlessly move to the full Visual Studio .NET, and vice versa, lowering the learning curve. Yukon and Visual Studio .NET Whidbey will ship by mid-2004, Microsoft says.
Visual Studio .Longhorn Looking further ahead, the Orcas release of Visual Studio .NET will target Longhorn, a wave of products that will include new versions of Windows, Windows Server, Microsoft Office, the Windows .NET Framework, and other products. Most of the primary platform work in Longhorn will occur in the Windows OS, and the new Office version will build on those capabilities and no doubt require Longhorn to run. Microsoft is still being vague about Longhorn, but the company notes that Visual Studio Orcas will support Longhorn features such as "managed interfaces, enhanced UI features, the Longhorn trustworthy computing and security model, new application model, improved communication and collaboration, integrated data storage, and innovations in presentation and media."
Visual Studio .Office In the meantime, we have Visual Studio .NET 2003 and, soon, a new set of development tools for Office 2003 that Microsoft will ship in September as a free add-on for Visual Studio .NET 2003 users. Dubbed Visual Studio Tools for the Microsoft Office System 2003, this package lets developers write new types of applications that target Microsoft Excel 2003 and Microsoft Word 2003 by using standard .NET languages. This add-on helps Visual Studio developers move seamlessly to Office without having to learn new tools, although this version supports only a few Office 2003 applications and not the whole suite. Applications written for Word and Excel are hosted directly in the task pane area and thus don't get in the user's face or require major UI work. And of course these applications can take advantage of the new .NET features, including an improved security model.
In the end, all of these Visual Studio advances point to a future of .NET managed code strewn across all of the platforms, applications, and services we access daily. Microsoft might have backed off of its notion that .NET should be center of its platform strategy, but there is little doubt that .NET will exist--and flourish--at every level of the Microsoft ecosystem. For developers, end users, administrators and, yes, Microsoft, this is a good thing.
==== 2. Announcements ==== (from Windows & .NET Magazine and its partners)
Get the eBook That Will Help You Get Certified! The "Insider's Guide to IT Certification," from the Windows & .NET Magazine Network, has one goal: to help you save time and money on your quest for certification. Find out how to choose the best study guides, save hundreds of dollars, and be successful as an IT professional. The amount of time you spend reading this book will be more than made up by the time you save preparing for your certification exams. Order your copy today! http://winnet.bookaisle.com/ebookcover.asp?ebookid=13475
Need Help Managing Your Storage Investment? Planning and managing your storage deployment can be costly and complex. Check out Windows & .NET Magazine's Storage Administration Web site for the latest advice, news, and tips to help you make the most of your storage investment. You'll find problem-solving articles, eye-opening white papers, a technical forum, and much more! http://www.storageadmin.com
==== 3. Events ==== (brought to you by Windows & .NET Magazine)
New--Mobile & Wireless Road Show! Learn more about the wireless and mobility solutions that are available today! Register now for this free event! http://www.winnetmag.com/roadshows/wireless
==== 4. New and Improved ==== by Carolyn Mader, products@winnetmag.com
Access Software Development Information LogicLibrary announced it has reached an agreement with Microsoft that lets Visual Studio .NET developers search a central library of software development assets (SDAs) to identify assets that match business and technical requirements for Windows .NET Framework-based application development. Under the agreement, Logidex .NET Library will integrate with Visual Studio .NET integrated development environment (IDE). Users can connect to a Logidex .NET Library hosted on Microsoft Developer Network (MSDN). For information about availability and pricing, contact LogicLibrary at 412-471-4710 or sales@logiclibrary.com. http://www.logiclibrary.com
==== Sponsored Links ====
Ultrabac FREE live trial-Backup & Disaster Recovery software w/ encryption http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;5945485;8214395;x?http://www.ultrabac.com/default.asp?src=WINTxtLAug03tgt=./
CrossTec Free Download - NEW NetOp 7.6 - faster, more secure, remote support http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;5930423;8214395;j?http://www.crossteccorp.com/tryit/w2k.html
===================
==== 5. Contact Us ====
About the newsletter -- letters@winnetmag.com About technical questions -- http://www.winnetmag.com/forums About product news -- products@winnetmag.com About your subscription -- winnetmagupdate@winnetmag.com About sponsoring UPDATE--emedia_opps@winnetmag.com
==================== This email newsletter is brought to you by Windows & .NET Magazine, the leading publication for IT professionals deploying Windows and related technologies. Subscribe today. http://www.winnetmag.com/sub.cfm?code=wswi201x1z
Manage Your Account
To unsubscribe from this email newsletter, send an email message to mailto:WinInfo-UPDATE_Unsub@list.winnetmag.com.
You are subscribed as #EmailAddr#. Manage your email newsletter account on our Web site. Simply log on to change your email address, update your profile information, and subscribe or unsubscribe to any of our email newsletters. http://list.winnetmag.com/cgi-bin3/flo?y=eNee0CFYDW0CBo0rvS0Al
Copyright 2003, Penton Media, Inc.
End of Article
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