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Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Ajax Pioneer Week: Bruce Johnson of GWT

Category: Google, Interview, Podcast, GWT

Today we have Bruce Johnson of the GWT team talking to us about GWT 1.5. He discusses the new features, such as the long awaited Java 5 language support, performance improvements, and much more.

It is very nice to take an application, run it through the new GWT 1.5 compiler, and get an instantly faster running application “for free”.


Previously on Ajax Pioneer Week…

Posted by Dion Almaer at 9:27 am
3 Comments

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4.5 rating from 24 votes

Monday, May 5th, 2008

Ajax Pioneer Week: Sam Stephenson of Prototype

Category: Prototype, Interview, Podcast

We are having a special week at Ajaxian. Ben and I are giving an Ajax talk at JavaOne this week, and decided to put a little video from Ajax pioneers. As we worked out what we wanted to do, we asked the pioneers for a little time to do an interview. Although only a piece of the interview will be used in the live presentation, we wanted to get the full interviews for the community here.

During the week you will hear from:

  • Sam Stephenson of Prototype
  • Bruce Johnson of GWT
  • Alex Russell of Dojo
  • John Resig of jQuery

On Wednesday, we will have a special video that features Ben and I having some fun with a new type of Ajax application.

Let’s cut to the chase, and listen in to Sam Stephenson. Although we couldn’t get to him in person, he kindly recorded himself via his laptop. My voice quality is poor, but we are all hear to listen to his thoughts on:

  • The future of Prototype
  • What excites him about new versions of Prototype, and what problems are they trying to solve
  • Thoughts on the current crop of browsers, and what he wants to see

In the interview he discusses pdoc, a new inline documentation tool, Sprockets, a tool to help package Prototype, and new event delegation techniques.


Posted by Dion Almaer at 11:16 am
15 Comments

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4.5 rating from 34 votes

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Audible Ajax Episode 25: State of Ajax

Category: Podcast

Ben and I were both in the same place for once, so we whipped out a recorder and produced a new Audible Ajax podcast.

There has been a lot going on in the Ajax-related space, and we cover our thoughts on:

  • IE 8 and standards
  • Acid3 testing
  • Server side JavaScript vs. polyglots
  • Fluid and GreaseKit
  • The meaning of the Open Web

We have the audio directly available, or you can subscribe to the podcast.

Posted by Dion Almaer at 10:30 am
2 Comments

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3.3 rating from 9 votes

Monday, February 18th, 2008

Audible Ajax Episode 24: Aptana Jaxer Talk

Category: JavaScript, Podcast, Framework, Aptana

I had the opportunity to sit down with three fine gents from Aptana to discuss their recent launch of Jaxer, the “server side Ajax framework”.

Paul Colton, Uri Sarid, and Kevin Hakman all sat with me to chat about things. I have already played with Jaxer, and created the Google Gears wrapper which can be used seemlessly for use cases such as “If the user doesn’t have Gears installed, just do it on the server”.

We discussed a lot in the twenty odd minutes including:

  • Where the idea for Jaxer came from
  • The difference between a server side JavaScript framework and Jaxer (since there are many of them!)
  • How Jaxer works (think of a headless Mozilla browser)
  • Side effects of going this direction
  • How developers are using it
  • How does your architecture change if you are using Jaxer?
  • How can you talk to code in Java and other languages?
  • How JavaScript 2 fits into the picture
  • What about deployment?

A lot of good stuff. Thanks to the crew for taking the time to chat with me. What other questions do you have for them?

We have the audio directly available, or you can subscribe to the podcast. We also have the video in high def here, or in normal def right below:


Posted by Dion Almaer at 9:37 am
7 Comments

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4.5 rating from 20 votes

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

John Lilly , CEO of Mozilla, Interviewed

Category: Firefox, Podcast

Sean Ammirati of ReadWriteTalk has posted an interview with John Lilly, the new CEO of Mozilla.

Listen, or read the transcript.

Ok. In Firefox 3 is the killer browser. And I think I’ve been using the Beta since Beta 1 and Beta 2 is even better. Even in the Beta, we’ve surpassed the quality of Firefox 2. So I already encouraged my mom and my grandmother to update their Firefox 3 Beta 2. I thinks it’s a killer product. It holds up in a lot of new areas. It works well on Mac, on Linux and works well in Windows as always.On labs, there are two things in particular. I’m really excited about the efforts on mobile were working on. I think a lot of folks wondered what about what we’re going to give mobile. And we’ve waited for a pretty long time. But we really felt like we needed to wait until the industry started to open-up a little bit.

We are trying not to overload users with a lot of new features. We’ve done a lot of stream lining. A few years ago we cam out with Firefox 1. It was a good’s a good product, but it was 1.0. With Firefox 2 we started adding a lot of what people were expecting. And then I think Firefox 3 really represents a streamlining and a maturation of the user interface. But it really means it fits into the Mac. The Macintosh theme really works. We have Linux system integration and icons. I think that it’s going to feel like a much better product to people, especially people who give you aren’t
so techy. But I think it will retain all the openness that the techy population, like myself, like.The one featured that everybody really likes, other than the fact that the memory usage is better than ever and the performance is better than ever, is
the URL bar.

Instead of just typing the URL and having it remind you what the URL is, you can type any word in the name of the document. Like if you went to a site about the Simpsons, you could just type Simpsons in the bar and it will show you all the sites with Simpsons in the title. And it’s just one example of maybe 15 different ways we’re helping people find the places they’ve been to before or the place that they want to get to. So I think navigation around the information space is getting increasingly important. The web is pervasive or humungous and getting larger. And just being able to find what you want, find what you’ve visited is the key. So I think that the colloquialism around here is to call it the awesome bar instead of the URL bar.
That’s just one example of hundreds of hundreds of user interface tweaks that we’ve made. And I think are going to make a little difference to people.

So I suspect that we’ll start to participate DataPortability.org. They’ve got to start doing something sooner or later. So like doing the actual work there is going to be the key. Of course OAuth and that kind of stuff we’ve starting to experiments with. That stuff will be very important for Weave. So I suspect we will start to participate in dataportability.org, but we haven’t yet.

Posted by Dion Almaer at 6:31 am
10 Comments

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2.9 rating from 16 votes

Friday, January 4th, 2008

Zed Shaw interview on Rails community, enterprise, Ajax, patents, and a whole lot more

Category: Ruby, Podcast, Rails

Rob Sanheim sat down with Zed Shaw at RailsConf and had an hour long conversation with him that covered his thoughts on the Rails community, the role of the Enterprise, the state of Ajax, JRuby and Rubinius, documentation, tests, tooling, the role of patents in software, and a whole lot of opinion.

Zed Shaw

It is very interesting to listen to this after the explosion that happened when Zed lambasted the Rails community. When you listen to this interview, you see some of the seeds of the rant, but it is a lot more toned down, and there is some good stuff in there. It is easy to blog a crazy rant…. but when you are talking to someone you get a different side of the coin. This gives you that side, from a time when he wasn’t as upset as he may have been when he sat at the computer to type up his post.

Listen to the recording, or subscribe to the podcast. We will go back to more “standard” Ajax topics in the future.

Zed’s Core Quotes

  • On Semantic Web: Einsteins brain on a crack whores body isn’t going to happen
  • I’m waiting for someone to blind-side the entire Web stack
  • Some people hate me, but love Mongrel
  • Where is the XP for managers

And here are some of the thoughts that Zed expressed throughout the interview:

Thoughts on the Rails community, and enterprise (as big business)

  • Mixed feelings
  • Mongrel was an art project
  • Simpler software is better
  • Enterprise software is known to be complex, and survives to make money for consulting companies
  • Afraid of consulting companies getting behind it, as their interest is in selling 30 people vs. 3 people teams

What could an enterprise company sell?

  • Do enterprise stuff well such as Authentication
  • Stacks: Make it simple (no ClassLoader6)

JRuby

  • It is a huge deal
  • The only fear is that Sun will mess it up with the JCP.
  • The JRuby guys are rock stars

Rubinius

  • An open source project not controlled by anyone
  • A bunch of guys who really love Ruby
  • Massive “spec”, working with the JRuby guys

State of Ajax

  • HTTP sucks
  • Needs to be a reset
  • Semantic Web: “Einsteins brain on a crack whores body isn’t going to happen”
  • I’m waiting for someone to blind-side the entire Web stack
  • Ajax the technology doesn’t impress me, but the new UIs that we are seeing is fantastic
  • Usability != better looking
  • “click here” actually does a really good job at having people click here!

What is going to come out with all of the work happening on top of Mongrel?

  • Swiftapply
  • Evented mongrel
  • DrProxy
  • OpenBSD clustering
  • X hits per day is meaningless. What is the peak?

Honest Open Source

  • Not all open source projects are equal
  • Make everything open and public immediately (e.g. SVN)
  • Corporate open source projects often lose their flavour
  • Outside commiters are key
  • Some people hate me, but love Mongrel
  • Documentation is poor for Rails and Ruby, Ruby doesn’t have a culture for it
  • Rails core does a much better job that the Ruby community in general, and this is a reason why it took off
  • QRI command line. Way better than RI
  • If Rails core isn’t using it, don’t use it. Add: used_by

What tools do you use?

  • Vim
  • Use a generic tool, and pimp it
  • “I code with a thesaurus”
  • Vim is designed to be used on phone lines, and it is very safe
  • Good tools never cover your code

Testing

  • A bit of design up front
  • Design the API
  • Tests to measure how it is working
  • Quality comes from the design ahead of time

Posted by Dion Almaer at 7:55 pm
5 Comments

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2.9 rating from 56 votes

Thursday, October 18th, 2007

Ken Russell on the new Java Plugin

Category: Java, Podcast, Recording

After we posted about the news that Sun has rewritten the browser Java plugin system, we got a chance to sit down with the lead engineer on the project, Ken Russell.

He got to tell us about the fun implementation issues behind the rewrite. It turns out that the new system is mostly written in Java itself, and there is a very thin bridge to the browser. The JVM also runs in its own OS process, so if the JVM crashes it doesn’t affect the browser.

There were also other tidbits, such as having JNLP working natively in the browser, and how this could be used to allow other scripting engines such as JRuby to run in the browser. One JNLP extension, and everyone can share JRuby.


Posted by Dion Almaer at 10:00 am
22 Comments

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3 rating from 100 votes

Wednesday, August 1st, 2007

Audible Ajax Episode 22: Joe Hewitt on Firebug, Firefox, and iUI

Category: Utility, Firefox, Interview, Podcast, iPhone

This is Joe Hewitt week. We were fortunate enough to find some time to chat with Joe about a myriad of topics.

These topics ranged from:

  • Firebug: How Firebug came about, tips and tricks and hidden toys, and YSlow
  • Browsers: We had a fun chat about the history of Firefox, and how Gecko and Webkit compare these days
  • iPhone: How Joe got interested in mobile development when he never had done before
  • Misc: We also explored topics such as JavaScript 2, and how you can turn yourself into a 24 hour coding machine.

I had a really good time chatting with Joe. He is a solid bloke, and we all give him a hand for giving us Firebug.

Go ahead and listen to the interview or subscribe to the podcast.

Who would you like us to interview for upcoming shows?

Posted by Dion Almaer at 9:00 am
8 Comments

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4.8 rating from 93 votes

Friday, June 8th, 2007

Interview with Mike Tsao of the Google Gears team

Category: Google, Podcast, Gears

To round out shark^H^H^H^H^HGears week we have an interview with Mike Tsao of the Google Gears team on the new Google Developer Podcast.

The interview gives us a view into how Gears was formed, and how the three initial components were created.

For example, the WorkerPooler that allows you to spawn a long running piece of JavaScript code in another thread came about as a solution to making sure that the browser wouldn’t hand while the Database component would write to SQLite.

In this interview you will learn:

  • What Google Gears is at a high level
  • How Google Gears came about
  • The parts and pieces of Google Gears
  • Information on the Datastore component (SQLite)
  • Information on the ResourceStore and ManagedResourceStore components
  • How the APIs look, and what should I be thinking about as I make my application offline
  • How to handle versioning with Google Gears applications
  • How the WorkerPool came about, and why we need to run JavaScript jobs in another thread
  • The code contributions made back to the SQLite codebase (e.g. MATCH() added)
  • The pain of finding the 90% case for syncing
  • Thoughts on how the client is getting smarter
  • How GWT supports Gears
  • How Google Reader is using Gears
  • How the UI fits in with offline behaviour
  • The open source vision for Gears
  • How other web platforms can access Gears
  • Future ideas for Google Gears

You can download the episode directly, or subscribe to the show (click here for iTunes one-click subscribe).

Posted by Dion Almaer at 1:31 am
Comment here

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4.2 rating from 10 votes

Wednesday, May 30th, 2007

Audible Ajax Episode 21: Dojo Offline on Google Gears

Category: Dojo, Google, Interview, Podcast, Gears

Google Gears

Google has announced some big news for Ajax developers at Google Developer Day. The announcement is Google Gears, an open source runtime to allow you to build Offline Web applications.

Some may think “hmm, what about Dojo Offline?” The great news is that the Dojo crew were in the loop wrt this project, and Brad has ported Dojo Offline to use Google Gears as the base platform.

This is fantastic news, as it means that Dojo and Google are working together, instead of fragmenting. The end result is that the open Web will end up with a much better offline solution.

We interviewed Brad Neuberg, who is working on Dojo Offline thanks to SitePen.

The discussion was a lot of fun, and covered Brad’s thoughts on the offline problem, and how Google Gears and Dojo Offline fit together.

I can’t wait to see what the community comes up with, especially to solve the tough syncing problems.

Without further ado, listen to the interview.

ps. I apologize for the un-produced feel of this podcast. We got to do the interview at the last minute, and wanted to get the content out there for you in a timely manner.

Posted by Dion Almaer at 6:02 pm
7 Comments

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4.5 rating from 34 votes

Tuesday, February 6th, 2007

Audible Ajax Episode 20: Project Tamarin

Category: JavaScript, Flash, Firefox, Interview, Podcast

We at Ajaxian have long been hoping for a JIT compiler inside of the browsers’ JavaScript interpreter — so we were pretty stoked when Adobe donated their excellent JIT-compiling JavaScript virtual machine to Mozilla back in Nov. ‘06. The new open-source codebase, maintained by the Mozilla Foundation, is known as Project Tamarin.

In this episode of Audible Ajax (~14 MB, ~27 min.), we look into Project Tamarin in a bit of detail, analyzing what kind of an impact this will have on the Ajax community. Special guests include Brendan Eich (CTO, Mozilla), Kevin Lynch (Chief Software Architect, Adobe), Alex Russell (Founder, Dojo), and more. Let us know what you think!

Posted by Ben Galbraith at 1:58 pm
22 Comments

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4 rating from 66 votes

Monday, December 4th, 2006

Audible Ajax Episode 19: The TIBCO GI Team

Category: Podcast, TIBCO

Dion and I have long been impressed with the nifty, robust and very ajaxian UI magic that TIBCO brought to the Web with their GI tool… but we weren’t so excited about the nifty, robust price tag nor it being IE-only. As we covered a while back, TIBCO recently open-sourced their product — and not with one of those “pointless-entry-level-version free, useful version spendy” schemes, either. Given this news, and the recent port to Firefox, we thought it was high time to sit down with the TIBCO guys once again.

In Episode 19 (~28MB, MP3 format), we discuss:

  • What happens to the price of your product now that its open source?
  • Why are you open sourcing TIBCO GI now? Did you fail in the marketplace?
  • Just to be clear, can I use TIBCO GI to create something like Flickr, put it on-line, and never pay you anything?
  • What’s in the new 3.2 release?
  • What motivated your port to Firefox?
  • How hard was it?
  • What other browsers do you support?
  • How well did the VML code port to SVG?
  • How does the performance of TIBCO GI apps differ on Firefox versus IE?
  • What were some of the key shortcomings preventing Safari support?
  • How much of an impact will Firefox’s upcoming JIT make on your product’s performance?
  • You used SVG instead of Canvas to render your charts in Firefox; why?
  • TIBCO GI’s IDE environment is in the browser itself; why did you make that decision?
  • How does GI fit into the Ajax ecosystem? Why use it instead of one of the other Ajax frameworks?
  • How easy could I add Scriptaculous or Dojo to a GI app today?
  • How many different UI widgets do you have? What are some of the funnest widgets you’ve done?
  • What is the architecture of TIBCO GI app like What
    server-side platforms easily integrate with a TIBCO GI view?
  • Is GI meant to build desktop apps that happen to run in a browser, or
    to build web apps?
  • Do you support Comet-style architectures?
  • How extensible is TIBCO GI? Can I start creating my own widgets and incorporating them into the IDE?
  • How is the open source project being run? Who are the committers? To whom would I submit patches?
  • How good is your project’s documentation?
  • You mentioned “pixel-perfect” fidelity between IE and Firefox with TIBCO GI apps; does GI give you full pixel-level control?

We recorded the podcast at the same time we did the screencast that we released earlier.

Posted by Ben Galbraith at 8:30 am
3 Comments

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4.1 rating from 23 votes

Sunday, September 17th, 2006

Audible Ajax Episode 18: The IE7 Team

Category: Podcast, Microsoft

IE7 Logo
A few months ago, the Ajaxians had the opportunity to sit down with Chris Wilson, Laurel Reitman, and Dave Massey — all program managers with the IE7 team — and discuss the upcoming release. Beforehand, we solicited your questions, and in Episode 18 (~8mb, MP3 format), we ask some of those questions to the team:

- What operating systems does IE7 target? Is that controversial amongst your clients?
- What are your favorite new features in IE7?
- WhatWG vs. W3C?
- Might Microsoft participate in the WhatWG in the future?
- Why did it take so long to create a new version?
- How often are you planning on making updates to the rendering engine? Can you hotfix IE or will we have to wait years?
- How can we make our sites compatible with >=IE6 and IE7?
- What are your plans for support of SVG and Canvas?
- Are there any plans to allow XHR in IE7 to read response before it has been completely loaded?
- What improvements to the JavaScript interpreter are you making in IE7?
- Tell us more about IE-hosted WPF and WPF/E
- Is the JavaScript hack for support of PNG transparency going away?
- Have you thought about how to better solve deep-linking and history mechanism issues with Ajax?
- With all of MS’ emphasis on driving value to the Windows platform, what is the level of your commitment to the browser platform?

We hope you enjoy the program!

Note: Laurel from this podcast was at Ajax Experience San Francisco back in May, answering questions, interviewing the community, and just generally gathering feedback. I’m sure the IE7 team will be sending someone to the Boston show as well.

Posted by Ben Galbraith at 11:44 pm
8 Comments

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3.6 rating from 60 votes

Thursday, April 20th, 2006

Audible Ajax Episode 17: Jamis Buck of 37 Signals

Category: Podcast

Download Episode 17

Ben and I had the pleasure of interviewing Jamis Buck of 37 Signals on his experiences with using Ajax in their live applications, and on the future of Ajax development in Rails.

What we cover on the podcast

  • What Jamis Buck does for 37 Signals
  • How do you differentiate your applications
  • Why a developer would choose Rails for Ajax development
  • What the Rails 1.1 RJS features gets you
  • Disadvantages of Rails
  • Scalability of Rails in production
  • Apache mod_fcgi vs. lighttpd
  • Advantages of chat on the web via Ajax
  • Where Rails is going over the next few years
  • Ajax architecture changes
  • The direction of Prototype and Dojo
  • The RJS approach to Ajax

Download Episode 17 as an MP3

Posted by Dion Almaer at 11:54 am
22 Comments

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4 rating from 41 votes

Tuesday, March 14th, 2006

Audible Ajax 16: March State of Ajax

Category: Podcast

Download Episode 16

Ben and I discuss the recent news, grab the IE team to ask them about IE 7, and get Jamis Buck of 37 Signals to talk about scalability of Campfire.

What we cover on the podcast

Future of Web Browsers

Question to the IE team: “What have you been doing, and why have you made us wait for so long for a new release?”

Question from the community

In this episode we answered a question emailed in by Mitchell: “How scalable are these ajax based chat applications like Campfire?”.

We cornered Jamis Buck of 37 Signals, to get the answer from the horses mouth!

The Ajax Experience

We announced a new track at the conference to keep up with demand. Please join the community for our first developer focus event in May at The Ajax Experience.

Please email podcast [at] ajaxian.com with any feedback and especially if you have anything that you want us to chat about in future ‘casts!

Download Episode 16 as an MP3

Posted by Dion Almaer at 8:59 am
8 Comments

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4 rating from 29 votes

Tuesday, February 14th, 2006

Audible Ajax Episode 15: Kevin Hakman of TIBCO

Category: Podcast, TIBCO

Download Episode 14

Ben and I had the pleasure of visiting TIBCO GI head quarters in the valley. They showed us their tools, and we got to interview Kevin Hakman about all things Ajax, including their recent announcement on pricing and features.

What we cover on the podcast

  • When did TIBCO start in the Ajax business?
  • Why did you decide to get into the Ajax business…why now?
  • What exactly is TIBCO GI? Is it a tool? Is it an API? What do you get with this?
  • Do you see people actually using the libraries separate from the GUI builder or do most customers use them directly together?
  • What does your tool do to make parsing SOAP messages easier?
  • A lot of users start with something like Prototype of Dojo for Ajax. What does TIBCO GI offer (use cases, applications?) over one of those frameworks?
  • What is the authoring experience like with your tool?
  • TIBCO GI sounds a lot like the modern incarnation of Flash (xml markup for vector-based UI, ActionScript, JavaScript event handlers). How does your tool compare? Are they similar or distinct in implementation?
  • How sophisticated is your auto-completion? How limited is it and what other IDE static-language type goodies have you given the environment?
  • The GI Builder is a JavaScript app that uses your technology (you eat your own dog food). Are you waiting for a JIT to come out to help with performance issues or are you finding in practice that JavaScript can perform adequately on the client?
  • Why is your product limited to Internet Explorer? Do you have plans to expand that?
  • What were some of the porting issues that you found going from this IE codebase to Firefox?
  • We’re excited to see a business application for some of Firefox’s newer more exotic features like SVG and Canvas. Are you going to be able to utilize some of those in your product as well?
  • Java engineers think about multi-threaded applications a lot. With JavaScript being single-threaded, do you have performance concerns? What are some techniques you’ve used to achieve this very responsive UI?
  • IE is known for its memory leaks. Does your tool handle some of those? How do you work around it?
  • Is your tool capable of creating something like Zimbra’s UI?
  • Is your tool agnostic; integrating with any backend?
  • RE: Desktop UI technologies. How competitive is your windowing system with more traditional desktop technologies? Do you acknowledge a point where someone should look at a desktop technology, or do you think your tool can facilitate the creation of arbitrarily complex user interfaces?
  • Have you done any benchmarks on what makes sense to use for exchanging data (XML, JSON, etc.)?
  • What’s the model for creating custom widgets in your tool?
  • Can you tell us about today’s release? Where to download, etc.?
  • So someone can create a free web-hosted alternative to Zimbra or MS Office using your tool to visually create it and do all the data manipulation — then release it for free?
  • Once I start charging for access to the website/product, what is the pricing model? What about charging for a commercial software product release?
  • Why should we check out your product in today’s overwhelmingly crowded toolkit/framework market?

Download Episode 15 as an MP3

Posted by Dion Almaer at 8:43 am
4 Comments

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3.8 rating from 37 votes

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