#MIoT
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isimirsart · 6 months ago
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MIOT
TERCER PERSONAJE
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nicolae · 1 year ago
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Internetul Obiectelor Militare (Internet of Military Things, IoMT)
Internetul obiectelor militare (Internet of Military Things, IoMT) este o clasă de Internet al lucrurilor pentru operațiuni de luptă și război. Este o rețea complexă de entități interconectate, sau „lucruri”, în domeniul militar, care comunică continuu între ele pentru a coordona, învăța și interacționa cu mediul fizic pentru a realiza o gamă largă de activități într-un mod mai eficient și mai…
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treatexpert · 1 year ago
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sullustangin · 1 month ago
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New Chapter: Conflict Resolution
Rating: M (this chapter PG)
Pairing: Theron Shan/Smuggler
Quick Quote:
Eva inspected all the other die rolls.  “Nobody else perceives Koth or the mysterious ticking device in the corner.  Great.”  Eva tucked the rule book under her arm for this one.  “Koth, roll to tamper with the device.  Miot, roll to see if your device goes off.”
Koth raised his hand.  “If it doesn’t go off, can I still take my shot?”
Aygo rejected that idea.  “No, that’s another action on a turn.”
“Ah, ah, ah!  I got a thing – it’s a tactical advantage.  I get a bonus action?” Koth tried to proclaim but he wasn’t totally sure on this one. 
Theron tugged the rule book out from Eva’s arm.  “If you’re stealthed – which it seems you are,” he began, looking at the cards Koth turned over. 
“Anything bigger than a breadbox breaks the field,” Eva commented.  “Miot, is your grenade larger than a breadbox?”
“What’s a breadbox?”
Eva stretched her arms and then made a motion with her hands to indicate the approximate size of the Thief’s breadbox.  “Like this?”
“Smaller.”
“Ok, Koth can play with it and not break the stealth field.  But once he shoots, the energy is more powerful than a breadbox thrown by a Wookiee, and that will disrupt the field,” Eva clarified, permitting Koth to tamper with the device while stealthed. 
“Is that how that guideline was established?” asked Theron.
“Uh huh.” 
A/N: yes, they're playing Brigs and Balyregs, which is my in-universe edition of Dungeons and Dragons.
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mini-owo · 10 months ago
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trendingreportz · 3 months ago
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Massive IOT (mIOT) Market - Forecast(2024 - 2030)
Massive IoT Market Overview
The market for Massive IoT is forecast to reach $121.4 billion by 2026, growing at a CAGR of 7.1% from 2021 to 2026. The Massive IoT Market is estimated to witness substantial growth over the forecast period primarily due to the growing demand for large scale Automation and machine intelligence. The rising adoption of IoT technology across various industry verticals such as manufacturing, automotive, and healthcare, is driving the market’s growth for bandwidth sensor technologies. With the traditional manufacturing sector amid a digital transformation, the IoT is triggering the next industrial revolution of intelligent connectivity and communication protocols. With the development of wireless networking technologies, especially low power networks, and the emergence of advanced data analytics, a reduction in the cost of connected devices adn indoor asset tracking, are some of the major factors driving the market. The adoption of cloud computing and cloud platform is another factor boosting the market growth during the forecast period 2021-2026.
Report Coverage
The report: “Massive IOT Market– Forecast (2021-2026)”, by Industry ARC covers an in-depth analysis of the following segments of the Massive IOT Market.
By Platform – Device Management, Application Management, Network Management, Cloud Platform and Others.
By Connectivity – Wireless, Field.
By Component – Hardware (Transmitters, Memory, Processors,Other), Software, Services.
By End User – Manufacturing, Transportation, Healthcare, Retail, Energy and Utilities, Residential, Other.
By Geography - North America (U.S, Canada, Mexico), South America(Brazil, Argentina and others), Europe (Germany, UK, France, Italy, Spain, Russia and Others), APAC(China, Japan India, South Korea, and Others), and RoW (Middle east and Africa).
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Key Takeaways
The Massive IoT Market is estimated to witness substantial growth over the forecast period primarily due to the growing demand for large scale Automation. The rising adoption of IoT technology across various industry verticals, such as manufacturing, automotive, and healthcare, is driving the market’s growth.
North America is holding a strong grip in the market, due to the growing role of IoT among the significant revenue-generating end-user industries of the region, driven by the deployment of connected cars, smart facilities, smart energy projects, home automation, and a focus on smart manufacturing.
The current and future IoT applications with respect to their requirements and then identify the feasible connectivity technologies for each application category. Massive IoT has played a major role across a variety of verticals by generating new revenue streams and other benefits, such as improved quality.
Massive IoT Market Segment Analysis - By Platform
The Industrial Internet of Things is the biggest and most important part of the Internet of Things now but consumer applications will catch up from a spending perspective. The growing demand of industrial automation and the penetration of industry 4.0 has boosted the Massive IoT market. The device management of the massive IoT has the largest market growth in the market, as the industrial automation includes mainly device management and machine to machine communication. For instance in March 2020 Cisco and Microsoft announced a partnership for seamless data communication between Cisco IoT and Microsoft Azure IoT cloud.
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Massive IoT Market Segment Analysis - By End User
The current and future IoT applications with respect to their requirements and then identify the feasible connectivity technologies for each application category. Massive IoT has played a major role across a variety of verticals by generating new revenue streams and other benefits, such as improved quality. The transportation market is also growing rapidly with the penetration of Massive IoT and the market has already invested $78 billion, just as is the case for the IoT manufacturing market. The main use case in transportation is freight monitoring, remaining a key driver in the market during the forecast period of 2021-2026.
Massive IoT Market Segment Analysis – By Geography
North America is holding a strong grip in the market with 37% share in 2020, due to the growing role of IoT among the significant revenue-generating end-user industries of the region, driven by the deployment of connected cars, smart facilities, smart energy projects, home automation, and a focus on smart manufacturing. The rapid implementation of the digital era across industry verticals and technological advancements have further boosted the growth of IoT in this region. The Massive internet of things (MIoT) market is highly competitive to the presence of many large and small enterprises in the market operating in the domestic as well as in the international market. APAC is an industrial hub of many verticals that makes it the fastest-growing.
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Massive IoT Market Drivers
Technological Advancement
Industry 4.0 and Massive-IoT are at the centre of new technological approaches for the development, production, and management of the entire logistics chain, otherwise known as smart factory automation. The massive change in manufacturing due to industry 4.0 and the implementation of IoT requires enterprises to adopt the smarter way to advance production with technologies that reduce industrial accidents caused by a process failure. This is changing the way industries approach the machines to improve efficiency and reduce downtime. This development in connectivity will lead to a larger base of individuals interested in purchasing IoT devices. The boost in the development of high-speed wireless network technology and the number of devices enabled with this technology are increasing rapidly with the penetration of MIoT. These changes in the industry vertical will be driving the market during the forecast period of 2021-2026.
Technology-enabled solutions to the healthcare organizations
During this Covid-19 pandemic, the vendors are taking this as an opportunity by offering emerging technology-enabled solutions to healthcare organizations. For instance, during the early stage of Covid 19 when the virus was infecting people of Shanghai the Shanghai Public Health Clinical Centre (SPHCC) has utilized the California-based connected health start-up Viva LNK’s continuous temperature measuring device to monitor COVID-19 patients, which reduces the risks of doctors and the nurses being infected by the virus.
Massive IoT Market Challenges
Security and the Pandemic
Massive IoT has opened serious security breaches that have drawn the attention of top line tech firms and government agencies across the world. The hacking of industrial Instruments, drug infusion pumps, cameras, and even assault rifles are signifying a security nightmare being caused by the future of IoT. Due to the recent outbreak of Covid-19 IOT investment and deployments have certainly slowed down. However, with major disruptions in global healthcare and supply chains, governments, hospitals, and logistics providers are heading to react quickly for a more connected world that could help better address the current crisis and mitigate future ones. The Covid 19 has done major damage to the Massive IoT market by shutting down the industries and ruining the economy. These factors will be restraining the market during the forecast period.
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Massive IoT Market Landscape
Product launches, acquisitions, and R&D activities are key strategies adopted by players in the Massive IOT market. The Massive IOT market is dominated by major companies such Vates (US), Science Soft (US), HQ Software (Estonia)CISCO (US), Huawei (China), Bosch (Germany), SAP (Germany).
Acquisitions/Technology Launches/Partnerships
In March 2020, Microsoft & Cisco Systems announced a partnership to enable seamless data orchestration from Cisco IOT Edge to Azure IOT Cloud. This partnership will be providing the customers a pre-integrated IOT edge-to-cloud application solution.
In January 2020, IBM Corporation announced a collaboration with Sund & Bælt, which owns and operates some of the largest infrastructures in the world, to assist in IBM's development of an AI-powered IOT solution designed to help prolong the lifespan of aging bridges, tunnels, highways, and railways.
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credihealth1 · 1 year ago
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https://www.credihealth.com/hospital/miot-international-chennai/doctors
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josefavomjaaga · 2 years ago
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Hi Josefa!
I've been scrolling through your stuff on Eugene and the impression I'm getting is that he was mediocre??
Of course, that's probably not all that is to him but he seems to be rather normal if anything so much so that I may not recognise him if he ever appeared in front of me. Is he just someone that is overshadowed by the more powerful personalities? Or is there something else to it?
Although reading about his sweet family life is pretty cute 🥰
Hi and thank you for the Ask! 💖
And I think you got it perfectly right. As a matter of fact "mediocre" is precisely the expression Joseph Bonaparte used for him in his memoirs (and if there's ever been an expert on mediocrity, it's Joseph). According to Joseph's friend Miot de Mélito so did Napoleon himself at the beginning of the Empire. In the "Mémorial de Sainte Hélène" Napoleon phrases it differently by saying that the only thing that made Eugène special was a certain balance in his character: He knew what he could do, and he did it. That already sufficed to distinguish him from plenty of others.
Eugène clearly was not a genius like Napoleon, not a romantic or tragic hero like Murat or Lannes or Ney or Junot, not even an imposing general like Davout or Soult. He was your regular run-of-the-mill guy, Monsieur What's-his-face, washed up by events to a rank he would otherwise never have occupied, like all of Napoleon's family, but - unlike Napoleon's brothers - very aware of this and trying to do his best to merit his position.
That's why I can relate to him much better than to the more prominent figures of the era. People like Lannes, Soult or Murat, let alone Napoleon, will always remain a mystery to me precisely because they are heroes and thus have so little in common with me. I fail to truly understand how they "tick". But somebody whom his stepfather's maelstrom has pulled, without his own doing, possibly even against his own will, out into a churning ocean and who now desperately tries to keep his head over water with the bit of force he has - that is something I can understand.
As to his "legacy" (or rather lack thereof) - some is due to the fact that his family pretty much was swallowed up by others over the next generation. His older son died without issue, the younger became a kind of prince consort to a daughter of the Russian tsar. Eugène enjoyed some prominence during the Second Empire, but as the Second Empire and Napoleon III have a pretty bad name in history, I'm not sure if that did him much good. I understand his name was all but forgotten in Northern Italy until recently.
During the Empire, at least up to 1809, this may have been much different. But with 19th century historiography focusing on the Napoleonic legend and the "big events", the role that Eugène may have played in the eyes of many contemporaries can barely be detected anymore. There's only the occasional hint of his high position, like the panic of Oudinot's ladies when they are suddenly to meet him, or the confusing rumours in the army in Austria 1809. Kérautret in his biography of Eugène emphasizes that Eugène, up to the birth of the "Roi de Rome", indeed was the only high functionary with a unique title. There's plenty of ministers and "grand officiers", plenty of marshals, a bunch of kings - but only one viceroy. And that's how Eugène is usually referred to in contemporary writings. The Viceroy. The second-in-command - or at least that's what some people may have read into it. If you add that, from all of Napoleon's family, he was the only one to govern the territory entrusted to him to Napoleon's satisfaction (well, as much as Napoleon would ever be satisfied with anything) and that he at least had some reputation within the army, him being seen as the future of the empire gains some credibility.
Because you do not consitute a stable empire (or any other state) through people like Napoleon (or Murat, or Junot, etc). For that, you need the stuffy, trusty second and third-in-line workers. If you want something to last, you want boring, reliable, grey.
But, coming back to Eugène, the one thing he really had going for him, the one thing that I first noticed about him, was his amiability. From contemporary sources up to the preface of volume 9 of Napoleon's "Correspondance Générale", everybody seems to agree that he was one of if not the most lovable figure of the Napoleonic saga. In historic sources, it's almost like another title: "Davout, the Duke of Auerstedt, Masséna, the Prince of Essling, Soult, the Duke of Dalmatia - and the prince Eugène. Such a nice guy!" 😁
Sorry for rambling so much - I'm always so excited when somebody notices "the boy", despite his lack of colourfulness. 😁
Thanks again for the question!
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sensitiveuser · 1 month ago
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Portrait of a Communard (1) : Arthur Arnould (1833-1895)
During the Second Empire, Arthur Arnould was a journalist at the Revue nationale, a newspaper opposed to Napoleon III. In 1870, he joined La Marseillaise.
After the proclamation of the Third Republic, he became assistant librarian of the city of Paris.
On March 26, 1871, he was elected to the Council of the Commune, as a representative of the 4th arrondissement. He was first a member of the Commission of External Relations, whose delegate was Pascal Grousset. In April, he joined the Commission of Labor and Exchange, whose delegates were Augustin Avrial, Léo Frankel, Benoît Malon, and Albert Theisz. He then joined the Commission of Subsistence, under the responsibility of Auguste Viard. Finally, we find him at the Commission de l’Enseingement, under the responsibility of Edouard Vaillant.
During the Commune, Arthur Arnould worked for Le Rappel, La Nouvelle République, and L’ Affranchi. On May 1, alongside Auguste Vermorel, he became an editor at the Journal officiel. When the Committee of Public Safety was created, he was one of the nineteen internationalists of the anti-authoritarian minority, alongside Andrieu, Avrial, Babick, Beslay, Chalain, Clémence, Cluseret, Frankel, Girardin, Langevin, Lefrançais, Longuet, Malon, Pindy, Serraillier, Rheiz, Vaillant, Varlin. As a reminder, the Committee of Public Safety, following the proposal of Jules Miot, was established on May 1, 1871, by 45 votes to 22. The five members were Antoine Arnaud, Gabriel Ranvier, Léo Meillet, Félix Pyat, and Charles Gérardin. The anti-authoritarians saw their power confiscated by the Committee of Public Safety; they were ousted from the delegations. On May 15, Arthur Arnoult signed the declaration of the internationalist minority, which publicly denounced the "dictatorship" of the Committee of Public Safety, "The Paris Commune has abdicated its power into the hands of a dictatorship to which it has given the name of Public Safety."
In November 1872, Arthur Arnould was sentenced in absentia to deportation. He therefore took refuge in Switzerland with his wife Jeanne Matthey (Jenny). In Geneva, among the proscribed, he was active in the Socialist Revolutionary Propaganda and Action Section. In 1873, he was sent to Lugano to attend the congress of the International League for Peace and Freedom. A year after the Saint-Imier Congress, he became close to Bakunin.
In 1874, he left for Argentina with Jenny.
In 1876, Bakunin died. Arthur Arnould was one of the people responsible for managing his manuscripts, which he then passed on to James Guillaume. In Geneva, he contributed to the Bulletin de la Fédération jurassienne, La Commune, and Le Travailleur. He published L’État et la Révolution (in 1877), and his Histoire populaire et parlementaire de la Commune de Paris (in 1878). With Gustave Lefrançais, he wrote Souvenirs de deux communards réfugiés à Genève, 1871-1873.
He also wrote novels under the pseudonym A.Matthey.
In the 1880s, when he returned to France, we can say that the character changed, and not in a good way, for a former communard and anarchist ! In 1881, he joined the Republican Socialist Alliance, a reformist socialist party of which Clemenceau was a member... A few years later, he had to deal with Jenny's death... The worst thing about his evolution was that he would have accepted to be decorated with the Order of Isabella the Catholic ! Then he joined an esoteric sect, the Theosophical Society.
Nevertheless, I would not say that he had completely erased his past as a communard and anarchist, since he still wrote an article about Bakunin in the Nouvelle Revue in 1891.
He died in 1895.
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grossillygirl · 5 months ago
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I can tell that miot still wants to meet up😭 they said they wont fully believe how hot i find them/ how much i think about them til im looking up at them with their cock in my mouth. Could be flirting, but they genuinely wanted to meet me and I was like nooooooo 😚
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reconnectgfx · 4 months ago
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Daily miot pic of Terrance :]
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freemangordon · 5 months ago
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Super late pride piece. Freehoun, as always :3
SHOWER THOUGHTS 💭🏳️‍🌈 obviously censured lol
Let Little miot cover this one!!! 💯💯
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treatexpert · 2 years ago
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sullustangin · 5 months ago
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New Chapter: The Rise
Rating: E (this chapter PGish)
Pairing: Theron Shan x Smuggler
Quick quote:
“Theron…”  A thready voice came from the general direction of the lift. 
Eva recognized the accent immediately.  She turned to face a Sullustan, hands bandaged up, eye red-rimmed from some irritant.  The thin form moved gingerly toward them. 
“Miot.  You sure you should be here?”  Theron asked, careful not to slide into hypocrisy on the matter of injury recovery. 
The one called Miot nodded, undeterred.  “Nothing that a few dips in kolto won’t fix.  I am little worried for these –” and here he wiggled his phalanges.
Eva saw it in how he moved.  “Not a pilot usually?”
At that, Miot bowed deeply.  “Captain.”
And the bow gave it away.  “Coruscant Planetary Orchestra.”
“Miot Dengd, electro harp, first chair.  And the Republic Galactic Symphony,” Miot filled in.  “Orbits, trajectories, rhythm, composition – all maths,” Miot eagerly added.  “When I heard of your Alliance, I thought to use my skills in music and as a Sullustan to navigate the galaxy.”  His near-black eyes jumped slightly with excitement. 
Eva knew Sullustans as some of the best pilots, whether as smuggler, civilian, or Pub navy.  Admittedly, she also had a soft spot for their gin.
…and the okayest lawman she’d ever met, minus Theron.
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ask-color-complex · 6 months ago
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Introducing Miot!!!
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Meet Miot! A pink fluffy tiger shark with white stripes and hair. :3
Name: Miot
Age: 19
Pronouns: He/Him
"Do you like the Suzuki Cappuccino?"
- Miot 🦈
OC and Art belongs to: @pinkshark-miata
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joachimnapoleon · 2 years ago
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What if question: If Napoléon had left the Kingdom of Naples to Joseph and had given Spain to Murat instead, how do you think Murat would have fared?
In a word? Badly.
I love Murat, but independent command in a long-term, high-stress scenario was not his forte. I think he would've done better than Joseph, who didn't want to be there at all, but I think the pressure of trying to manage a kingdom in open rebellion, with what would've been a non-stop deluge of increasingly displeased and disparaging missives from Napoleon, would've eventually brought him to the point of breakdown. Just look at the state he had worked himself into during the summer of 1810 when his efforts to take Sicily were coming to nothing and he had come to believe that Napoleon had it out for him and wasn't supporting him properly; he wasn't handling it well at all. See also Murat's failure to handle the disintegrating Grande Armée in December 1812/early January 1813 for another example of the strain of a catastrophic situation taking a massive toll on him. I think as a general rule he was just mortified at the prospect of Napoleon seeing him fail miserably, and the more likely that prospect became, the more he started to break down under it.
Additionally there's the fact that his suppression of the 2 May 1808 uprising in Madrid had made him deeply unpopular in Spain; if Napoleon had put the crown on his head after that, it probably would've just infuriated the people even more than it did when he gave it to Joseph. Marbot, who served as one of Murat's aides-de-camp in Spain, writes "It is certain that, from the entry of Murat into Spain, his warrior reputation, his tall stature, his handsome martial presence, his manners, everything, even his bizarre costume, always plumed and colorful, partly in the French way, partly in the Spanish way, infinitely pleased the Castilian nation, and I was convinced that if it thought it had to accept a king from the family of Napoleon, it would have at this time preferred the chivalrous Murat to the feeble Joseph. But since the combat of Madrid, the results of which had been endlessly exaggerated by the public, the admiration the Spanish people had at first felt for Murat was changed to an implacable hatred!... I believe it is certain that the Emperor had at first considered Murat for king of the Spaniards, but informed later of the repulsion that the nation had conceived for this prince, he regarded the thing as impossible." Marbot did believe Murat would have been "more useful for the war that soon broke out on the Peninsula" than Joseph though, but that's a low bar to leap, honestly.
I've never wholly bought into the idea that Murat was so devastated at not receiving the Spanish crown that it caused his ensuing severe illness (which was so bad he had to be carried in a litter to Bayonne for the treaty negotiations with Napoleon over his new Neapolitan throne), and Count Miot de Melito writes, in his memoirs, that "Judging from Murat's manner as he described all these things [regarding the situation in Spain], I saw that he thought himself lucky to have escaped from Spain; and, in truth, the change was a clear gain for him."
Now, would he have *ultimately* fared better, in that after losing the crown of Spain (which he eventually would have), he probably wouldn't have attempted the same madcap enterprise to get it back that led to his execution in Naples in 1815? Maybe. And maybe he would've also ultimately fared better in that he never would've found himself in a position to even consider abandoning Napoleon to keep the crown; maybe then he would've been able to fight at Waterloo and find the soldier's death he would've preferred, or maybe he would've survived and gone to America, or settled in Italy with his family like most of the rest of the Bonaparte clan did after the dust settled. It's an interesting what-might've-been, but unlike Joseph, I doubt Murat would've been happy with the occupation of a deposed monarch in peacetime. He probably would've embroiled himself in some kind of ridiculous political intrigue at some point, just to have something to break up the boredom.
Thanks for the ask! 😊
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