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jumbosvg · 2 months ago
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21 Mickey Characters Halloween Png Bundle
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citysvg1 · 3 months ago
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Mickey Get In Loser, We're Going to Hell Svg
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familydigitalsvg · 2 years ago
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Mouse Not So Scary Halloween PNG, Minnie Mickey Halloween PNG, Halloween 2022 Party PNG
Mouse Not So Scary Halloween PNG, Minnie Mickey Halloween PNG, Halloween 2022 Party PNG
Mouse Not So Scary Halloween PNG, Minnie Mickey Halloween PNG, Halloween 2022 Party PNG  ♥ Welcome FamilyDigitalSvg ♥ Cricut, SVG, DXF, PNG, JPEG, PDF, EPS, Digital download, Instant download, Digital clip art W H A T Y O U ‘ L L G E T ———————————————- NOTE: This is a digital file. No physical product will be sent to you. You will receive: • + SVG (ready cut file) • + PNG (high resolution…
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clarenceomoore · 6 years ago
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Voices in AI – Episode 51: A Conversation with Tim O’Reilly
Today's leading minds talk AI with host Byron Reese
.voice-in-ai-byline-embed { font-size: 1.4rem; background: url(https://voicesinai.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/cropped-voices-background.jpg) black; background-position: center; background-size: cover; color: white; padding: 1rem 1.5rem; font-weight: 200; text-transform: uppercase; margin-bottom: 1.5rem; } .voice-in-ai-byline-embed span { color: #FF6B00; }
About this Episode
Sponsored by Dell and Intel, Episode 51 of Voices in AI podcast features host Byron Reese and Tim O’Reilly discussing autonomous vehicles, capitalism, the Internet, and the economy. Tim is the founder of O’Reilly Media. He popularized the terms open source and Web 2.0.
Visit www.VoicesinAI.com to listen to this one-hour podcast or read the full transcript.
Transcript Excerpt
Byron Reese: This is Voices in AI brought to you by GigaOm, I’m Byron Reese. Today our guest is Tim O’Reilly. He is, of course, the founder and CEO of O’Reilly Media, Inc. In addition to his role at O’Reilly, he is a partner at an early stage venture firm, O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures, and he is on the board of Maker Media, which was spun out from O’Reilly back in 2012. He’s on the board of Code for America, PeerJ, Civis Analytics, and POPVOX. He is the person who popularized the terms “open source” and “web 2.0.” He holds an undergraduate degree from Harvard in the classics. Welcome to the show, Tim.
Tim O’Reilly: Hi, thanks very much, I’m glad to be on it. I should add one other thing to my bio, which is that I’m also the author of a forthcoming book about technology and the economy, called WTF: What’s The Future, and Why It’s Up to Us, which in a lot of ways, it’s a memoir of what I’ve learned from studying computer platforms over the last 30 years, and reflections on the lessons of technology platforms for the broader economy, and the choices that we have to make as a society.
Well I’ll start there. What is the future then? If you know, I want to know that right away.
Well, the point is not that there is one future. There are many possible futures, and we actually have a great role. There’s a very scary narrative in which technology is seen as an inevitability. For example, “technology wants to eliminate jobs, that’s what it’s for.” And I go through, for example, looking at algorithms, at Google, at Facebook, and the like and say, “Okay, what you really learn when you study it is, all of these algorithms have a fitness function that they’re being managed towards,” and this doesn’t actually change in the world of AI. AI is simply new techniques that are still trying to go towards human goals. The thing we have to be afraid of is not AI becoming independent and going after its own goals. It’s what I refer to as “the Mickey and the broomsticks problem,” which is, we’re creating these machines, we’re turning them loose, and we’re telling them to do the wrong things. They do exactly what we tell them to do, but we haven’t thought through the consequences and a lot of what’s happening in the world today is the result of bad instructions to the machines that we have built.
In a lot of ways, our financial markets are a lot like Google and Facebook, they are increasingly automated, but they also have a fitness function. If you look at Google; their fitness function on both the search and the advertising side is relevance. You look at Facebook; loosely it could be described as engagement. We have increasingly, for the last 40 years, been managing our economy around, “make money for the stock market,” and we’ve seen, as a result, the hollowing out of the economy. And to apply this very concretely to AI, I’ll bring up a conversation I had with an AI pioneer recently, where he told me he was investing in a company that would get rid of 30% of call center jobs, was his estimate. And I said, “Have you used a call center? Were you happy with the service? Why are you talking about using AI to get rid of these jobs, rather than to make the service better?”
You know I wrote a piece—actually I wrote it after the book, so it’s not in the book—[that’s] an analysis of Amazon. In the same 3 years which they added 45,000 robots to their factories, they’ve added hundreds of thousands of human workers. The reason is because, they’re saying “Oh, our master design pattern isn’t ‘cut costs and reap greater profits,’ it’s ‘keep upping the ante, keep doing more.’” I actually started off the article by talking about my broken tea kettle and how I got a new one the same day, so I could have my tea the next morning, with no interruption. And it used to be that Amazon would give you free 2-day shipping, and then it was free 1-day shipping, and then in many cases, it’s free same-day shipping, and, this is why they have this incredible fanatical customer focus, and they’re using the technology to actually do more. My case has been, that if we actually shift from the fitness function being efficiency and shareholder value through driving increases profits to instead actually creating value in society—which is something that we can quite easily do—we’re going to have a very different economy and a very, very different political conversation than we’re having right now.
Listen to this one-hour episode or read the full transcript at www.VoicesinAI.com
Voices in AI
Visit VoicesInAI.com to access the podcast, or subscribe now:
iTunes
Play
Stitcher
RSS
.voice-in-ai-link-back-embed { font-size: 1.4rem; background: url(https://voicesinai.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/cropped-voices-background.jpg) black; background-position: center; background-size: cover; color: white; padding: 1rem 1.5rem; font-weight: 200; text-transform: uppercase; margin-bottom: 1.5rem; } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed:last-of-type { margin-bottom: 0; } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed .logo { margin-top: .25rem; display: block; background: url(https://voicesinai.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/voices-in-ai-logo-light-768x264.png) center left no-repeat; background-size: contain; width: 100%; padding-bottom: 30%; text-indent: -9999rem; margin-bottom: 1.5rem } @media (min-width: 960px) { .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed .logo { width: 262px; height: 90px; float: left; margin-right: 1.5rem; margin-bottom: 0; padding-bottom: 0; } } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed a:link, .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed a:visited { color: #FF6B00; } .voice-in-ai-link-back a:hover { color: #ff4f00; } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed ul.go-alexa-briefing-subscribe-links { margin-left: 0 !important; margin-right: 0 !important; margin-bottom: 0.25rem; } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed ul.go-alexa-briefing-subscribe-links a:link, .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed ul.go-alexa-briefing-subscribe-links a:visited { background-color: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.77); } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed ul.go-alexa-briefing-subscribe-links a:hover { background-color: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.63); } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed ul.go-alexa-briefing-subscribe-links .stitcher .stitcher-logo { display: inline; width: auto; fill: currentColor; height: 1em; margin-bottom: -.15em; }
  Byron explores issues around artificial intelligence and conscious computers in his new book The Fourth Age: Smart Robots, Conscious Computers, and the Future of Humanity.
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babbleuk · 6 years ago
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Voices in AI – Episode 51: A Conversation with Tim O’Reilly
Today's leading minds talk AI with host Byron Reese
.voice-in-ai-byline-embed { font-size: 1.4rem; background: url(https://voicesinai.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/cropped-voices-background.jpg) black; background-position: center; background-size: cover; color: white; padding: 1rem 1.5rem; font-weight: 200; text-transform: uppercase; margin-bottom: 1.5rem; } .voice-in-ai-byline-embed span { color: #FF6B00; }
About this Episode
Sponsored by Dell and Intel, Episode 51 of Voices in AI podcast features host Byron Reese and Tim O’Reilly discussing autonomous vehicles, capitalism, the Internet, and the economy. Tim is the founder of O’Reilly Media. He popularized the terms open source and Web 2.0.
Visit www.VoicesinAI.com to listen to this one-hour podcast or read the full transcript.
Transcript Excerpt
Byron Reese: This is Voices in AI brought to you by GigaOm, I’m Byron Reese. Today our guest is Tim O’Reilly. He is, of course, the founder and CEO of O’Reilly Media, Inc. In addition to his role at O’Reilly, he is a partner at an early stage venture firm, O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures, and he is on the board of Maker Media, which was spun out from O’Reilly back in 2012. He’s on the board of Code for America, PeerJ, Civis Analytics, and POPVOX. He is the person who popularized the terms “open source” and “web 2.0.” He holds an undergraduate degree from Harvard in the classics. Welcome to the show, Tim.
Tim O’Reilly: Hi, thanks very much, I’m glad to be on it. I should add one other thing to my bio, which is that I’m also the author of a forthcoming book about technology and the economy, called WTF: What’s The Future, and Why It’s Up to Us, which in a lot of ways, it’s a memoir of what I’ve learned from studying computer platforms over the last 30 years, and reflections on the lessons of technology platforms for the broader economy, and the choices that we have to make as a society.
Well I’ll start there. What is the future then? If you know, I want to know that right away.
Well, the point is not that there is one future. There are many possible futures, and we actually have a great role. There’s a very scary narrative in which technology is seen as an inevitability. For example, “technology wants to eliminate jobs, that’s what it’s for.” And I go through, for example, looking at algorithms, at Google, at Facebook, and the like and say, “Okay, what you really learn when you study it is, all of these algorithms have a fitness function that they’re being managed towards,” and this doesn’t actually change in the world of AI. AI is simply new techniques that are still trying to go towards human goals. The thing we have to be afraid of is not AI becoming independent and going after its own goals. It’s what I refer to as “the Mickey and the broomsticks problem,” which is, we’re creating these machines, we’re turning them loose, and we’re telling them to do the wrong things. They do exactly what we tell them to do, but we haven’t thought through the consequences and a lot of what’s happening in the world today is the result of bad instructions to the machines that we have built.
In a lot of ways, our financial markets are a lot like Google and Facebook, they are increasingly automated, but they also have a fitness function. If you look at Google; their fitness function on both the search and the advertising side is relevance. You look at Facebook; loosely it could be described as engagement. We have increasingly, for the last 40 years, been managing our economy around, “make money for the stock market,” and we’ve seen, as a result, the hollowing out of the economy. And to apply this very concretely to AI, I’ll bring up a conversation I had with an AI pioneer recently, where he told me he was investing in a company that would get rid of 30% of call center jobs, was his estimate. And I said, “Have you used a call center? Were you happy with the service? Why are you talking about using AI to get rid of these jobs, rather than to make the service better?”
You know I wrote a piece—actually I wrote it after the book, so it’s not in the book—[that’s] an analysis of Amazon. In the same 3 years which they added 45,000 robots to their factories, they’ve added hundreds of thousands of human workers. The reason is because, they’re saying “Oh, our master design pattern isn’t ‘cut costs and reap greater profits,’ it’s ‘keep upping the ante, keep doing more.’” I actually started off the article by talking about my broken tea kettle and how I got a new one the same day, so I could have my tea the next morning, with no interruption. And it used to be that Amazon would give you free 2-day shipping, and then it was free 1-day shipping, and then in many cases, it’s free same-day shipping, and, this is why they have this incredible fanatical customer focus, and they’re using the technology to actually do more. My case has been, that if we actually shift from the fitness function being efficiency and shareholder value through driving increases profits to instead actually creating value in society—which is something that we can quite easily do—we’re going to have a very different economy and a very, very different political conversation than we’re having right now.
Listen to this one-hour episode or read the full transcript at www.VoicesinAI.com
Voices in AI
Visit VoicesInAI.com to access the podcast, or subscribe now:
iTunes
Play
Stitcher
RSS
.voice-in-ai-link-back-embed { font-size: 1.4rem; background: url(https://voicesinai.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/cropped-voices-background.jpg) black; background-position: center; background-size: cover; color: white; padding: 1rem 1.5rem; font-weight: 200; text-transform: uppercase; margin-bottom: 1.5rem; } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed:last-of-type { margin-bottom: 0; } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed .logo { margin-top: .25rem; display: block; background: url(https://voicesinai.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/voices-in-ai-logo-light-768x264.png) center left no-repeat; background-size: contain; width: 100%; padding-bottom: 30%; text-indent: -9999rem; margin-bottom: 1.5rem } @media (min-width: 960px) { .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed .logo { width: 262px; height: 90px; float: left; margin-right: 1.5rem; margin-bottom: 0; padding-bottom: 0; } } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed a:link, .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed a:visited { color: #FF6B00; } .voice-in-ai-link-back a:hover { color: #ff4f00; } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed ul.go-alexa-briefing-subscribe-links { margin-left: 0 !important; margin-right: 0 !important; margin-bottom: 0.25rem; } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed ul.go-alexa-briefing-subscribe-links a:link, .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed ul.go-alexa-briefing-subscribe-links a:visited { background-color: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.77); } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed ul.go-alexa-briefing-subscribe-links a:hover { background-color: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.63); } .voice-in-ai-link-back-embed ul.go-alexa-briefing-subscribe-links .stitcher .stitcher-logo { display: inline; width: auto; fill: currentColor; height: 1em; margin-bottom: -.15em; }
  Byron explores issues around artificial intelligence and conscious computers in his new book The Fourth Age: Smart Robots, Conscious Computers, and the Future of Humanity.
from Gigaom https://gigaom.com/2018/06/19/voices-in-ai-episode-51-a-conversation-with-tim-oreilly/
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learnwithhomer · 7 years ago
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Feeling Good about iPad Time
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I’m willing to admit that iPad time sometimes feels like it saves my life, especially when traveling. My kids get so excited to spend time on their devices that they are much more manageable on travel days. As soon as we settle into our seats on the train, in the car, or on an airplane, they get set up with their tablets. The addition of headphones makes this even more calming for me.
It’s both magical and scary how they can both zone out for hours on end. While I choose not to overthink things like this usually, I gave a lot more thought to my kids’ iPad time as we prepared for our 125 day road trip across Europe. They would be in the car a lot, and I didn’t want all of that time devoted to Mickey Mouse Clubhouse.
In addition to planning an assortment of fun car activities, which I’d love to share with you in detail in another post, I revamped their iPads. I decided that no matter how much effort I put into entertaining the kids in the car, we’d still be relying heavily on their tablets this summer. So I removed the guilt.
I took all videos off of their iPads and populated the screen with educational apps. Homer helped a lot with this. The app is filled with stories to engage the kids, but the kids are also super excited to conquer new letters, expand their vocabulary, and move through different lands. My daughter is especially competitive with herself and excited to see how much she can accomplish. With Homer, I would be in control of what they could access. I downloaded a lot onto the iPad before we set out, but I purposefully didn’t let them access everything. I want there to be new surprises along the way. So I updated Homer regularly on stops so they’d always have new content to explore.
Now, when I hand them the iPads in the backseat of the car, I don’t feel the usual twinge of guilt. I am confident that this screen time is engaging learning time for them. The best part is the kids are so engrossed with this interesting content that they don’t seem to miss the videos they once watched with zombie dedication.
In addition to limiting the iPad content to educational apps, I made both iPads look exactly the same. This may sounds like a small thing, but it is a game changer! I no longer hear, “She has something special on her iPad that I don’t have!” And my daughter can easily show Olaf where certain apps are on his tablet.
Headphones are also key to my iPad-use happiness. I don���t have to hear two different apps going at the same time, which makes me a bit crazy. A bonus to the headphones is that Stefan and I can now listen to Audible or a favorite podcast without worrying too much about the content being kid-friendly.
Store the iPads, with their headphones, in a bag together. We used a small travel bag from Ikea. They’re opaque and just the right size to keep everything together. This makes them easy to add to the backpack, but it also helps keep the devices out of sight so the kids aren’t constantly reaching for them.
If you’re planning a trip this summer, I hope you’ll find these tips helpful in balancing the pull of the screens with your desire to keep your children from turning into zombies. I’d also love to hear your tips and tricks!
So happy to #TravelwithHomer this summer.
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dadofdivas · 7 years ago
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Mickey Mouse: Merry & Scary on Disney DVD August 29th!
Mickey Mouse: Merry & Scary on Disney DVD August 29th! #Disney
Invite Mickey and Donald into your home as they bring laughs and merriment to not one, but two holiday seasons! Mickey Mouse: Merry & Scary is arriving on Disney DVD August 29th, and you’ll want to catch their Halloween and Christmas hijinks! Get into the Halloween spirit as Mickey, Donald, and Goofy swap hair-raising Halloween stories. Then fast forward a couple months to Donald’s first…
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jumbosvg · 2 months ago
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26 Disney Halloween Bundle Png
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citysvg1 · 4 months ago
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Disney Halloween Mickey and Friends Trick or Treat Svg
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familydigitalsvg · 2 years ago
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Mickey's Not So Scary Halloween Party SVG, Happy Halloween Pumpkin SVG, Mouse Halloween SVG
Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party SVG, Happy Halloween Pumpkin SVG, Mouse Halloween SVG
Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party SVG, Happy Halloween Pumpkin SVG, Mouse Halloween SVG  ♥ Welcome FamilyDigitalSvg ♥ Cricut, SVG, DXF, PNG, JPEG, PDF, EPS, Digital download, Instant download, Digital clip art W H A T Y O U ‘ L L G E T ———————————————- NOTE: This is a digital file. No physical product will be sent to you. You will receive: • + SVG (ready cut file) • + PNG (high resolution…
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familydigitalsvg · 2 years ago
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Mickey Mouse Halloween 2022 SVG, Mickey Not So Scary Halloween SVG, Mickey Spiderweb Halloween SVG
Mickey Mouse Halloween 2022 SVG, Mickey Not So Scary Halloween SVG, Mickey Spiderweb Halloween SVG
Mickey Mouse Halloween 2022 SVG, Mickey Not So Scary Halloween SVG, Mickey Spiderweb Halloween SVG  ♥ Welcome FamilyDigitalSvg ♥ Cricut, SVG, DXF, PNG, JPEG, PDF, EPS, Digital download, Instant download, Digital clip art W H A T Y O U ‘ L L G E T ———————————————- NOTE: This is a digital file. No physical product will be sent to you. You will receive: • + SVG (ready cut file) • + PNG (high…
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familydigitalsvg · 2 years ago
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Mickey Not So Scary Halloween 2022 SVG, Disney Halloween Family SVG, 2022 Mickey Disney Halloween SVG
Mickey Not So Scary Halloween 2022 SVG, Disney Halloween Family SVG, 2022 Mickey Disney Halloween SVG
Mickey Not So Scary Halloween 2022 SVG, Disney Halloween Family SVG, 2022 Mickey Disney Halloween SVG  ♥ Welcome FamilyDigitalSvg ♥ Cricut, SVG, DXF, PNG, JPEG, PDF, EPS, Digital download, Instant download, Digital clip art W H A T Y O U ‘ L L G E T ———————————————- NOTE: This is a digital file. No physical product will be sent to you. You will receive: • + SVG (ready cut file) • + PNG (high…
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familydigitalsvg · 2 years ago
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2022 Mickey Not So Scary Halloween SVG, Mouse Castle Halloween SVG, Mickey Disneyland Spider Halloween SVG
2022 Mickey Not So Scary Halloween SVG, Mouse Castle Halloween SVG, Mickey Disneyland Spider Halloween SVG
2022 Mickey Not So Scary Halloween SVG, Mouse Castle Halloween SVG, Mickey Disneyland Spider Halloween SVG  ♥ Welcome FamilyDigitalSvg ♥ Cricut, SVG, DXF, PNG, JPEG, PDF, EPS, Digital download, Instant download, Digital clip art W H A T Y O U ‘ L L G E T ———————————————- NOTE: This is a digital file. No physical product will be sent to you. You will receive: • + SVG (ready cut file) • + PNG (high…
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familydigitalsvg · 2 years ago
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Mickey Pirate Not So Scary Halloween SVG, Pumpkin Pirate Halloween SVG, Mouse Pumpkin Spider Halloween SVG
Mickey Pirate Not So Scary Halloween SVG, Pumpkin Pirate Halloween SVG, Mouse Pumpkin Spider Halloween SVG
Mickey Pirate Not So Scary Halloween SVG, Pumpkin Pirate Halloween SVG, Mouse Pumpkin Spider Halloween SVG  ♥ Welcome FamilyDigitalSvg ♥ Cricut, SVG, DXF, PNG, JPEG, PDF, EPS, Digital download, Instant download, Digital clip art W H A T Y O U ‘ L L G E T ———————————————- NOTE: This is a digital file. No physical product will be sent to you. You will receive: • + SVG (ready cut file) • + PNG (high…
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familydigitalsvg · 2 years ago
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Mickey Halloween Spider SVG, Mickey Not So Scary Halloween SVG, 2022 Disney Halloween Party SVG
Mickey Halloween Spider SVG, Mickey Not So Scary Halloween SVG, 2022 Disney Halloween Party SVG
Mickey Halloween Spider SVG, Mickey Not So Scary Halloween SVG, 2022 Disney Halloween Party SVG  ♥ Welcome FamilyDigitalSvg ♥ Cricut, SVG, DXF, PNG, JPEG, PDF, EPS, Digital download, Instant download, Digital clip art W H A T Y O U ‘ L L G E T ———————————————- NOTE: This is a digital file. No physical product will be sent to you. You will receive: • + SVG (ready cut file) • + PNG (high resolution…
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