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Rajeev Motwani, wanted to study mathematics and become another Gauss! His
father, however, persuaded him to study computer science. Little did he know how
closely the two are related? He graduated with B.Tech. in computer science from
IITK in 1983 and PhD from Berkeley in 1988. Rajeev was a wise theoretician that
had the rare knack and desire to turn theory into practical applications.
"Whenever you use a piece of technology, there is a good chance a little
bit of Rajeev Motwani is behind it." Rajeev played an important role in the
founding of Google 15 years ago. He was snatched away from us on June 5, 2009,
at the age of 47, in a drowning accident in the backyard swimming pool of his
Atherton home after a party celebrating the end of the school year!
Growing up
Rajeev Motwani was born on March 24, 1962 in the Indian city of Jammu to Lt.
Colonel
Hotchand Motwani, an officer in the Indian Army, and Namita Motwani. His
family included brothers Sanjeev and Suneev. Given his fathers army career,
Rajeevs family moved often and lived in various parts of India before settling
down in New Delhi.
When Rajeev was seven, his father was stationed in the scenic town of Devlali near
Mumbai, India. His family would walk a kilometer to the local library to get books,
and the seven-year-old Rajeev would be seen reading the books they had borrowed
from the library as they walked home! His brothers recall that not a single day
would pass when he did not read a whole book.
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Young Rajeev wanted to be a mathematician, like Gauss. This was partly shaped
by the books I had at home. My parents for some reason had a lot of these books
10 great scientists or five famous mathematicians their life stories and so on. As
a child, whatever heroes you read about you want to become, adds Rajeev. Rajeev
would read books of all types, including novels, comics, autobiographies and
scientific books. Rajeev also loved music, particularly rock music. One of his
favorite bands was Indian Ocean. His friend from Berkley days, Rathin Sinha
recollects Rajeevs love for books by Asimov, music by Pink Floyd, and canned
chili and rice meals!
A turning point in Rajeevs intellectual development came when his family moved
to New Delhi in 1974. Rajeevs father wanted to send his children to the
prestigious St Columbas High School in New Delhi. St Columbas High School
administered a difficult entrance exam to admit students, and Rajeev studied hard
the night before taking the exam. Not only did Rajeev pass the exam, he did so
well that the principal admitted all three brothers into the school!
Reluctant Computer Scientist
After 11th grade (in the 10+2 program) in 1978, he appeared in JEE earning third
place in the northern zone of India. He did not stay at Columbas to finish the 12th
grade instead joined I I T Kanpur, which at that time had just started the
undergraduate program in computer science. I truly wanted to be a
mathematician, and my parents were hesitant because how do you make money as
a mathematician, how do you support a family. I was basically forced into going
into computer science even though I did not want to, but it turned out to be a
wonderful surprise that computer science is actually quite mathematical as a
field, recalls Rajeev in an interview.
Even though IIT Kanpur had an outstanding computer science faculty in the late
1970s, formal computer science education at the undergraduate level was still in
its infancy in India. Rajeev was a member of the very first cohort of undergraduate
computer science students at IIT Kanpur. Rajeev often recalled that IIT Kanpur
had attracted an amazing group of people, and there could not have been a better
environment for studying computer science in India. As a student, Rajeev was
inspired by Professor Kesav Nori, who taught Rajeevs first class on programming
TA 306: Principles of Programming. Rajeev recalls, Wonderful thing about
Prof. Nori is that he was a very inspiring person. He did more than just teach. He
created such a wonderful ecosystem and developed a personal connection with his
students.
Prof. Nori thinks Rajeev gave him more credit than he deserves. It has been 35
years but he is still so enthusiastic talking about Rajeev the chubby, smart boy.
In a recent phone conversation one could sense enthusiasm in his voice when he
said, Rajeev knew that purpose of programing is not just coding; it is to formulate
the problem. Rajeevs thinking was clear; his expression direct. No unnecessary
stuff. Rajeev had a knack for creating the most elegant and brief answers to the
hardest of programming problems. It was a joy to read his papers.
Another instructor at IITK recollects, Anyone who had taught Rajeev could not
but be impressed by his class. At the same time, he was not at all competitive if
he did well, which he did, it was because doing well was so natural for him.
Gautam Bhargava, a classmate of Rajeev at IIT Kanpur remembers him, As a fun
loving, rock-n-rollin party guy, a super-smart classmate. Hardly anyone in IITdays called him Rajeev. To us he was, and still is, Mots, which was not short for
Motwani, as you would expect, but rather short for Motwayne! After the younger
brother of the movie star John Wayne! But this alleged younger brother of John
Wayne was never seen wearing a 10-gallon Stetson; rather he was most often seen
in a kurta, jeans, chappals, with a cloth book-bag slung across his shoulder!
Rajeevs amazing brilliance might lead you to believe that Rajeev was this
immensely studious type who spent all his waking hours studying and hitting the
books hard. On the contrary, Rajeev was an incredibly fun loving guy always ready
for a party! In his dorm room, next to his bed would always be a stack of sciencefiction books waiting for eager consumption. Rajeev would spend endless hours
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solving the hardest crossword puzzles, playing bridge or volleyball, and hanging
out with friends then he would show up for the tests and magically ace them!
Now if a course were crazy hard, say, like the one on Number Theory, Rajeev
would effortlessly breeze through, with amazingly elegant answers to even the
toughest of problems. However, if the class were easy, Rajeev could easily lose
some interest. Rajeev thought time could be better spent listening to music or
hanging out at the canteen eating hakka chowmein or anda parathas.
Gautam continues, Rajeev was also quite a music lover with a particular fondness
for RocknRoll. During IIT years Rajeev was also the Audio Club Secretary. This
was indeed a prestigious job as the Audio Secy controlled the keys to the
RocknRoll kingdom and decided when and where the amps and the speakers
and the other equipment would be made available. As usual, Rajeev took great joy
in running that club and recruited a bunch of his friends to lug those heavy amps
around! When this got too much he decided it was more fun to play the bass his
favorite tune for riffing on bass was Badge! Later he started doodling on the
keyboard and as our friend Madhavan recalls, they only played songs in the key
of A-minor so Rajeev could just play on the white keys!!! Rajeev could also create
musical wonders with another instrument you just had to hear him use a wine
glass and a fork to play the tune for the Bollywood hit Chura Liya Hai.
Rajeevs undergraduate thesis (joint with Chilukuri K. Mohan and Amitabh Shah;
advised by Professor Somenath Biswas) was quite theoretical: Specification and
Verification of Computer Communication Protocols. This simultaneous interest
in theory and programming percolated through Rajeevs career. Rajeevs friends
recall that in college he was not only brilliant, but also incredibly fun-loving and
always ready for a party. There would always be a stack of science-fiction books
waiting for eager consumption in his dorm room, and he would spend endless
hours solving difficult crossword puzzles, playing bridge or volleyball, and hanging
out with friends. He never lost this undergraduate spirit. Through his time at
Berkeley and as a faculty member at Stanford, Rajeev approached research and
entrepreneurship with joy.
Never do work today that you can defer to tomorrow
Everybody else was coming to the US for PhD or Masters or whatever. Actually
Rajeev did not want to come to USA for some unexplainable reasons. He got a job
at DCM Data Products because getting visas at that time (1983) was a big problem.
He was also interviewed by the top three guys at Wipro a small enterprise then.
The interviewer said we would love to give you a job looking at your track record
but isnt every one with your kind of back ground going to the US on a
scholarship? So have you applied to US? Rajeev said, Yes I have an offer from
Berkley. He asked do you have a scholarship. Rajeev said, Yes, but I am not sure
if I will get a visa. He got the visa and landed up at Berkley.
In 1983, Rajeev became a PhD student at UC Berkeley. He found Berkley to be a
very politically charged university he would call it the JNU of the US. For 3 years
Rajeev had a blast. Did not do any work and fully enjoyed the environment. His
advisor was Prof. Richard Karp, who won the Turing award which is like the
Nobel Prize in computer science in 1985-86. When Rajeev had finished those 3
years without publishing any papers, he thought that he was not doing anything
and letting this man down. So from then on he worked really hard and was quite
productive for the next two years.
In an advanced course on algorithms taught by Prof. Richard Karp the class was
asked to solve a homework problem. With a fellow student and Prof. Karp, Rajeev
developed this problem into a theory of deferred data structures: data structures
that are built-up incrementally. This resulted in Rajeevs first published paper,
and he summarized it jokingly as his philosophy in life, with the words: Never do
work today that you can defer to tomorrow.
This is how Rathin Sinha remembers his days with Rajeev at Berkley, Rajeev was
perhaps my closest friend in UC Berkeley. We arrived in the same August of 1983
and I remember spending countless evenings at his Durant apartment going
through his full collection of Isaac Asimov, having tea and ending the evening with
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fried chili and rice. and then we went our separate ways. I discontinued my PhD
program, took up a job, but lived in the neighborhood.
When I got laid off in 1986, he helped me with my resume, in job search, and most
importantly kept me motivated. He even gave me his answering machine in case
an interviewer calls and I am not there to take the call. He was always smiling.
Very mellow and soft spoken. I never saw him getting frustrated or rattled in spite
of his heavy work load. He never complained about life, teachers, tests, or grades.
He knew how to enjoy himself.
10 years later one email and we were connected again. His first request to me
was to see if I could help a budding entrepreneur who was looking for some
technology. So was Rajeev. For me it was like growing up with Greatness. Rajeev
was always ready to help.
In 1988 Rajeev was about to graduate from Berkley with PhD (His Dissertation:
Probabilistic analysis of matching and network flow algorithms) and was
wondering what to do next. Go back to India or stay in the US. Again other people
made the decisions for him. Don Knuth, one of the founding fathers of computer
science, came over to meet Rajeevs advisor and told him that they wanted to hire
someone young for algorithms at Stanford. So Karp suggested Rajeevs name.
Rajeev was then invited by Knuth at Stanford for lunch. Rajeev was wondering
why this great man wants to have lunch with him. Anyway, Rajeev went to
Stanford and met him at a restaurant near the church at the quad. He then told
him to be with Stanford for a year and see if they liked him and vice versa after
which if things worked out well they would hire Rajeev.
He was offered a visiting faculty position at Stanford. He did not want that job as
he was getting better offers and permanent jobs at other places but since it was an
offer by Knuth it was hard to turn down. Rajeev thought, Its the like Einstein
inviting you to Princeton for a job! He joined Stanford and taught several courses
and had a very good time.
Stanford liked what they saw and he was appointed as tenure-track faculty. Based
on his thesis work at Berkeley, Stanford realized that it was getting an
extraordinary and promising theoretician in this 27 year old man. However,
everyone underestimated the incredible scholar, teacher, advisor, colleague,
entrepreneur, and friend that Rajeev would become.
3 4 months after his first year at Stanford he got married. Rajeev met his soonto-be wife Asha Jadeja in May 1989. Asha graduated from the University of
Southern California and relocated to the San Francisco Bay area. Rajeev and Asha
were married on March 22, 1990 in Delhi. They liked living in Stanford, and
decided to stay. Asha started graduate school at UC Berkeley in 1991, studying
urban planning and urban transportation, and joined the department of political
science at Stanford in 1994. Two daughters were born from their marriage, Naitri
(b.1991) and Anya (b.2003). In their tribute to Rajeev, Ashas younger brothers,
Yashwant and Yogi said, Rajeev, who we called Jamaisaheb, was to the world a
famous scientist, entrepreneur, and mentor. For us, he was the rock star of an
elder brother that we never had. When our dear sister Asha married Rajeev, we
used to pinch ourselves and wondered how we ever got so lucky that this
brilliant, humble, and incredibly handsome man entered our family and
immediately became part of a large, cantankerous family with such ease. In our
20 years of close association, we never saw Rajeev ever lose his cool, was always
generous even to people he did not know, and became the darling son of our
parents, and all aunts and uncles in the family. He will be with us forever.
Robots Taught Him Something Special
Rajeev enjoyed teaching at Stanford. Since so many people were retiring or leaving
Stanford there were a lot of courses to be taught. Rajeev ended up teaching variety
of courses. He even created and offered his own courses such as topography and
algorithms and complexity theory. Since he did not know a lot of these areas but
he learned a lot by teaching these courses. He did not get enough sleep! He used to
say, I am a perfectionist and I still get nervous to talk before a class even today. I
get nervous, what if someone asks me a question and I find myself unable to
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On a smaller scale, I recently realized thats exactly what he was doing in our
research enterprise. He clearly had a knack for matchmaking. deeply thought-out
insights on most any issue, a willingness to help anyone anytime, and an
understated but ever-present sense of humor.
We faculty have a tendency to blather on. Rajeev, on the other hand, would sit
quietly and then get right to the point. Rajeev left one hole that simply cant be
addressed. He forged a unique connection between the department and the
entrepreneurial worlda connection that was broad, deeply technical, and full of
integrity. That is something we simply cant replicate with any other human being
known to us.
Ram Shriram, a family friend remembers, Rajeev had a photographic memory
and seemed to have a limitless capacity to remember people, numbers, events,
companies and the like. He was always accessible and approachable. His business
acumen rivaled his technical prowess which made him a unique and potent force
in the venture community.
Gaurav Garg noted, Rajeev was one of those rare people who operated at the
highest level of excellence in multiple disciplines. He was exceptionally observant,
practical, thoughtful, yet decisive, with an unerring instinct for the right questions
or issues around any topic, be it the game of cricket or a startup. I was always
impressed by his kindness, fondness, and open door policy with young
entrepreneurs.
Rajeev was a nurturing force for many startups, according to a close friend and
GigaOm editor Om Malik. As an investor and advisor, he sat on the boards of
Google, Kaboodle, Mimosa Systems, Adchemy, Baynote, Vuclip.
Then Came the World Wide Web
Around this time the world wide web was coming up and Rajeev got sucked into it.
Rajeev in his interview with Shivanand Kanavi in 2002 recollects, There was this
guy Jeff Ullman, another one of the grand old men of computer science, who
retired this year. He was in the office next to me and was in database. I was talking
to him and a new student Sergey Brin, and I remember at that time we were
using Mosaic, and we were looking at the web and I was sitting there and thinking
that we could randomize the web in some way because that was going to grow and
become big and randomness was going to be important; though I did not know
how and why. So I thought about doing random walks on the web and there was
this problem of crawling on the web. At that time a search engine called Inktomi
had just come out of Berkley. Excite and Yahoo had come out from Stanford so we
had seen the first signs of all of this.
I remember going to Inktomi and searching for the word Inktomi and it could not
find itself. I dont know if that is still true but at that time if you went to Inktomi
and typed in the word it said no results found. My Godelian past induced me to do
these self-referential queries but what amazed me was that this is a simple thing
that people screw up on. So in the context of all this I was listening to some people
from IBM talk on Data mining and Ullman had just introduced me to some
problems in databases. I broke them down with a student and was getting pretty
excited about the concept of databases. Ullman took me for this talk on data
mining which sounded very interesting to me. So Sergey and Ullman and we
decided to do some data mining on the web because it sounded like a nice mix. We
then formed this research group called Midas which stood for Mining Data At
Stanford. We did a lot of good work on data mining. Then there was this guy called
Larry Page who wasnt really a part of the Midas group but was a friend of Sergey
and would show up for these meetings. He was working on this very cool idea of
doing random walks on the web.
When I understood what the World Wide Web would look like, I knew I had to
somehow force randomness into it. When Larry showed us what he was doing, it
was like a complete epiphany, we thought it was absolutely the right thing to do.
So Sergey got involved and it became a sub group inside Midas. I was really a good
sounding board for Sergey and Larry and I could relate to what they were doing
through randomness. They then created a search engine called Backrub. It was
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running as a search engine from Stanford just like Yahoo ran till the traffic got big
and the IT guys sent it off the campus. So these 2 guys would come to the office
and say hey we need some more disc space. They were completely non respectful
of me, which was a wonderful thing. They treated me like an equal. These 21 year
old guys were demanding things from me. They needed more disc space because
its getting bigger. So we need more disc and more money. There are still pictures
around the building of how they used to use Legos, to create a box inside which
the discs were being put. These discs were those cheap ones bought from the back
of a truck and were generating a lot of heat. So they put it in Legos to allow for air
circulation.
For me it was a fun research project. We had a lot of ideas which we shared. At
some point this thing started getting very serious and we wanted a better name for
this than Backrub. So somebody came up with the name Google. Google means 10
raised to the power of 100. It is actually spelt as GOOGOL but somebody miss
spelt it and thats how the search engine got its name. Of course the official story is
we deliberately spelt it that way but my guess is we miss spelt it.
So Google started and pretty soon everybody in the world was using Google. The
results were much better than all the other search engines going around. It was by
word of mouth like I tell my brother to use it, he would tell his wife, wife would tell
her kids and so on. At some point these guys said we want to start a company.
Everybody said it was not worth it. There were 37 search engines already there.
How would you raise money? How would you form the company? But they
decided to do it and they did it. There were some big names which supported the
company. Andy Bechtolsheim, an ex-Stanford guy who along with Vinod Khosla
had founded the Sun Microsystems, put in a little bit of money. They managed to
raise a million dollars. They started the company and it was right here in the
university avenue. It used to be on my drive home so I used to go and hang out
with these guys. It used to be wonderful.
Then they took over the world!
Right now the other search engines dont even compare and I remember people
who I dont want to name saying why do you need another search engine? Today it
is the most used search engine. Feels like I was part of a little bit of history and
contributed to that history.
Sergy Brin and Larry Page founded Google on September 4, 1998.
In his tribute to Rajeev, this is what Sergy Brin said, Officially, Rajeev was not my
advisor, and yet he played just as big a role in my research, education, and
professional development. In addition to being a brilliant computer scientist,
Rajeev was a very kind and amicable person and his door was always open. No
matter what was going on with my life or work, I could always stop by his office for
an interesting conversation and a friendly smile.
When my interest turned to data mining, Rajeev helped to coordinate a regular
meeting group on the subject. Even though I was just one of hundreds of graduate
students in the department, he always made the time and effort to help. Later,
when Larry and I began to work together on the research that would lead to
Google, Rajeev was there to support us and guide us through challenges, both
technical and organizational.
Eventually, as Google emerged from Stanford, Rajeev remained a friend and
advisor as he has with many people and startups since. Of all the faculty at
Stanford, it is with Rajeev that I have stayed the closest and I will miss him dearly.
Yet his legacy and personality live on in the students, projects, and companies he
has touched. Today, whenever you use a piece of technology, there is a good
chance a little bit of Rajeev Motwani is behind it.
This is how Larry Page remembered him, Rajeev was a wise theoretician that had
the rare knack and desire to turn theory into practical applications. Rajeev was
always willing to lend an ear and a brain to anyone, even to me as a confused
student. With his always open door and clever insights, Rajeev was instrumental
in the early work that led to Google.
Ron Conway, early stage investor in Google, Ask Jeeves and PayPal, recollects,
Rajeev was always so generous with his time. I was talking last night to Rajeevs
brother, Sanjay, and we concluded that there must have been THREE of him!!!
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.one was always at university caf and another was always at Stanford and the
other one at google!!
Humble to the Core
David Hornik of August Capital remembered Rajeev as a friend, It is one thing to
be friendly with someone in the business world. It is another thing altogether to
consider them a friend. Rajeev genuinely liked people and people genuinely liked
him.
One of his instructors from IITK recalls, I met him only infrequently since 1983,
but Id get in touch with him whenever any need arose, either for myself or for a
student. Rajeev would render his help promptly and hed answer e-mails without
any delay. Only now I realize, reading about him, how busy though he had been all
through. I recall that in 1999 June I went to his office to meet him. When I
reached, an undergraduate student of his theory of computation course was there
to clear some doubts. From the questions the student was asking, it was evident
that the student had put in hardly any effort in the course. Most of us would be
very impatient with such students. Rajeev, however, was not only patient but also
friendly I still remember how beautifully, without using the whiteboard, Rajeev
explained, just through words, why the problem of checking if an input TM would
ever make a left move when started on a blank tape is decidable. I could see that
the student understood the argument, and he left the office very happy. It was a
lesson to me I realized that people of true excellence have no problems at all in
accepting shortcomings in others.
When Rajeev received Godel Prize in 2001, this is what he so humbly said, I got
the Godel prize for my theoretical work. In science it is said that one guy stands on
the shoulders of another and another on his and so on. The guy on top gets the
prize. In my case I was on the tip of the pyramid and so got the prize. Everyone
forgets the pyramid.
Rajeev was a school mate of Shahrukh Khan, the Indian film star, at St Columbas
High School in New Delhi and had great admiration for him. In his self-effacing
style he would say, that guy (Shahrukh) is brilliant and will be the No.1 in
anything he takes up. Pushing into background his own remarkable intellectual
achievements.
Not feeling so lucky!
Prakash Tripathi met Rajeev as a 17 year old at IIT Kanpur campus in 1979. Rajeev
spoke to Prakash, ironically, by the IITK poolside.
Can you jump into the waters?, Rajeev asked.
Yes, I can, Prakash replied. Not because Prakash knew how to swim, but as a
fresher in a campus of Indias engineering schools, in a hot summer afternoon in
Kanpur, dying in a pool was a far dignified way to reject lifes conditions then to
submit and surrender.
Rajeev didnt tell Prakash whether he could swim. Nor Prakash had the courage to
ask. But Rajeev inspired Prakash to convert our lies into truth as a homage to
future. First thing Prakash did, after graduating from IITK, was to learn to swim in
IIT Delhi pool. Prakash recollects, Its traumatic to me today that Rajeev didnt.
That was his failing as a human.
Rajeev, 47, died June 5, 2009 in the backyard swimming pool of his Atherton
home after a party celebrating the end of the school year. Rajeevs blood alcohol
level was .26 when he died, San Mateo County Coroner Robert Foucrault said. The
legal limit for operating a motor vehicle is .08. Rajeev did not know how to swim.
On June 6, 2009, day after Rajeevs death, Deepak Nayar, wrote, I was one year
senior to him at IITK and when he arrived at Berkeley, I picked him from the San
Francisco airport and had a run-down room ready for him (next to our run-down
room above Pasandrestaurant). Four of us lived above Pasand. He and his success
were admired by so many of us. So many of us looked up to him and referred to
him as an IIT Baap. We were proud of him. Sad it ended this way. This is not how
it is supposed to be!!!! In the classic American movie, Its a Wonderful Life, the
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angel who has been sent to save George Bailey, says: Strange, isnt it? Each mans
life touches so many other lives. When he isnt around he leaves an awful hole,
doesnt he?
Rajeevs life touched so many of us. His death has certainly left a big hole.
Every time you Google, you are in touch with Rajeev.
=============================
Rajeev Motwani graduated with BTech in Computer Science from IITK in 1983
and PhD from Berkeley in 1988. He taught at Stanford till his accidental death in
2009. A fun loving highly accomplished theoretician who could find practical
application of his ideas was an early investor in several start-ups. He helped Brin
and Page in 1998 to found Google. He received Godel Prize in 2001 and
Distinguished Alumnus Award from IITK in 2006. A Computer Science Building
at IITK in Rajeevs name is being constructed through generous donation from his
family.
This story has been prepared from personal interviews and by cutting and pasting
material found through, interestingly, Google search! All credit to original
contributors who are too many to be named individually.
Source Rajeev Motwani: There wasnt a startup he didnt love
Visit our programming blog at Cracking The Code .
Disclaimer : This post is just for inspiration, I came across it while surfing the web
, original author holds the complete rights to it . I posted it to here to let the world
know more about Rajeev Motwani and the blogger's efforts.
Edit:One of the best thing happened to me , I spend few months with one of
classmate of Rajeev and he told me that Rajeev was an avg. student during IIT
time , Its United State Of America who gave him opportunity and Rajeev grabbed
it , I will post more details later.
83,467 views 868 upvotes Written 14 Sep 2013
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Programmers Day Special : One of Worlds Finest ... - Cracking The Code - Quora
https://crackingthekode.quora.com/Programmers-Day-Special-One-ofst-Programmer-Mathematician-and-Man-Behind-Google-Rajeev-Motwani
5/31/16 11:29 AM
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