New York University Tandon School of Engineering
Type | Private |
---|---|
Established | 1854 |
Parent institution | New York University |
Dean | Jelena Kovačević |
Academic staff | 396 |
Students | 5,300 |
Undergraduates | 2,585 |
Postgraduates | 2,715 |
Location | Brooklyn, New York, U.S. 40°41′40″N 73°59′12″W / 40.694412°N 73.986531°W / 40.694412; -73.986531 |
Campus | Urban, 15 acres (excluding CUSP and leased space)[1] |
Website | engineering.nyu.edu |
The New York University Tandon School of Engineering (commonly referred to as Tandon) is the engineering and applied sciences school of New York University. Tandon is the second oldest private engineering and technology school in the United States.[2][3][4][5] The school dates back to 1854 when its predecessor institutions, the University of the City of New York[6] School of Civil Engineering and Architecture and the Brooklyn Collegiate and Polytechnic Institute, were founded.[7] The school was renamed in 2015 in honor of NYU Trustees Chandrika and Ranjan Tandon following their donation of $100 million to the school.[8]
The school's main campus is in Brooklyn's MetroTech Center, an urban academic-industrial research park. It is one of several engineering schools that were founded based on a European polytechnic university model in the 1800s, in response to the increasing industrialization of the United States. It has been a key center of research in the development of microwave, wireless, radar, electronics in general, polymers, industrial engineering and operations research and the US space program.[9]
Contents
1 History
1.1 Founding institutions
1.1.1 Brooklyn Collegiate and Polytechnic Institute
1.1.2 School of Civil Engineering and Architecture
1.1.3 Expansion, financial difficulties and acquisition
1.2 Distinction through technology
1.3 Present
2 Fundraising
3 Name
4 Campuses
4.1 Brooklyn campus
4.2 Manhattan sites
4.3 Online
5 Academic profile
5.1 Departments
5.2 Accreditation
5.3 Class Profile
5.4 Rankings
6 Research
6.1 Academic labs
6.2 Research centers
6.3 CUSP
7 Notable faculty and alumni
7.1 Nobel laureates
7.2 National Medals for Science, Technology and Innovation
7.3 Russ Prize, Gordon Prize, Draper Prize
7.4 IEEE Edison Medal
7.5 Turing Award
7.6 Astronauts
7.7 DARPA directors
7.8 Pulitzer Prize winners
7.9 Business leaders
7.10 Inventors
8 See also
9 References
10 External links
History
Founding institutions
Brooklyn Collegiate and Polytechnic Institute
On May 17, 1853, a group of Brooklyn businessmen wrote a charter to establish a school for young men. Named Brooklyn Collegiate and Polytechnic Institute, the school moved into its first home at 99 Livingston Street in Brooklyn. The first class, admitted in 1855, consisted of 265 young men ages nine to 17. The school conferred its first bachelor's degrees in 1871. Graduate programs began in 1901 and the school awarded its first doctoral degree in 1921.[10] From 1889 to 1973 the school became known as Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn. In 1917, the preparatory program separated from the Institute and became the Polytechnic Preparatory Country Day School. Poly Prep is now located in the Dyker Heights section of Brooklyn. Polytechnic Institute moved to its present location in 1957, the former site of the American Safety Razor Company factory, where it became a co-educational institution.
School of Civil Engineering and Architecture
In 1854, the University of the City of New York, now New York University, founded the School of Civil Engineering and Architecture at a time when specialized schools of engineering were uncommon in America.[11] Classes began in 1855 and the school awarded its first undergraduate degree in 1857. As the industrial revolution took shape, the school formalized its engineering curriculum and the school's first dean, Charles H. Snow, changed the name of the school to the School of Applied Science. During this time the engineering school officially separated from the university's arts and science school then called University College. In 1894 the University of the City of New York moved its engineering school to a new campus in the Bronx.[12] The new campus gave the university space to build larger science laboratories that could not be constructed at its Washington Square site.[13] With the addition of the new campus, under the leadership of Chancellor Henry Mitchell MacCracken, the University of the City of New York renamed itself New York University. The neighborhood surrounding the Bronx campus eventually became known as University Heights. By 1920 separate electrical and chemical engineering departments were created and the school changed its name to the College of Engineering.
Expansion, financial difficulties and acquisition
Enrollment at New York University expanded considerably from the early 1900s into the postwar decades. However, by the early 1970s this growth ceased due to rising crime and financial troubles in New York City. New York University faced financial hardships leading it to sell its University Heights campus that housed its engineering school to City University of New York, which in turn renamed the campus Bronx Community College. Also during that period from 1969 to 1975, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn was forced to rely on subsidies provided by New York state to keep the school afloat. The state supported Polytechnic on the basis that closing the school would create economic hardship locally.[9] With both Polytechnic Institute and New York University facing financial difficulties, the state brokered a merger of New York University's engineering school with Polytechnic Institute. Polytechnic Institute acquired the faculty, programs and students of New York University's engineering school to form Polytechnic Institute of New York.[9] Polytechnic Institute of New York gained university status in 1985 and changed its name to Polytechnic University.
Distinction through technology
By 1986 Polytechnic University in Brooklyn was the largest technological university in the New York metropolitan area and the second-largest in graduate enrollment in the nation after the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Of the 300 engineering schools in the United States, Polytechnic had the second-largest graduate enrollment and was among the most successful institutions in the country as a producer of science and engineering graduates who went on to doctoral studies. An average of 7.2 percent of Polytechnic graduates went on to achieve a Ph.D., compared with two other schools with large engineering programs: Carnegie Mellon, with an average of 6 percent, and Princeton, with 4.5 percent.[9] Polytechnic University became well known for its research centers in electrophysics and polymer blends.
Present
Enrollment History: | |
---|---|
1986: 5,100 students[9] | |
2015: 5,212 students[14] |
Discussions about a merger with Polytechnic University and New York University began in 2004. Four years later Polytechnic University and New York University agreed to take steps towards a merger beginning with a formal affiliation between the two schools. This affiliation resulted in the school changing its name to Polytechnic Institute of New York University.[15] The schools officially merged in 2014 when the New York State Regents approved the change of charter making NYU the sole member of Polytechnic University.[16][17] Since the merger applications to the school and incoming SAT scores have increased substantially. The school has also experienced an influx of students coming from outside of New York state. Fundraising and faculty research awards have increased since the merger.[15] The school also opened a bioengineering facility in partnership with the medical and dental schools.[18]
A gift of $100 million from Chandrika and Ranjan Tandon in 2015 resulted in the school changing its name to the Tandon School of Engineering. New York University has committed to investing over $500 million to its engineering school in the coming years.[19]
Fundraising
The school has had several fundraising campaigns over the years. From 2001-2005 the school raised more than $275 million.[20] Alumnus Joseph J. Jacobs, who founded Jacobs Engineering Group, one of the largest engineering and construction companies in the world, gave the school more than $30 million over the course of his life.[21]
Name
The school started from two origins and has carried a number of different names:
- 1854: Brooklyn Collegiate and Polytechnic Institute; University of the City of New York School of Civil Engineering and Architecture (founding names, separate institutions)
- 1889: Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn (also spun out Polytechnic Preparatory Country Day School)
- 1896: New York University School of Applied Science (separate from Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn)[11]
- 1920: New York University College of Engineering (separate from Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn)
- 1973: Polytechnic Institute of New York (acquired the faculty, programs and students of New York University College of Engineering)
- 1985: Polytechnic University (acquired university status)
- 2008: Polytechnic Institute of New York University (affiliated with New York University)
- 2014: New York University Polytechnic School of Engineering (merged with New York University)
- 2015: New York University Tandon School of Engineering
Campuses
The NYU Tandon School of Engineering main campus is in Downtown Brooklyn and is close to public transportation routes. In addition to its main address at MetroTech Center in Downtown Brooklyn, the school offers programs in Manhattan. The school is an integral part of NYU Abu Dhabi, NYU Shanghai and the NYU Center for Urban Science and Progress (CUSP) in downtown Brooklyn.[22]
Brooklyn campus
The school played a major role in bringing about MetroTech Center, one of the largest urban university-corporate parks in the United States, while closing down the larger campus at its former Long Island Graduate Center. Today, the 16-acre, $1 billion complex in Brooklyn includes the school's main campus, along with several technology-dependent companies such as Securities Industry Automation Corporation (SIAC), as well as New York City Police Department's 9-1-1 Center, New York City Fire Department Headquarters and the U.S. technology and operations functions of JPMorgan Chase.
The school has seven buildings in Brooklyn, as well as leased spaces in some other nearby buildings. The seven buildings are as follows:
- Jacobs Academic Building
- Jacobs Administration Building
- Rogers Hall
- Wunsch Building
- Dibner Building
- Othmer Residence Hall
- Civil Engineering Building (currently closed)
An eighth 460,000-square-foot building, adjacent to Rogers Hall, will open in Fall 2017.[23]
Manhattan sites
The Bioengineering Institute research facility is located at 433 First Avenue in Manhattan.[24] The School of Engineering and Colleges of Nursing and Dentistry are located in the building where chemical, biomolecular engineers, as well as mechanical engineers do research in biomaterials and biotherapeutics for regenerative medicine.[18]
The engineering school also has a location in downtown Manhattan. The downtown site offers degree programs in Financial Engineering, Management of Technology, Information Management and Accelerated Management of Technology, and the Exec 21 Construction Management certificate.
Online
NYU Tandon Online is the online learning unit at NYU Tandon School of Engineering which offers 6 master’s degrees, 2 graduate certificates, and 3 certificates of completion programs fully online. Focused on peer-to-peer engagement, the unit has been recognized as providing one of the top online learning programs by U.S. News & World Report, and the Online Learning Consortium among others.
Academic profile
Departments
- Applied Physics
- Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
- Civil and Urban Engineering
- Computer Science and Engineering
- Electrical and Computer Engineering
- Finance and Risk Engineering
- Mathematics
- Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
- Technology, Culture and Society
- Technology Management and Innovation (affiliated with Leonard N. Stern School of Business)
Accreditation
All undergraduate and graduate programs at the engineering school are accredited by the Middle States Association. Undergraduate chemistry students have the option to pursue a degree approved by the American Chemical Society (ACS). The Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET), the Computer Science Accreditation Board (CSAB), Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), International Association of Financial Engineers (IAFE), Institute of Industrial Engineers (IIE), American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME), Construction Management Association of America (CMAA), American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE), American Society for Metals, Society of Manufacturing Engineers (SME), American Academy of Environmental Engineers (AAEE), Biomedical Engineering Society (BMES), American Chemical Society (ACS), American Physical Society (APS) and the Joint Policy Board for Mathematics (JPBM) have recognized the school's undergraduate and graduate programs in engineering, computer science and physics, chemistry and mathematics.
Class Profile
Tandon's incoming classes typically consist of some 700 students, with a total academic population of over 5,000. From 2007 to 2016, applications rose 103% and the average first year admitted student SAT score rose 145 points, from 1175 to 1320.[15]
Rankings
- Ranked #3 by U.S. News & World Report Best Online Graduate Computer Information Technology Program in 2017[25]
- Ranked #1 PayScale Best Value College in NY State (20-year ROI) in 2015[26]
- Ranked #8 by U.S. News & World Report Best Online Graduate Engineering Programs in 2015[27]
- Ranked #9 by The Princeton Review Top Graduate Schools for Video Game Design in 2015[28]
- Ranked #16 among Financial Engineering and Mathematical Finance programs in North America in 2014[29]
- Ranked #41 (tied) in U.S. News 2018 graduate engineering programs.[30]
- Ranked #61 in U.S. News 2018 undergraduate engineering programs.[31]
Research
Some of the school's first research institutes included the Polymer Research Institute, established in 1942, and the Microwave Research Institute, established in 1945. The American Chemical Society designated the Polymer Research Institute as a National Historic Chemical Landmark on September 3, 2003.[32] The Microwave Research Institute developed electromagnetic and microwave defense and communication systems and later renamed itself the Weber Research Institute. Other notable research centers of the institute include NSF-sponsored Wireless Internet Center for Advanced Technology (WICAT), which ranked #1 among technology research centers in funding and #2 in the number of industry participants according to the United States National Science Foundation,[33] Center for Advanced Technologies in Telecommunications (CATT), a New York State and NSF sponsored research center that is also affiliated with Columbia University,[34] NSF-funded Internet Security and Information Systems Lab, a U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) designated Center of Excellence in Information Assurance, Information Assurance Education and a Center of Excellence in Research,[35] and the New York State Resiliency Institute for Storms & Emergencies (NYS RISE), which is housed jointly at NYU's Brooklyn campus, and Stony Brook University.[36][37][38]
Over the years the school has been a key center of research in the development of microwave physics, radar, polymers and the space program.[9] During World War II the school's Microwave Research Institute worked on problems whose solution led to the development of radar, and later broke ground in electromagnetic theory and electronics in general. In later years the school participated in the space program, solving re-entry problems of the manned space capsules.[9]
The school has been affiliated with some major inventions and innovations including: the Panama Canal locks; lockmaking;[39] the Brooklyn Bridge cables; cable-lift elevators;[40] cordless phones; ATM machines; bar codes; laser; radar; penicillin; polymers; elevator brakes; lightweight, ultra durable automotive brake rotor;[41][42] light beer; cardiac defibrillator; artificial cardiac pacemaker; RFID; contact lenses; zoom lens; first telephone handset; commercial television;[43] non-stick coating as an application of Teflon; suspension system for the largest radio telescope; microwave technology; Apollo Lunar Module, the first, and to date only, manned spacecraft to operate exclusively in the airless vacuum of space; X-ray crystallography;[9] structure of the DNA molecule; submarine; modern refrigerator; A/C generator; electric motors; transformer;[39] submarine communications facilities;[44][45] development of the artificial sweetener aspartame; development of nontoxic processes to create food colorings and remove caffeine from coffee; the quasi-complementary (transistor) amplifier circuit; lateral transistor; the wireless microphone; as well as Eugene Kleiner’s first semiconductor (and much of the Silicon Valley), and Spencer Trask's investing and supporting of Thomas Edison's invention of the electric light bulb.[39][46][47][48][49]
Academic labs
Academic labs and research centers include:
- Computational Mechanics Laboratory[50]
- Dynamical Systems Laboratory[51]
- Brooklyn Experimental Media Center (formerly Integrated Digital Media Institute)[52]
- Wireless Implementation Testbed Laboratory[53]
- Bio-interfacial Engineering and Diagnostics Lab[54]
- Control and Telecommunications Research Laboratory[55]
- High-Speed Networking Lab[56]
- Power and Power Electronics Engineering Laboratory[57]
- CITE Game Innovation Lab[58]
- Protein Engineering and Molecular Design Laboratory[59]
- Translational Neuroengineering (associated with the NYU Center for Neural Science and the NYU Langone Medical Center)[60]
- Urban Future Lab (founded in partnership with the New York City Economic Development Corporation)[61][62]
Research centers
Research at the engineering school is conducted either through academic departments or through one of many interdisciplinary research centers including:
- Center for Advanced Technology in Telecommunications (CATT)
- Center for Finance and Technology (CFT)
- Institute for Mathematics and Advanced Supercomputing (IMAS)
- Polymer Research Institute (PRI)
- Urban Intelligent Transportation Systems Center (UITSC)
- Wireless Internet Center for Advanced Technology (WICAT)
- CRISSP (Cyber-Security. Includes Tandon School of Engineering, Wagner Graduate School, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Stern School of Business, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development)
- Weber Research Institute
- Research Center for Risk Engineering
- Materials Research Science and Engineering Center
- Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center
- The Games for Learning Institute
- Media and Games Network (MAGNET)
- New York State Resiliency Institute for Storms & Emergencies (includes NYU, Stony Brook University, Columbia University, Cornell University, City University of New York and Brookhaven National Laboratory)
- NYU WIRELESS
- Biomatrix Research Center (located in Manhattan)[63]
CUSP
The Center for Urban Science and Progress (CUSP) is a degree-granting research facility of NYU located at MetroTech Center in Downtown Brooklyn, New York. Its permanent 460,000-square-foot building adjacent to NYU School of Engineering's Rogers Hall, will open in Fall 2017.[64][65]
Notable faculty and alumni
New York University Tandon School of Engineering has just over 33,000 living alumni living in 68 countries as of 2015.[66] The school's alumni include inventors, scientists, entrepreneurs, politicians, country presidents, university presidents, academic leaders (including NYU Stern's founder Charles Waldo Haskins) and more than 2,000 CEOs and leaders at large corporations.[67] Among its past and present graduates and faculty are at least four Nobel Prize winners, seven National Medals for Science, Technology and Innovation winners, two astronauts, Russ Prize, IEEE Edison Medal, Turing Award, Gordon Prize and Draper Prize winners and over 100 National Academy of Engineering members.[68][69]
Nobel laureates
Gertrude B. Elion, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Rudolph Marcus, Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Francis Crick, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for being a co-discoverer of the structure of the DNA molecule
Martin Perl, Nobel Prize in Physics in 1995 for his discovery of the tau lepton
National Medals for Science, Technology and Innovation
- John G. Trump
- Joel S. Engel
- Richard J. Gambino
- Herman Francis Mark
- Rudolph A. Marcus
- Ernst Weber
Jerome Swartz, developed early optical strategies for barcode scanning technologies
Russ Prize, Gordon Prize, Draper Prize
- Joel S. Engel
- Clive Dym
- Harold S. Goldberg
- Elmer L. Gaden
IEEE Edison Medal
William B. Kouwenhoven, invented the closed-chest cardiac defibrillator- Bancroft Gherardi, Jr.
Turing Award
- Judea Pearl
Astronauts
- Paolo A. Nespoli
- Charles Camarda
DARPA directors
- Jack Ruina
Pulitzer Prize winners
James Truslow Adams, writer who coined the term "American Dream
Business leaders
Alumni leaders at large companies include:
Ursula Burns, Chairperson and CEO of Xerox
Arthur C. Martinez, Chairman and CEO of Sears
Robert J. Stevens, Chairman and CEO of Lockheed Martin
Alfred Amoroso, Chairman of Yahoo!
John Dionisio, Chairman and CEO of AECOM
Herbert L. Henkel, Chairman of Ingersoll Rand
Spencer Trask, Chairman of The New York Times
Jason Hsuan, Chairman and CEO of TPV Technology
John Trani, Chairman and CEO of Stanley Black & Decker
John Elmer McKeen, Chairman and CEO of Pfizer
Mark Ronald, Chairman and CEO of BAE Systems
Vincent A. Calarco, Chairman and CEO of Chemtura
Sunil Godhwani, Chairman and CEO of Religare
Robert Prieto, Chairman and CEO of Parsons Brinckerhoff
Richard Santulli, Chairman and CEO of NetJets
Stav Prodromou, Chairman and CEO of Peregrine Semiconductor
Michael H. Kappaz, Chairman and CEO of KM Group
Israel Borovich, Chairman and CEO of EL AL
Hugh John Casey, Chairman of New York City Transit Authority
Stewart G. Nagler, Vice Chairman, Director and CFO of MetLife
Craig G. Matthews, President, CFO and Chief Operating Officer of KeySpan
Charles D. Strang, Chairman, CEO and President of Outboard Marine Corporation
Charles Ranlett Flint, founder of IBM
Nils Lahr, Chairman, CEO and founder of IBEAM Broadcasting Corporation
Fadi Chehadé, CEO of ICANN
Joseph J. Jacobs, Chairman, CEO and founder of Jacobs Engineering Group
Rajiv C. Mody, Chairman, CEO and founder of Sasken Communication Technologies
Glenford Myers, Chairman, CEO and founder of Radisys
Bern Dibner, Chairman, CEO and founder of Burndy
Eugene Kleiner, Chairman, CEO and founder of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
Ta-lin Hsu, Chairman, CEO and founder of H&Q Asia Pacific
Paul Ferri, Chairman, CEO and founder of Matrix Partners
William C. W. Mow, Chairman, CEO and founder of Bugle Boy
Jerome Swartz, Chairman, CEO and founder of Symbol Technologies
Alfred P. Sloan (attended, but transferred), Chairman, CEO and founder of General Motors
Rachelle Friedman, Chairperson, CEO and founder of J&R
Bill Friend (engineer), President of Bechtel
Michael Horodniceanu, President of the MTA Capital Construction
Ami Miron, Vice President, General Instrument Corporation
Charles Hinkaty, Vice President, Citibank
Eugene Fasullo, Chief Engineer of Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
Jay Greene, NASA chief engineer
George W. Melville, chief engineer of the United States Navy. Congressional Gold Medal winner.
Howard A. Chinn, Chief Engineer of CBS. Pioneered techniques of analog audio recording as well as radio and television broadcasting practices.
Virginia P. Ruesterholz, President, Verizon[70]
Alan Schriesheim, Director and CEO of Argonne National Laboratory, Board member of Rohm and Haas
Inventors
Partial list of inventors affiliated with the school:
Barouh Berkovits, contributed to invention of the cardiac defibrillator and artificial cardiac pacemaker
Gordon Gould, invented the laser
Mario Cardullo, contributed to the invention of the Radio-frequency identification (RFID)
Robert G. Brown, invented the first telephone handset
Jasper H. Kane, invented the practical, deep-tank fermentation method for production of large quantities of pharmaceutical-grade penicillin
Maurice Karnaugh, inventor of the Karnaugh map (K-map)
Norman Gaylord, played a prominent role in the development of permeable contact lenses
Ronald R. Yager, invented Ordered weighted averaging aggregation operator
Thomas J. Kelly, designed and built the Apollo Lunar Module
Fredric J. Harris, co-inventor of the Blackman–Harris filter
David J. Thomson, invented the multitaper
Erol Gelenbe, invented G-networks and random neural networks
Joseph Owades, inventor of Lite beer
John Colagioia, invented Thue (programming language)
Paul Peter Ewald, inventor of X-ray diffraction method for determination of molecular structure
Henry C. Goldmark, designed and installed the Panama Canal locks
Helias Doundoulakis, patented the suspension system for the largest radio telescope in the world
George Glauberman, discovered the ZJ theorem and the Z* theorem
Torunn Atteraas Garin, oversaw the development of the artificial sweetener aspartame; developed nontoxic processes to create food colorings and remove caffeine from coffee
James Wood, fabricated the steel cables for the Brooklyn Bridge, making cable-lift elevators possible. He also contributed to the inventions of lockmaking, submarine, A/C generator, electric motors, transformer and the design of the modern refrigerator. He held 240 patents.[39]
Joe Landolina, invented Vetigel
Hung-Chang Lin, invented the quasi-complementary (transistor) amplifier circuit, the lateral transistor, and the wireless microphone. He held 61 patents
Harold Horton Sheldon, invented a precision photoelectric color-scope measurement instrument, more accurate than the human eye
Fred Waller, invented Cinerama, the Waller Gunnery Trainer, and patented the water ski
See also
- List of university and college mergers in the United States
- Gee Bee Model R
- NYU Tandon School of Engineering Lynford Lecture Series
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^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-09-07. Retrieved 2015-08-20.
^ "Testimony of Steven Koonin" (PDF). Nyu.edu. Retrieved 2014-02-12.
^ "History | Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association | NYU Tandon School of Engineering". Engineering.nyu.edu. Retrieved 2016-08-18.
^ "NYU Polytechnic School of Engineering Achieves On Time, Within Budget Campus Solutions and HCM ab Upgrade 7.6 to 9.0" (PDF). Sierra-cedar.com. Retrieved 2016-08-18.
^ "Chaning The World : The First 150 Years" (PDF). Engineering.nyu.edu. Retrieved 2014-02-12.
^ "What Will You Do ?" (PDF). Engineering.nyu.edu. Retrieved 2012-02-12.
^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-06-10. Retrieved 2012-09-14.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to New York University Polytechnic School of Engineering. |
- Official website
"Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute". Encyclopedia Americana. 1920.
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