Showing posts with label Nook Color. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nook Color. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 April 2011

Nook Wi-Fi by Barnes & Noble in Pakistan


Price:

Price :12,990.00
Product Description

World`s most advanced eBook reader
  •   A better reading experience

  •   Endless shelf space

  •   Lend eBooks to friends
    nook Wi-Fi by Barnes & Noble Description: 
    Choose an eBook using the beautiful color touch screen, then watch it appear instantly on the E Ink® display, where text appears as crisp as a printed page. The 16-level gray scale display offers great contrast with no glare or backlight. Choose from five font sizes so you can read with ease — plus, bookmark, highlight, and make notes as you go. Store as many as 1,500 eBooks, eNewspapers, and eMagazines on your nook’s 2 GB of internal storage, so you'll never be without your favorites. Need more space? Just add a Micro SD card and expand your library up to 17,500 titles including pictures, music, and PDF files.
    Go easy on your eyes
    nook's easy-to-read E Ink® display is more like a traditional book than a computer screen. With no glare or backlight, and adjustable text size, you can read comfortably for hours.

    Download eBooks in seconds
    Browse eBooks, magazines and newspapers at lightning-fast speeds on Wi-Fi. Automatically connect to free Wi-Fi at all Barnes & Noble stores and AT&T Wi-Fi hotspots.

    Endless shelf space
    With 2GB of memory, nook stores up to 1,500 books, newspapers and magazines. Need even more space? Just add a memory card for storage of up to 17,500. An entire library light enough to take with you everywhere, so you'll never be without your favorites
    Sample eBooks for freeTry before you buy. Download a free sample of any eBook we sell to discover new authors and check out today’s most talked about books for free.

    Mark up your pages
    nook makes it easy to bookmark, highlight passages, or make notes – plus, look up words mid-sentence using the built-in dictionary. Use Reading Now, your virtual bookmark, to bring you back to the last book you've read, right where you left off. If you forget your nook at home and are stuck on a bus, keep on reading with your iPhone™ or BlackBerry®, using Barnes & Noble’s free eReader software.

    Lend eBooks to friends
    Share favorite eBooks with your friends or family. Most eBooks can be lent for up to 14 days at a time. Just choose the eBook you want to share and send it to your friend's nook – or to any computer or cell phone with the free Barnes & Noble eReader software downloaded on it.

    Navigate as you like
    Control your nook with an easy-to-use full-color touchscreen, created to work seamlessly with the crisp, clean E Ink® display. Just use your finger to swipe through titles and tap open your next read. Or use nook's large, comfortable, virtual keyboard to find exactly what you're looking for

  • NOOK Color in Pakistan

    Price :29,990.00
    Product Description
     

    VividView™ Color Touchscreen
    Reading is more amazing than ever on our stunning 7-inch VividView™ Color Touchscreen. NOOKcolor uses best-in-class technology to display more than 16 million colors and an extra wide viewing angle for personal or shared reading





    Over 2 Million Books
    You'll never be without something wonderful to read. NOOKcolor offers the largest selection of titles with new ones arriving every day. One million FREE books are ready for instant download and you can sample books FREE before you buy. Most titles are $9.99 or less and are ready to read in just seconds




    NOOKcolor Features - nook newsstand

    Your Favorite Magazines and Newspapers - All in Vivid Color
    NOOKcolor is the first reading device to offer all your newsstand favorites in rich, full color. From Us Weekly and Elle to The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal - NOOKnewsstand delivers your morning paper and latest magazines right to your NOOKcolor, ready to read in an amazing new way





    NOOKcolor Features - nook kidsStories Come to Life
    For the first time, enjoy hundreds of kids' picture books with our state-of-the-art NOOK kids reading experience. Exclusive Alive Touch™ technology lets your child interact with words and pictures, easily find a favorite story, even have it read aloud. Enjoy classic favorites and the most popular new releases






    NOOKcolor Features - NOOKextrasMusic & More with NOOKextras™
    Listen to music while you read. Load your own MP3s and play on the built-in music player or enjoy tunes from Pandora® internet radio. Other extras: Crossword Puzzles, Sudoku and Chess , with more on the way. Want to create new NOOKextras™ ? Find out more about NOOKdeveloper.



     
     
    NOOKcolor Features - NOOKbook Personal Shopping
     
    NOOKbook Personal Shopping™
    Our knowledgeable booksellers will provide recommendations for you based on books and authors you like, through our exclusive NOOKbook Personal Shopping™, so you'll always have a great book to enjoy.





    Nookcolor Featues - Personalized Reading Experience

    Tuesday, 12 April 2011

    Nook Color, the low cost Android tablet

    I love my Nook and use it all the time to read while traveling. I also use my iPad for ebook reading, but it is much heavier than my Nook and eInk text looks wonderful and gives me a book experience. Today, Barnes & Noble announced the Nook Color for $249 with a November 19th release data and I already placed my order for one. The Nook Color is an Android-powered tablet device at a much lower cost than any other Android tablet we have seen, with some obvious limitations.
    The Nook Color is not being marketed as an Android tablet with its main focus on ebook, magazine, and newspaper reading. However, it comes with a web browser, games, Office document viewer, support for sharing via Twitter and Facebook, along with support for developers to create apps. Applications mentioned by Barnes & Noble include Pandora, Lonely Planet, Dictionary.com, and more. There is the potential here to add enough apps to satisfy those who might buy an Android tablet, especially if couch surfing was the main desire for a tablet.
    Specs include the following:
    • 7 inch VividView capacitive touch screen at 1024×600 resolution
    • 8GB internal memory
    • 802.11 b/g/n WiFi for ebook purchases and browsing
    • microSD expansion card slot
    • 3.5mm headset jack
    • Integrated mono speaker
    • Standard microUSB port for charging and book transfer via cable
    • Dimensions of 8.1 x 5.0 x 0.48 inches and 15.8 ounces
    And like the original Nook, you get much better support for content than you do with the Kindle, including ebooks checked out from your local library or purchased at other online stores like the Sony eBookstore.
    Battery life may be a concern with the color display and the specs state you get up to 8 hours with wireless off. That is not very good, considering I go a few days with my current Nook and my iPad goes about 10 hours with wireless on.

    Nook Color to receive 'major' firmware update, new magazine titles

    Barnes & Noble has announced several developments for its prized Nook Color e-book reader. Not only is a ton of new content on the way, but a “major” firmware update is too
    Barnes & Noble has announced several developments for its prized Nook Color e-book reader. Not only is a ton of new content on the way, but a “major” firmware update is too.Let’s start with the easy and most confirmed stuff. First up is stuff you can get now, which includes copies of such popular glossies like The Economist, Travel + Leisure, Food & Wine and ESPN The Magazine, along with the “only” digital version of The King’s Speech.
    Kids will get some new treats too as the children’s book section is being expanded with new interactive titles from Nickelodeon’s SpongeBob SquarePants and Dora the Explorer.
    But more importantly, B&N will issue ”a major update to the device’s firmware” what will allow access to “exciting new applications, email and many other requested features.” Some of the apps on the way include Angry Birds, Drawing Pad, Lonely Planet Phrasebooks, Tikatok, and Wine PhD.
    According to the Home Shopping Network (via CNET), all of that will be thanks to an upgrade to Android 2.2 with Adobe Flash onboard and the new Nook Store. (Don’t call it Nook App Store!)
    The Nook Color is about to get a whole lot more exciting.

    How to hack the $250 Nook Color into a full Android tablet

    The Nook Color is a $250 e-reader powered by Android. Learn how to hack it into a powerful and fully functional Android tablet.
    The Android Honeycomb 3.0 operating system and the first fleet of tablets that are going to run it are all looking mighty impressive. Unfortunately, it’s also looking like most of them will be even more expensive than the Apple iPad, which starts at $500.
    If you’re tempted for an Android tablet but don’t want to spend a small fortune, then you may want to try the Barnes & Noble Nook Color (right). Out of the box, it’s primarily intended to be an e-reader but it’s a 7-inch touchscreen device that is actually running Android under the hood. It even gives you a few apps like Chess, Sudoko, Crossword puzzles, and Pandora.
    However, you can also kick things up a notch with the Nook Color by hacking it to run a full version of the Android OS. Then you can install your favorite homescreen UI and your favorite Android apps. You can even install the Amazon Kindle app and other e-reader apps and libraries so that you’re no longer locked into just the Barnes & Noble library on this device.
    Of course, hacking or “rooting” the Nook Color will void your warranty and should only be done by those who are very comfortable fiddling with technology. Also, TechRepublic is not responsible for any damage that you do to your Nook Color while attempting any of the steps that we’re about to show. Proceed at your own risk.
    Nevertheless, the process is relatively simple and if you run into trouble you can always do a factory reset on the device and start from scratch. Just keep in mind that if you’re not tech-savvy and you do this incorrectly then you could cause your Nook Color to become unbootable.
    Okay, now that we’ve got the disclaimers out of the way, let’s go through the steps on how to hack the Nook Color

    The first great Android Tablet: Nook Color

    Let’s get real. There are only two great tablets out there today: Apple’s iPad and the iPad 2. Android has always had the potential to be a wonderful tablet operating system, but most Android tablets have been non-starters and, even the best of them, the Samsung Galaxy Tab aren’t as good as an iPad. But, the iPad may soon have a serious Android opponent: Barnes & Noble’s Nook Color.
    I know what you’re thinking: The Nook Color!? It’s an e-reader, sure you can root the Nook Color into being a full scale Android tablet, but you don’t want to hack my e-reader and void my warranty just to get a cheap tablet that might, or might not, work.
    Who said anything about rooting it? While rooting a Nook Color is quite easy–watch huskermania’s YouTube video on how to do it if you don’t believe me–Barnes & Noble will be upgrading the Color Nook to being a real Android tablet in mid-April. In its press release, the book store giant states only that, “NOOK Color will get even better this Spring when a major update to the device’s firmware will offer customers access to explore exciting new applications, e-mail and many other requested features.” Sources tell me though that the Color Nook will be upgraded from Android 2.1 to Android 2.2 (Froyo), be given Flash video support, and will have its own version of the Google Android Apps Market.
    As reported by ZDNet’s sister network, CNET, the Home Shopping Network, of all places, has been advertising the Color Nook’s forthcoming firmware upgrade. This news comes as no surprise. I’ve been predicting that it was only a matter of time before the Android Linux-based e-readers, like the Nook and Android’s Kindle, were upgraded into tablets.
    Now you may be thinking, sure the Nook Color is nice, but how can it compete with an iPad? It only has a 7″ display, 8GBs of internal storage, a micro-SD card slot for up to 32GBs of additional storage, 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi, and an 800MHz ARM Cortex A8-processor. You’re right, that’s smaller and slower than an iPad and a good deal slower than an iPad 2.
    So what? Here’s the important point: You can pick up a new Nook Color for $249. The cheapest new iPad2? $499.
    I’ve said it before, I’ll say it again, Apple is the Mercedes-Benz, the Rolls-Royce, of computing hardware. That’s fine, but it still leaves lots of room for the mid and low-end market users and now, with this update to the Nook Color coming down the road we’re finally going to have a compelling, inexpensive Android tablet for the Toyota or Ford “drivers

    Monday, 11 April 2011

    Big Nook Color update coming in April

    Nook color







    The Nook Color is a surprisingly robust device. On the surface it appears to be a fancy ebook reader, but it’s also quite capable of performing the duties a mid-range tablet. The Nook Color is powered by Android, and some users have easily rooted the Nook Color to run Honeycomb, access the Android Market and enable Flash. According to a product page on HSN’s website, the Nook Color is getting an update in April which will add similar features.
    HSN will provide a sneak peek into the Nook Color’s upcoming features this weekend. If you want to check out the show, but can’t get HSN on television, their website streams shows. The first showing of the Nook Color’s new features will be this Saturday at 12am EST.
    April will bring a Nook Store to the device that will house new apps for users to enjoy. HSN lists Angry Birds, Drawing Pad and Lonely Planet Phrasebook as some of the Nook apps that will be available. The Nook Color will also get built-in email functionality. This will probably come in the form of another app that will take the place of checking email through the built-in web browser. The web browser is also getting Flash support provided by Android 2.2.



    It's hard to believe we're already writing a review of the Nook Color, considering Barnes & Noble's first foray into the e-reader world was revealed just over a year ago. In that time, the company has gone from no presence in e-books to owning 20 percent of the marketshare, and now has moved from a somewhat sluggish hybrid E-Ink / LCD device to a full color, tablet-like product. The Nook Color is definitely a major step forward, boasting a completely revamped, Android-based OS, and a big push into the children's book and periodical market (particularly full color magazines). Both of these spaces have yet to be mined successfully by players like Apple and Amazon -- and it's clear Barnes & Noble is aware of the stakes. Beyond book reading, the Nook Color potentially offers a tablet alternative that can (or will be able to) do much of what is possible on an iPad or Galaxy Tab. In fact, the company plans to launch its own Android tablet app store in the first quarter of 2011, providing a consistent, compatible application experience that could get the jump on other Android tablet-makers' plans (hello Samsung). Of course, this is a fierce market, and with a $249 price tag, Barnes & Noble has to play to win on every front. So, is the Nook Color the next logical step in e-readers? Is it a healthy alternative to more expensive tablets? And can it cement the prominent bookseller's place in a hotly contested new space.
    It should be obvious right off the bat that B&N put a lot of thought into the design of the new Nook. In fact, the actual industrial design of the device was done by Yves Behar, whose work you've undoubtedly seen in iconic products like the OLPC XO laptop, the Leaf Light for Herman Miller, and more recently, the intriguing Jambox. There's no mistaking his masterful touch here; the Nook Color is an elegantly, thoughtfully designed piece of technology. As you would expect, the front of the device is eaten up mostly with that 7-inch, 1024 x 600 IPS display. The edges and sides of the device are coated in a near-matte finish, charcoal-colored plastic, while the back of the unit is smooth, soft rubber. On the lower lefthand corner there's a small "hook" which continues the outline of the unit, but gives purchase for a finger to slip through, or a lanyard to be attached. It's a small design flair without a lot of use, but it helps to give the Color a distinct vibe. On the opposite sides near the top of the device there's a power / sleep button and volume rocker. A 3.5mm headphone jack lives on top of the unit, there's a speaker around back, and on the face of the device is a single, iPhone-like home "n" button which always takes you back to a familiar homescreen. At just 0.48-inches thick, the Nook Color feels svelte, though it weighs in at nearly a pound, making the device seem substantial in your hands.

    Even though the framing is built out of plastic, the unit feels durable and even rugged (we suspect that rubber backing helps with that perception). While we didn't do any drop tests, the Nook Color certainly feels like it can take something of a beating (but don't go throwing it against walls on our account).

    Inside, the system boasts a TI OMAP 3621 CPU clocked at 800MHz (or, "speeds up to 800MHz"). The device has 512MB of RAM, 8GB of flash storage, and a microSD slot for additional expansion (the slot allows use of cards up to 32GB). As we said, the screen is of the 7-inch LCD variety, and at the 1024 x 600 resolution, looks reasonably dense (from a pixel perspective) with a 178-degree viewing angle. Barnes & Noble is particularly proud of the screen, which the company says utilizes its "VividView" treatment to provide less glare. What that really means is that the screen coating is fully laminated against the display itself, making for less tiny, almost-imperceptible unglued areas which can catch light. Still, the display is pretty reflective, making reading in bright locations (like on a subway with stark fluorescent lighting) sometimes difficult.

    The Nook Color is equipped with 802.11b/g/n WiFi, but you won't find any 3G here. Additionally, there's a light sensor on the front of the device -- a nice touch which allows you to conserve a little bit more of that battery (which is rated at 8 hours a charge... with WiFi off).

    Overall, both inside and out, the Nook Color is surprisingly well designed. There are some performance issues (more on that in the software section below), but that seems likely to be a symptom of sloppy code rather than an underpowered chipset. In fact, we played around with a dev unit running Angry Birds, and it was just as smooth as the iPad or Galaxy Tab running the same game.

    Software


    Really, the Nook Color (and any device which relies solely on a touchscreen for input) is all about the software. The Color starts at a deficit (in our opinion) by running atop a custom Android build based off of version 2.1. That's a little bit of a downer as 2.2 provided a noticeable speed bump for the platform, and we're currently on the precipice of entering 2.3 territory, leaving Barnes & Noble considerably behind the curve. In many ways, this isn't really an issue, because the original Android interface has been so obscured by the tweaked skin and functionality that using the Nook Color often feels nothing like Android -- and that's a good thing in this case. In fact, throw out your whole conception of Android as a platform (provided you have one at all), because the Color behaves like a beast all its own.

    When you first boot the device, you're greeted with the center screen of three homescreens where you can arrange books and periodicals you're currently reading, see recently downloaded content (presented as a scrollable list at the bottom of the display), and get quick access to a number of other features of the device, such as your most recent selections, and general settings. We like the idea of this landing page, and in execution it works really well, though there are some touch response and frame rate issues that make the experience a little uneven. One nice feature is that you're able to scale and freely move material you're reading around these pages, allowing you to prioritize your content in a visual manner.

    As far as general navigation goes, on every screen (not just your home base), you've got a small tab which pulls up a menu from the bottom of the page with familiar Nook selections: library, shop, search, extras, web, and settings.

    The library section is organized by books, magazines, and newspapers, but also gives options for creating your own sets of content ("my shelves"), working with PDFs and other docs, music, images, and video (M4V only) in "my files," and allows you to dive into the company's much-touted lending program. The lending options have been expanded in the Nook Color, and the company now provides a social network of sorts for friends of yours with Nook devices wherein you see the selections they're lending out, showcase what you have to lend, and request titles. Not every book is lendable, but the expansions to the service are thoughtful.

    Shopping is now a much more interactive and enjoyable experience, with clearly guided methods of search and discovery. We wish we could be as excited about file management, but it's kind of a mixed bag. We had no trouble playing MP3s and AAC files, but we had some issues figuring out just how to get our music into the player. We could play a single file, but found no option to add albums or create playlists. Finally, we figured out that a restart is required once you've added music (we're guessing it gives the device a chance to scan the content). That's all well and good, but the Color should rescan your collection after a USB sync. Another issue was getting back to the player itself. In the corner of the device you get a small music icon which gives you a pop-over notification -- you expect that it will transport you back to the player, but it does nothing. We also discovered while shooting our demo video that Pandora and the music app can actually end up playing over one another -- obviously there should be a call to kill one when another starts. Hopefully Barnes & Noble will have a quick fix for some of these minor issues early on.

    Videos were another issue -- we couldn't get anything besides M4Vs to play, and even then we had trouble with some HD trailers. Obviously this isn't a crucial task for this device, but having a strong set of codecs and some decent video support would be really nice (and should cost next to nothing for this platform).

    Dealing with galleries and PDFs, on the other hand, was a joy. We jumped into really large PDFs with no trouble whatsoever (though it is weird that you don't flip through them like books, rather swipe up and down). Galleries loaded up reasonably quickly and the included image viewer gives you a healthy amount of options (along with pinch zooming). The Nook Color also does Microsoft Office documents, and we were able to view DOCs and PPT files with a reasonable level of success. Just like most things on the device, it wasn't the fastest experience in the world, but it worked well.
    While the Nook Color is a fully capable Android tablet, it's not loaded with the kind of features you'll see in a Galaxy Tab. It does, however, have a full web browser, as well as a Pandora app, along with chess, sudoku, and crossword games. As we said earlier, Barnes & Noble has plans to launch its own app store in Q1 of 2011 with software designed (or tweaked) specifically for this form factor -- we're hoping that developers get on board, otherwise the Color-as-tablet concept is basically out the window. We do think that if anyone is going to force an Android tablet-specific app store, a retailer with a big footprint like B&N has more of a fighting chance right now than a disparate group of hardware manufacturers like Samsung and LG.

    As far as the web browser goes, the experience is pretty standard Android 2.1 fare, though as with the homescreen and general navigation on the Nook Color, the fun of using the device is hampered by touch response and refresh rates that seem way behind the curve. The team working on this software really needs to clear up some of these lag issues to make the Color a more viable choice for those considering this instead of a dedicated Android tablet. Of course, this price point helps to make a powerful argument.

    Web browsers and gaming aside, the main focus of the Nook Color is that it's an e-reader -- so how does it fare in that department?

    First let's get something out of the way. Obviously this isn't an E-Ink screen, so you have to decide if you're on board or not for reading on an LCD display. If you're entertaining an iPad or Galaxy Tab, we'll assume this screen technology is not going to deter you from using the device as a reader. For us, the display tech isn't a major hang-up -- in fact, lots of the staff have been using iPads as reading devices with little to no trouble.

    So as far as screen tech goes, the Nook Color looks gorgeous as an e-reader for standard books and goes one step beyond, delivering magazines and children's books the way they were meant to be viewed. For standard e-book reading, there are tons of options for formatting, fonts, and coloring -- even those with poor eyesight should be able to find settings that make the reading experience enjoyable. We really liked reading with the Color, and even though the device doesn't sport animated page turns (a la the iPad), it does offer great options for notation and word or phrase discovery (you can do dictionary, Google, and Wikipedia searches right from a contextual menu). We also loved that you're able to share quotes or info about what you're reading via email, Twitter, or Facebook.For magazines, the reading format is a bit different. The full pages of the magazine are displayed on the screen, and you can swipe left and right to move through them. What's even better, however, is a scrubber (for lack of a better term) that you're able to bring up just below your magazine content which lets you quickly jump through the magazine and then zoom into a page you want to read. We found this option great for skipping ads. Once in a magazine page, you can zoom and pan to see photos up close or read, but the Nook Color also provides a novel (no pun intended) option called ArticleView which lets you break out text on the page into a strip down the middle of the screen with plain, clearly readable content inside. It's a great idea that worked most of the time. Sometimes, on pages with lots of captions or cutaway text it didn't seem to capture everything. As avid magazine readers, we really love the option of a unified method of getting periodicals, and the Nook Color is the first device to actually show that it can be done without a tremendous amount of effort (and surprisingly little lost). There's clearly room to grow in this area (and a lot of content still to nab -- the current magazine catalog is only about 70 strong), but we like where it's headed. We hate to beat a dead horse, but as with the rest of the interface, the magazine experience is hampered by the sluggishness of the UI.


    The Nook Color also offers newspapers delivered daily, but we're not quite as psyched on the layout of the traditional dailies. We found the page ordering and design of these digital editions confusing and clunky. There's likely a hybrid of what Barnes & Noble is doing with magazines and what the company does with books for these publications -- but the current state of daily papers is a bit of a mess on the platform.

    The final piece of the puzzle is B&N's push into the kids' book market with its new formatting that not only allows children and their parents to page through full color versions of popular kids titles, but introduces a "read to me" function. The premise is rather simple: a professional voice actor reads the copy out loud through the Nook Color's speaker, and a child can follow along. We're sure this will be a quality addition to a parent's arsenal of options for keeping the kids happy. We did have a few issues with some audio skipping early on in one of the books we tested, but it went away quickly and didn't return. The kids books also offer a scrubber similar to the one found in the magazine section. One thing of note -- loading these volumes takes a little more time -- though overall the feature worked as advertised.

    Battery life

    We didn't have much of a chance to gauge the Nook Color's long-term battery life (we've only had the device a few days), but in our testing, a full charge yielding more than a day of on and off use. This wasn't constant hammering, but an ebbing and flowing of reading, testing features, and keeping the device asleep. From the looks of things, a charge every couple of days should take care of battery issues for most people, but the most voracious readers may find that the Color pales in comparison to E-Ink devices, and in our testing the iPad still outclasses this in battery life by a long shot. In short: the battery life is good, but it's not going to blow you away. Expect to keep the charger handy -- you'll definitely need it on a regular basis.

    So, is the Nook Color worth your hard-earned cash? Well, we'll say this -- if you're a hardcore reader with an appetite that extends beyond books to magazines and newspapers, the Color is the first viable option we've seen that can support your habit. Not only does Barnes & Noble have an astoundingly good selection of e-book titles, the company seems to be aggressively pursuing the periodical business, which is a big deal. This is the first device we've seen that effectively and consistently presents a color magazine option. It's not the fanciest or most sophisticated presentation, but the idea of having your favorite glossy delivered direct to a device like this every month (in a truly readable format) is a major innovation. But besides all the reading you'll be doing with the Color, you're also buying into a potentially much bigger proposition -- namely, the idea that come Q1, this thing will be a viable Android tablet with an app store of its own. Granted, it doesn't have 3G on-board, and the OS could use some serious TLC and polish, but if B&N delivers on its desire to create a marketplace for Nook Color apps, you could be spending $249 not just for a great reading experience, but for something far bigger. For the price, you're getting a lot of product here -- now it's just a question of whether or not Barnes & Noble knows how to take advantage of that product.

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