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Updating my book reviews again…sigh

The PolyBlog
February 10 2019

Soooo, about my book reviews on my website. I tweaked and played about five major times with layout, format, etc. between 2005 and 2015. It has come up enough that my wife’s reaction to ANOTHER change was basically that I was always fiddling with it, wasn’t I? Not quite, but it obviously seems like it to her.

Early on, it was just by email. Then I had a website, and I tried multiple layouts and even some plugins. I was posting the reviews on Amazon, and even had some inkling that maybe some day I could be a top reviewer for them. Lots of people do 10-20 reviews and stop, and back when I was starting, even 500 reviews would have put you in the top 50. Then Amazon exploded and their affiliate program grew too, so now people review EVERYTHING. So I expanded my reviews to post them elsewhere too — Indigo, Google, Barnes and Noble, GoodReads, Ottawa Public Library, LibraryThing, etc.

But other than that, the major changes have been a result of something external:

  1. Changing servers — Each time I’ve moved from one host to another, it has almost always broken some aspect of my site because the config was different on the new host, and I therefore had to go in and modify something in my reviews…that’s happened four separate times in total;
  2. Amazon changed their policy on disclosure — Amazon added a requirement to all reviews that they had to disclose if the writer had received a free book or anything in exchange for the review or knew the author. An extra paragraph for the reviews, and as consistency is one of the hobgoblins in my little mind, I added that section during one of the updates;
  3. A plugin I used changed — I was using one plugin that would do the link, and it changed the way it worked, requiring me to go in and manually adjust a bunch of reviews…to avoid the gremlins with that, I switched plugins and used a paid plugin with more firepower behind it. Again, it required a revamp and update to the reviews, including for layout as to how the images showed around the text; and,
  4. I became an Amazon affiliate — this happened in the midst of all this so that if someone read a review on my site, then clicked through to Amazon, I’d get a few pennies on the referral if they subsequently bought something.

Here’s the thing though…If you want people to click through, and get the money, it only works well if they see the Amazon logo and button to buy, etc. I hate that layout. It messes up my theme, in part, but it is also really crass and commercial. I could also make money selling advertising on my site, small banners here and there, maybe even enough to pay for my monthly web bill. And more. But I have ZERO interest in having ads on my site. Ever. Yet there I was considering embedding an Amazon ad? I opted instead for the lowest click-through / least offensive layout and I got almost no click-throughs and thus earned no revenue. I didn’t care about that, I only cared that it let me link to their book images, really. Sure, if I got enough revenue to buy a free book once in awhile, what was the harm?

So that’s where I was as of January 2016 (Finally setting up my book reviews). I had my layout, everything was SET. Perfect. Then I merged my sites back into one, but that was fine, only a minor tweak then. I uploaded 36 more BRs, a few more here and there at a time, added another 10 for my 50by50 campaign (#50by50 #28 – Write ten book reviews). I’m over 100 now, and quite happy with them, Sam I am.

ENTER THE GDPR DRAGON!

Dun, dun, dun! As part of the implementation of the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR as it is usually written), many websites are trying to figure out how to deal with transitory data about users. In the old days, they had people register, give them some basic profile info, and then sat on it even if they weren’t using it. Now, in the EU, if the user hasn’t interacted with the website in over a year, and thus can’t be said to be “current”, then a few things happen. Most sites started emailing the user to say “Do you still want to continue?”. Many tried to figure out if there were ways to dump the data but keep some basic profile. And others, like Amazon, who are always in the EU’s cross-hairs due to domestic companies complaining they can’t compete, were forced to look at accounts even in their affiliate programs to see if they were fully “active”. Even if they aren’t EU accounts.

So Amazon et al with affiliate programs are culling the herd. If the affiliate links aren’t generating any traffic, i.e., no referrals, no income, etc., then they are shutting them down. For most people, this seems like an almost no-brainer. If you’re not using it, what does it matter? Well, for one thing, when Google indexes sites, it looks to see who and what links to other places. If I was part of a fanbase that really liked one author, and 100 of us had links to their books on Amazon, it might not generate any revenue (we already have the book), but it would boost Google rankings. If they cull the affiliate accounts, then my link looks VERY different and lots of people will just dump it instead. Fewer links to Amazon, lower rankings of some products in Google. The EU wasn’t stupid. The corollary though was also true…if the link is sitting there, doing nothing but may somehow, somewhere generate a sale for Amazon, why would THEY want to kill it? Lots of people suggested it was better to have updated Amazon databases of active referrers, but they weren’t DOING anything to really service my account. And they WERE getting links, just not ones that generated any revenue for me. So it wasn’t costing them anything. But the GDPR hit, someone decided this was a way to comply, and all affiliate links that hadn’t generated income in the last year were killed. Well, perhaps a better description was that Amazon maimed my API limb.

Know what an API is? No, okay, here’s a simple explanation. If you have a smartphone with a Facebook app, that app connects to the Facebook API to know how to transfer info and it connects with your account to allow you to do or see updates. Two permissions, although you only see one — you give it permission to access your account. But long before you downloaded the app, the developer had to get permission to access FB’s API at all. 

For Amazon, the API is the guts and power that your website needs to connect to their website and pull some data. And most websites have the same licensing rules — if you link to their site, you have to use their API to pull data, and if you use their API, you agree to their terms and conditions; if you link to their site without their API, you’re violating their licensing.

Okay, enough tech babble. What does this mean? It means that although I get to still be an Amazon affiliate, I cannot access their Amazon API. Which means I can’t pull data from their product pages like the BOOK’S IMAGE and format it however I want. Which was the primary thing I did. I can do banners, I can do detailed pages, etc., but no custom layouts. Heck, even NON-AFFILIATES can pull data from Amazon if they don’t care if it looks like this:

It’s freaking HUGE, and it is hard to style well. Definitely NOT what I wanted.

SO ABOUT GOODREADS

GoodReads is owned by Amazon, but they have mostly left it alone. They increased the links to Amazon products, etc., but you can still do a fair amount with it. And since I’ve also got an account over there, and have posted my reviews there, the site lets me use their API to show that review back on my own site. It even gives me the code to directly embed my review. There are two general caveats with their API usage…first, I can’t start harvesting their site willy-nilly, steal all their data, and create my own database to serve. Seems fair. Second, I have to include a clear and identifiable link back to GoodReads. The code it gives you to paste shows you one way to meet these requirements, and I tweak it slightly for wording and flow, and size of image, all allowable in the terms and conditions. Perfect, right?

Well, not quite. First of all, the code for Amazon has to be deleted — with the API not working for them anymore, or at least not allowing ME to use it, all the old images I pulled are gone. But not just “not showing”, they’re replaced by a little image of a missing picture file. So the code has to be deleted, and done so relatively manually as it is different links on every page (same structure, different sub-elements, so can’t just search and replace).

But I had also conformed to the Amazon rules about disclosure, which doesn’t make much sense on my site as it is the same text almost every time. No I didn’t get a free book; no I don’t know the author personally; no I don’t follow or interact with them on social media. Blah blah blah. A legalistic text that sometimes seems overkill if the rest of the review is short. Yet if I’m no longer constrained by the Amazon API, I can delete that. Sweet.

Oh, but then the bottom-line / one line summary should be in a different spot in the review, it doesn’t look right where it is sitting now. And some text right above it was fine being in 14 point font previously but now that I’m moving things around, it should go to 10 point font and two horizontal lines should be ditched. Plus a heading is no longer accurate.

Bloody hell.

Sure, they look “okay”, and I could simply go through and do the bare minimum to do the update. I did that once before — I decided that a bunch of individualised links at the bottom were taking too long to generate, so I ditched them. But I didn’t go back and delete them from previous reviews. I just left them. They looked sucky, but I didn’t want to edit.

Since I’m going to have to edit ANYWAY now, I might as well clean up everything, no?

Damn the European Union and the extraterritoriality of their cyber laws!

While this should be the last time I have to ever edit the BRs that I’ve already done, and there is now nothing in any of them that would no longer link properly, it’s still a pain in the patootie to edit 125 posts. But I’m anal about how things appear, which is partly why I have a website at all. At least I’ve got a decent workflow figured out — delete the old images (Amazon link, featured image); adjust the old layout (adjust a heading, remove horizontal lines, reduce font size for a legend, remove repetitive disclosure, move the one-line summary, and delete some old stuff I should have deleted previously); and paste the new GoodReads code (image plus link to more information).

While I’m not happy I “have” to do it, I am happy with the detachment from a commercial vendor like Amazon, and having more control over my layouts and how things appear. I just have to remember to never tell my wife about it again.

Posted in Computers | Tagged book review, goals, personal development | Leave a reply

Fun with photos for blog posts

The PolyBlog
January 11 2019

No, I’m not starting a Sheldon Cooper “Fun with flags” videocast rip-off. 🙂 I’m taking a Metaliteracy class, and of course it has a strong sub-element on being a good digital citizen, particularly when it comes to online content. Namely, not stealing it willy-nilly but instead respecting licensing.

One thing I don’t do a whole lot of in my blog is include photos. Every advice site on the ‘net will tell you that pix are where it’s at, and if you want your text to soar, add pictures. So, sure, if I’m writing about something that I have pictures of that I took, I usually include them. But if I’m just writing in general, maybe about publishing or reading, I don’t see why a picture of a book or a typewriter is going to help that prose. One of my favorite blogs, The Passive Voice, also doesn’t use much in the way of graphics, yet frequently shares links to sites that allow you to do simple photos for blogs etc. on the cheap and easy.

Take for instance the site PhotoFunia.com. It basically allows you to upload a photo you already have and do a bunch of fun things with it. You can upload a photo, and put it in a newspaper layout with a headline of your choice. You can add a pic or some text to a building being blown up. A billboard. A xmas card. A pic of a painter painting a picture and it will weave your photo into the canvas. Some things work well, some dont’, but the examples on their site are awesome. Here’s an image of one where the photo and a drawing are merged:

Cool site to play with. Of course, you can do all of it in apps/programs like Adobe’s products, but why bother if you can do it quickly with a template?

Okay, so maybe you like things like PhotoShop or Lightroom. But you don’t have the cash. What can you do? Well, instead of pirating it, you could try DarkTable, billed as an opensource (i.e. free) alternative. It’s great for simple things like adjusting lighting and a thousand other things, but it was way too complicated to pick up quickly. But I probably don’t have to…

A site called Unsplash has free images for use, and many of them are even available for commercial use if need be. People, landscape, buildings…lots of choices. Not as big as some of the stock image sites, but these ones are free. One of the things I often “test” when I’m looking at a site is whether or not they have photos of frogs and what kinds. Simple or full-on tree frogs. It’s what I want for PolyWogg from time to time, so it’s a “real” test. Unsplash has a bunch for frog (maybe 50 or so) which isn’t bad, and while none of them are OMG AWESOME, they’re certainly usable for a blog post if I want something. For those doing an article about a city, you’re likely to find well-known landmarks easily. But, like I said, I often “test” it by looking for frogs.

Pixabay is another similar site, but it has Shutterstock as its sponsor, and often intersperses payment-required photos into the search results. And they’re always SO much better. But for free, I searched for frog, and it gave me 100 pics on the first page with 45 more pages in the wings. You would probably want to narrow the search a bit. 🙂

The last one on my free sites is Pexels. Same drill as the rest, although it has links to Adobe Stock as its sponsor, and not as many images as the previous one. But searching for frog, I get this:

That’s probably one of the better ones I’ve seen for free around the net. And free with permission is far better than ripping off photographers by stealing their photos from around the net.

Posted in Computers | Tagged blogs, free photo sites, licensing, posts | Leave a reply

So you want your own website…

The PolyBlog
December 4 2018

Since a lot of friends know I have my own website, it isn’t uncommon to get questions about how they get their own website, dipping their toe in the vast sea of having their own presence online. Usually I frame the discussion around three questions.

A. Do you want your own domain?

This is almost always a no-brainer for people as they often think in very specific terms and have some domain names in mind. My domain, polywogg.ca, is registered to me and only me. It is the same for every company on the planet that has a site, usually. They all register a domain name that is unique to them.

It isn’t the only way to go. Lots of people use free sites at various hosters and end up with sites like “http://AndreasWorld.wordpress.com” or “LoveOfBooks.blogger.com”. Their “unique” presence is still there but the hoster’s name shows up too. For some, they don’t care about that; for most, they do.

If you care about having a site that only has your name in it, you need to register a domain. If you don’t, you can go with lots of hosters that will give you an address like above. Or even trick out a bunch of social media sites like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Now, the REAL question is more difficult, and for me it’s not a question. I do not and will not register a domain with the same company I choose for my hosting of the site. Let me explain.

When I put my website online, I need two things:

a. A registrar who tells the internet that polywogg.ca is registered to me and also tells all its internet friends where to find my website (the technical numerical address of my site); AND

b. A server of some sort that hosts the files and content for my actual website.

A registrar and a hoster. I need both. And lots of people who are hosters will also offer registrar services. And some registrars have also gotten into hosting. A fully-integrated service, as they pitch it.

Yet there is an inherent conflict of interest for them. Sure, they have to do it all properly and everything, but when you register your domain, it actually records four pieces of information — a registrant ID, a tech ID, an admin ID, and the DOMAIN NAME SERVICE (DNS) address where your website can be founded (like your REAL IP web address that the internet servers use, not the word form users see).

For most people registering a personal site, the DNS will be given to you by your hoster; the admin ID is likely you; and the tech ID may be whoever is helping you set up the website or just you. Regardless of who is doing the registry, these three things are pretty much the same across the board. The problem comes with the REGISTRANT ID.

This basically says who owns that domain. When you do the registry yourself, it should always say you. However, here’s the kicker…sometimes companies that offer cheap registries and hosting packages actually find it easier to just register themselves in that field. They may also register themselves as the tech or admin ID, which is not ideal, but not too problematic, they’re easily changed. But the owner / registrant ID requires the registered ID holder to agree to any changes.

Most people don’t think anything about this. And if you ask the hoster, they’ll tell you there’s no issue. You just move the registry to somewhere else. But unless you have that in writing, why would you simply trust them?

There are countless stories on the web of BADHOSTER X registering a domain “on behalf of” customer Y. Fast forward five years, the person’s needs have changed in what they’re looking for in a website, and they see lovely HOSTER Z sitting over there with exactly what they’re looking for at the right price. No problem, Y will just move from X to Z. And then X says, “Whoa, wait a minute. We want your business. Let us do blah blah blah.” And so they delay and cajole the person into staying. And eventually it turns acrimonious as the person just wants to leave, and BADHOSTER X won’t relinquish their ownership of the domain. They’ll let the DNS address point to another service, but they won’t do it quickly (they serve their own customers first), and what a surprise, they’ll only do it after paying an admin fee. If you’re Mr. or Ms. Big and Popular site, sometimes they’ll say, “Oh, look at our sliding scale…we’ve been discounting, so now you have to pay our full admin fee based on usage, and oh look, they want $1000 to transfer your domain.” It’s extortion, pure and simple, and yes, it is indeed illegal.

Is this a frequent problem? No. Is it a possible problem? Absolutely. They also might just jack the rates after year 1 for your renewals (you have to pay a yearly fee to keep the domain registered to you).

When I went to register my domain, all the experts said “do it separately”, it’s just less risk of future hassle, and while a bit more manual, not egregiously so. And I did. I found Canadian Domain Name Services in Canada, registered all three of my domain names with them over time, and that’s the only service I do with them. They now offer hosting too, but I don’t need that. I just need the basic service I signed up with them for, and it works perfectly. No muss, no fuss, no extortionary practices if I decide to move my website hosting. Which, by the way, I have done four times in my website’s life. Just deciding that the previous hosting wasn’t what I wanted. Three clicks later (almost), and I was with someone else’s hosting package, so I just closed the previous one. And if any of the hosters gave me a hard time, I didn’t care — I just went to the registrar and pointed away from that hoster to my new hoster, leaving me with an up and running site. By contrast, if I was in dispute with my old hoster, they could literally hold me and my website hostage if they were also my registrar.

And yes, ALL the current hosters will offer you deals on your initial registry to get you to join, and almost ALL of them will register themselves as the owner of the domain. You decide if you want to trust them with that part of your site.

In the end, the question is easily answered by a simple metaphor…if you paid a lawyer to register your business, would you let them register themselves as the owner?

B. Do you want a dynamic site or a static site?

If you read any web design advice on the web, they’ll tell you that static sites are the worst possible thing to do. But they mean something different than what this question means.

What they mean is that sites need updates and new content in order to generate buzz and traffic. New things to encourage people to visit your site regularly. What they mean is “dynamic content”.

In my case though, I mean two things — is there going to be dynamic content (as per above) and are you going to want to change the look and feel, menus, etc. on the site over time?

If all you want is a relatively static site — both for content and design — then there are lots of simple hosters out there that offer HTML-based websites (simple web pages) with slick looking templates. You go to their site, sign up for a hosting package, choose a template, and voila, your site is designed. You add your info, some pics and graphics, and you’re done. Easy, peasy, lemon squeezy.

GoDaddy used to be the biggest player on the block for this. Then companies like WIX came along. They’re cheap, they’re slick, it all works pretty well. The only thing you’ll have to do is provide your credit card, click some buttons, and then go tell your registry whatever info the hoster tells you to enter (it’ll basically be something like “Your DNS entry is AndreasWorld.wix1.com” and you’ll go enter that in the registrar site — it’s basically like telling the post office where you live).

There are GREAT sites and templates available. Prices can be as low as $5/month or even lower if you pay by the year. So why wouldn’t everyone use it? Because it isn’t easy to modify the template. If you decide you don’t like the colour of the lines on a table? Well, good luck changing it. Maybe it’s easy, likely it’s not. Some features aren’t even available to be edited, regardless of your technical ability, unless you’re a pro.

Cheap, easy, fast, and relatively professional looking. But it’s not easy to update regularly (nor change the design).

Others, by contrast, want to basically add new content every day. A story. A photo. A post. A new page. Random thoughts. If this is what you are after OR you will be mostly static but with lots of sub-pages, then another solution is better. Officially it’s called a CMS — content management system.

The most common CMS available are blogging platforms aka blogs or gallery platforms aka photo galleries. If you’ll be mostly posting text, you want a blogger; if you are mostly posting photos, you might want a gallery. And of course, just to be confusing, most galleries allow you to have blog-like posts and most blogs also offer galleries. But if you’re mostly text, go with the blog.

There are two main blogging platforms that are like Wix or GoDaddy — already available blogging setups ready to go. One is called blogger.com, and the other is WordPress. Blogger is entirely a self-contained site, you can host your site with them (with your own domain, just like Wiz) and have a bunch of templates to choose from. Click, click, click, you’re good to go. A little basic in their offerings, but you can be blogging in minutes. Literally.

WordPress took a different approach. Yes, they offer both free and paid online accounts (as does Blogger), and the more you pay, the more power you have. Even the most basic site though is more powerful than the free site (and you can have your own domain as opposed to polywogg.wordpress.com). Like Blogger, you can be up and running in minutes, but there is more power under the hood, so it can be a bit more daunting.

The alternative approach they took though is that they ALSO offer their software as a full download and you can run it on other hosting platforms i.e. I am registered with a company called Web Hosting Canada, and can install WordPress to run on it. There are competitors out there too — Moodle, Joomla, Drupal, etc. Actually dozens, if not hundreds. But WordPress is the biggest player.

Running your own “install” of WordPress might sound daunting, and it is at first. But there aren’t that many menus under the hood, and they are relatively intuitive after you finish with setup. Plus there are thousands of templates available to tweak to your heart’s content.

Definitely more work, but the payoff is that a blog is inherently dynamic. Write a new article, post it, and BAM, instant dynamic content. If you don’t plan to do that, then stick with a static site.

C. What else do you want on the site?

After you get through the basics of a static or dynamic page above, you should be leaning one way or the other. Now I need to make your life more complicated. What else do you want on the site?

Do you want a guestbook? If you do, it is easier to do and control with a dynamic site (after all, static sites don’t inherently let you make simple updates like adding your name to the page).

Do you want a catalog of products that might change? If it’s a few services or products and they are relatively the same all the time, maybe just price changes, you can go with a static site. If you want a lot of products listed (almost like a gallery), you need a dynamic site.

Do you want sidebars, banners, advertising, changing menus, galleries, calendars? All argue for a dynamic site. The more “custom” you need it, the less the basic static sites are going to meet your needs.

What am I not telling you?

If you are going to hire someone to do the design for you, none of the above may matter. If they are good, they’ll set you up with a solution that meets your needs today and tomorrow. Of course, there may be a small conflict of interest in their advice in that they may get more money out of you if you redesign later.

So, in short:

  • Simple site, not much change in content, few pages, basic web presence — go with static site;
  • Changing content, multiple pages, regular updates, evergreen web presence — go with dynamic site like WordPress.

At least those are the basics.

Posted in Computers | Tagged advice, blogger, design, dynamic, static, website, Wix, WordPress | 2 Replies

Articles I Like: Tracking Emerging Cryptomining Threats

The PolyBlog
May 13 2018

The WordPress security plugin, Wordfence, published a blog entry describing how one of its techs working on cracking malware goes about doing the various steps in a recent day, analysing and developing responses to specific threats.

While the post seems at first to be highly technical, it’s quite readable by the informed layperson, and quite interesting to see. It also dispels the cryptocurrency baitclick headline to note it could have been running anything off the site, it just happened to be doing CCs.

One of our sources of threat data at Defiant is cleaning hacked websites. In this case, Ivan, a member of our SST team had cleaned a hacked site and handed me the forensic data for analysis. The site had been hacked for months before the owner discovered that it had been compromised.

My normal routine is to start by verifying the files we already detect to check if there is any new information inside any of them. Usually there is not, and this infection did not yield any surprises in the files that Wordfence already detected.

What did surprise me is that the server had a large number of malicious files we have not seen before. The server had been infected for a long time, which may have left the attacker feeling confident enough to upload more valuable code.

For us, a server with code we have not seen before is a treasure trove, because it immediately allows us to add new detection capability to the Wordfence malware scanner. If an attacker is caught in this situation, they generally have a bad day, because many of their files that may have previously been undetected by malware scanners will now be detected by our scan.

The first thing that made this attacker different from others is that, instead of using a standard javascript code obfuscator that just scrambles the code, they were using a finite wordlist to replace variable and function names in the code. When you look at the code, the variable and function names just seem like gibberish.

I immediately searched for other similar files out of the remaining samples and found several, then proceeded to write new signatures to detect those files. That accomplished, I moved on to the next file in the list. That was a basic PHP file that selectively redirects regular users, not search engines, to a malicious website. This is a standard thing we see, so I wrote a signature to detect this updated malware variant and moved on.

WordPress: Tracking Emerging Cryptomining Threats

Even the opening approach is quite illuminating, seeing the real work of defenders, not the Hollywood version.

Posted in Computers | Tagged background, computer, curation, security | Leave a reply

Oh, well, I was doing well on online guides until this one.

The PolyBlog
May 12 2018

I’ve had some decent success in recent days with reading online ebook guides from websites, and Vanilla Forums has one called Gamification for Online Communities. I’m not even going to bother linking to it as it doesn’t deserve the promotion.

I confess I have a small hidden agenda in reading it — I’m curious if they know what gaming is to start with or if they just decide it’s too obvious to define. The MOOC course studying games showed that isn’t an irrelevant question (Understanding Video Games – Week 7 – The culture of video games).

It starts off strong — a definition rooted in the academic study and scientific classification, namely that gamification is the “use of game thinking and game design elements in non-game contexts. These game mechanics are designed to shape a game’s dynamics (e.g., competitive behaviour) and emotions (e.g., anticipation) in order to engage players (e.g. users, customers, employees, voters).” It focuses on the application aspects to other areas and even goes further with a larger formal definition that recognizes point-scoring and rules as key elements. For the onboarding process, it uses examples about tracking completion progress and achievements, but doesn’t initially mention the need for “rewards” for those behaviours — without the reward, it’s just a to-do list.

After that, it moves into the aspects but I found the motivation elements less revealing. They talk about player types, and only identify 3, and then moves on to benefits of gamification. Except it doesn’t identify any. It says “let’s talk about what it can’t do”, and then doesn’t. It is completely empty fluff statements. It shifts gears into “how to implement gamification”, but really only jumps to some key performance indicators (KPIs) to know if people are using the site before and after you implement it.

At this point, I would be willing to toss the entire thing, but it’s only 33 pages so I kept going. The section on onboarding isn’t bad, pretty simplistic view, but okay. Another section talks about engagement, hopefully leading to entrenchment, before moving on to potential pitfalls.

Overall, I’d probably rate it about a 3/10 for content. But if you take into account typos, grammatical mistakes, and just plain spelling errors, I’ll downgrade to a 1/10.

Too bad, it started so strongly on the definition.

Posted in Computers | Tagged computers, gamification, guide, website | Leave a reply

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