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Utah teapot

The Utah teapot, or the Newell teapot, is a 3D test model that has become a standard reference object and an in-joke[1] within the computer graphics community. It is a mathematical model of an ordinary Melitta-brand teapot that appears solid with a nearly rotationally symmetrical body. Using a teapot model is considered the 3D equivalent of a "Hello, World!" program, a way to create an easy 3D scene with a somewhat complex model acting as the basic geometry for a scene with a light setup. Some programming libraries, such as the OpenGL Utility Toolkit,[2] even have functions dedicated to drawing teapots.

A 3D STL model of the teapot
A 2008 rendering of the Utah teapot model

The teapot model was created in 1975 by early computer graphics researcher Martin Newell, a member of the pioneering graphics program at the University of Utah.[3] It was one of the first to be modeled using bézier curves rather than precisely measured.

History edit

 
The actual Melitta teapot that Martin Newell modelled, displayed at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California (1990–present)
External image
  A scan of the original diagram Martin Newell drew up, to plan the Utah Teapot before inputing it digitally.
Image courtesy of Computer History Museum.

For his work, Newell needed a simple mathematical model of a familiar object. His wife, Sandra Newell, suggested modelling their tea set since they were sitting down for tea at the time. He sketched the teapot free-hand using graph paper and a pencil.[4] Following that, he went back to the computer laboratory and edited bézier control points on a Tektronix storage tube, again by hand.[citation needed]

The teapot shape contained a number of elements that made it ideal for the graphics experiments of the time: it was round, contained saddle points, had a genus greater than zero because of the hole in the handle, could project a shadow on itself, and could be displayed accurately without a surface texture.

Newell made the mathematical data that described the teapot's geometry (a set of three-dimensional coordinates) publicly available, and soon other researchers began to use the same data for their computer graphics experiments. These researchers needed something with roughly the same characteristics that Newell had, and using the teapot data meant they did not have to laboriously enter geometric data for some other object. Although technical progress has meant that the act of rendering the teapot is no longer the challenge it was in 1975, the teapot continued to be used as a reference object for increasingly advanced graphics techniques.

Over the following decades, editions of computer graphics journals (such as the ACM SIGGRAPH's quarterly) regularly featured versions of the teapot: faceted or smooth-shaded, wireframe, bumpy, translucent, refractive, even leopard-skin and furry teapots were created.

Having no surface to represent its base, the original teapot model was not intended to be seen from below. Later versions of the data set fixed this.

The real teapot is 33% taller (ratio 4:3)[5] than the computer model. Jim Blinn stated that he scaled the model on the vertical axis during a demo in the lab to demonstrate that they could manipulate it. They preferred the appearance of this new version and decided to save the file out of that preference.[6]

Versions of the teapot model — or sample scenes containing it — are distributed with or freely available for nearly every current rendering and modelling program and even many graphic APIs, including AutoCAD, Houdini, Lightwave 3D, MODO, POV-Ray, 3ds Max, and the OpenGL and Direct3D helper libraries. Some RenderMan-compliant renderers support the teapot as a built-in geometry by calling RiGeometry("teapot", RI_NULL). Along with the expected cubes and spheres, the GLUT library even provides the function glutSolidTeapot() as a graphics primitive, as does its Direct3D counterpart D3DX (D3DXCreateTeapot()). While D3DX for Direct3D 11 does not provide this functionality anymore, it is supported in the DirectX Tool Kit.[7] Mac OS X Tiger and Leopard also include the teapot as part of Quartz Composer; Leopard's teapot supports bump mapping. BeOS and Haiku include a small demo of a rotating 3D teapot, intended to show off the platform's multimedia facilities.

Teapot scenes are commonly used for renderer self-tests and benchmarks.[8][9]

Original teapot model edit

The original, physical teapot was purchased from ZCMI (a department store in Salt Lake City) in 1974. It was donated to the Boston Computer Museum in 1984, where it was on display until 1990. It now resides in the ephemera collection at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California where it is catalogued as "Teapot used for Computer Graphics rendering" and bears the catalogue number X00398.1984.[10] The original teapot the Utah teapot was based on used to be available from Friesland Porzellan [de], once part of the German Melitta group.[11][12] Originally it was given the rather plain name Haushaltsteekanne ('household teapot');[13] the company only found out about their product's reputation in 2017, whereupon they officially renamed it "Utah Teapot". It was available in three different sizes and various colors; the one Martin Newell had used is the white "1,4L Utah Teapot".[14]

Appearances edit

 
"The Six Platonic Solids", an image that humorously adds the Utah teapot to the five standard Platonic solids

One famous ray-traced image, by James Arvo and David Kirk in 1987,[15] shows six stone columns, five of which are surmounted by the Platonic solids (tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, dodecahedron, icosahedron). The sixth column supports a teapot.[16] The image is titled "The Six Platonic Solids", with Arvo and Kirk calling the teapot "the newly discovered Teapotahedron".[15] This image appeared on the covers of several books and computer graphic journals.

The Utah teapot sometimes appears in the "Pipes" screensaver shipped with Microsoft Windows,[17] but only in versions prior to Windows XP, and has been included in the "polyhedra" XScreenSaver hack since 2008.[18]

Jim Blinn (in one of his "Project MATHEMATICS!" videos) proves an amusing (but trivial) version of the Pythagorean theorem: construct a (2D) teapot on each side of a right triangle and the area of the teapot on the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the areas of the teapots on the other two sides.[19]

Loren Carpenter's 1980 CGI film Vol Libre features the teapot, appearing briefly at the beginning and end of the film in the foreground with a fractal-rendered mountainscape behind it.

Vulkan and OpenGL graphics APIs feature the Utah teapot along with the Stanford dragon and the Stanford bunny on their badges.[20]

With the advent of the first computer-generated short films, and later full-length feature films, it has become an in-joke to hide the Utah teapot in films' scenes.[21] For example, in the movie Toy Story, the Utah teapot appears in a short tea-party scene. The teapot also appears in The Simpsons episode "Treehouse of Horror VI" in which Homer discovers the "third dimension."[22] In The Sims 2, a picture of the Utah teapot is one of the paintings available to buy in-game, titled "Handle and Spout".

An origami version of the teapot, folded by Tomohiro Tachi, was shown at the Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art in Israel in a 2007–2008 exhibit.[23]

 
'Smithfield Utah' public sculpture in Dublin, Ireland

In Oct 2021 "Smithfield Utah" by Alan Butler which was inspired by the Utah teapot was unveiled in Dublin, Ireland.[24][25]

During the opening of The Amazing Digital Circus, the teapot can be seen spinning among different 3D objects.

OBJ conversion edit

Although the original tea set by Newell can be downloaded directly, this tea set is specified using a set of Bézier patches in a custom format, which can be difficult to import directly into many popular 3D modeling applications. As such, a tesselated conversion of the dataset in the popular OBJ file format can be useful. One such conversion of the complete Newell teaset is available on the University of Utah website.

3D printing edit

Through 3D printing, the Utah Teapot has come full circle from being a computer model based on an actual teapot to being an actual teapot based on the computer model. It is widely available in many renderings in different materials from small plastic knick-knacks to a fully functional ceramic teapot. It is sometimes intentionally rendered as a low poly object to celebrate its origin as a computer model.[citation needed]

In 2009, a Belgian design studio, Unfold, 3D printed the Utah Teapot in ceramic with the objective of returning the iconographic teapot to its roots as a piece of functional dishware while showing its status as an icon of the digital world.[26]

In 2015, the California-based company Emerging Objects followed suit, but this time printed the teapot, along with teacups and teaspoons, out of actual tea.[27]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dunietz, Jesse (February 29, 2016). "The Most Important Object In Computer Graphics History Is This Teapot". Nautilus. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  2. ^ Mark Kilgard (February 23, 1996). "11.9 glutSolidTeapot, glutWireTeapot". www.opengl.org. Retrieved October 7, 2011.
  3. ^ Torrence, Ann (2006). "Martin Newell's original teapot: Copyright restrictions prevent ACM from providing the full text for this work". ACM SIGGRAPH 2006 Teapot on - SIGGRAPH '06. p. 29. doi:10.1145/1180098.1180128. ISBN 978-1-59593-364-5. S2CID 23272447. Article No. 29.
  4. ^ "The Utah Teapot - CHM Revolution". Computer History Museum. Retrieved March 20, 2016.
  5. ^ "The Utah Teapot". www.holmes3d.net. Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  6. ^ Seymour, Mike (July 25, 2012). . fxguide.com. Archived from the original on July 29, 2012. Retrieved April 15, 2015.
  7. ^ "DirectX Tool Kit". GitHub. November 29, 2022.
  8. ^ Wald, Ingo; Benthin, Carsten; Slusallek, Philipp (2002). (PDF). Technical Report, Computer Graphics Group. Saarland University. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 23, 2012.
  9. ^ Klimaszewski, K.; Sederberg, T.W. (1997). "Faster ray tracing using adaptive grids". IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications. 17 (1): 42–51. doi:10.1109/38.576857. S2CID 29664150.
  10. ^ Original Utah Teapot at the Computer History Museum. September 28, 2001. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  11. ^ Sander, Antje; Siems, Maren; Wördemann, Wilfried; Meyer, Stefan; Janssen, Nina (2015). Siems, Maren (ed.). Melitta und Friesland Porzellan - 60 Jahre Keramikherstellung in Varel [Melitta and Friesland Porzellan - 60 years manufacturing of ceramics in Varel]. Schloss Museum Jever [de] (in German). Vol. Jever Heft 33 (1 ed.). Oldenburg, Germany: Isensee Verlag [de]. ISBN 978-3-7308-1177-1. Begleitkatalog zur Ausstellung: Jeverland - in Ton gebrannt. (48 pages)
  12. ^ Friesland Porzellan [@FrieslandPorzel] (March 24, 2017). "The original Utah Teapot was always produced by Friesland. We were part of the Melitta Group once, thats right. Got yours already?" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  13. ^ (in German). Radio Bremen. Archived from the original on April 1, 2019. Retrieved March 1, 2019.
  14. ^ (in German). Friesland Versand GmbH. Archived from the original on March 29, 2023. Retrieved November 15, 2023.
  15. ^ a b Arvo, James; Kirk, David (1987). "Fast ray tracing by ray classification". ACM SIGGRAPH Computer Graphics. 21 (4): 55–64. doi:10.1145/37402.37409.
  16. ^ Carlson, Wayne (2007). . OSU.edu. Archived from the original on February 12, 2012. Retrieved April 15, 2015.
  17. ^ "Windows NT Easter Egg – Pipes Screensaver". The Easter Egg Archive. Retrieved May 5, 2018.
  18. ^ "changelog (Added the missing Utah Teapotahedron to polyhedra)". Xscreensaver. August 10, 2008.
  19. ^ Project Mathematica: Theorem Of Pythagoras. NASA. 1988. Event occurs at 14:00. Retrieved July 28, 2015 – via archive.org.
  20. ^ Rob Williams (March 8, 2018). "Khronos Group Announces Vulkan 1.1". Techgage Networks. Retrieved January 18, 2020.
  21. ^ "Tempest in a Teapot". Continuum. Winter 2006–2007. from the original on July 12, 2014.
  22. ^ "Pacific Data Images – Homer3". from the original on July 24, 2008.
  23. ^ "Tomohiro Tachi". Treasures of Origami Art. Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art. August 17, 2007. Retrieved June 18, 2021.
  24. ^ "Dublin City Council commission of public sculpture for Smithfield Square" (PDF). Retrieved April 23, 2023.
  25. ^ "Central Area: Smithfield Square Lower – Sculpture Dublin". Retrieved April 23, 2023.
  26. ^ "Utanalog, Ceramic Utah Teapot". Unfold Design Studio. October 28, 2009. Retrieved May 12, 2015.
  27. ^ Virginia San Fratello & Ronald Rael (2015). "The Utah Tea Set". Emerging Objects. Retrieved May 12, 2015.

External links edit

  • Image of Utah teapot at the Computer History Museum
  • Newell's teapot sketch at the Computer History Museum
  • S.J. Baker's History of the teapot November 20, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, including patch data
  • (Wayback Machine copy)
  • WebGL teapot demonstration
  • History of the Teapot video from Udacity's online Interactive 3D Graphics course
  • The World's Most Famous Teapot - Tom Scott explains the story of Martin Newell's digital creation (YouTube)

utah, teapot, newell, teapot, test, model, that, become, standard, reference, object, joke, within, computer, graphics, community, mathematical, model, ordinary, melitta, brand, teapot, that, appears, solid, with, nearly, rotationally, symmetrical, body, using. The Utah teapot or the Newell teapot is a 3D test model that has become a standard reference object and an in joke 1 within the computer graphics community It is a mathematical model of an ordinary Melitta brand teapot that appears solid with a nearly rotationally symmetrical body Using a teapot model is considered the 3D equivalent of a Hello World program a way to create an easy 3D scene with a somewhat complex model acting as the basic geometry for a scene with a light setup Some programming libraries such as the OpenGL Utility Toolkit 2 even have functions dedicated to drawing teapots A 3D STL model of the teapotA 2008 rendering of the Utah teapot modelThe teapot model was created in 1975 by early computer graphics researcher Martin Newell a member of the pioneering graphics program at the University of Utah 3 It was one of the first to be modeled using bezier curves rather than precisely measured Contents 1 History 1 1 Original teapot model 2 Appearances 3 OBJ conversion 4 3D printing 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp The actual Melitta teapot that Martin Newell modelled displayed at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View California 1990 present External image nbsp A scan of the original diagram Martin Newell drew up to plan the Utah Teapot before inputing it digitally Image courtesy of Computer History Museum For his work Newell needed a simple mathematical model of a familiar object His wife Sandra Newell suggested modelling their tea set since they were sitting down for tea at the time He sketched the teapot free hand using graph paper and a pencil 4 Following that he went back to the computer laboratory and edited bezier control points on a Tektronix storage tube again by hand citation needed The teapot shape contained a number of elements that made it ideal for the graphics experiments of the time it was round contained saddle points had a genus greater than zero because of the hole in the handle could project a shadow on itself and could be displayed accurately without a surface texture Newell made the mathematical data that described the teapot s geometry a set of three dimensional coordinates publicly available and soon other researchers began to use the same data for their computer graphics experiments These researchers needed something with roughly the same characteristics that Newell had and using the teapot data meant they did not have to laboriously enter geometric data for some other object Although technical progress has meant that the act of rendering the teapot is no longer the challenge it was in 1975 the teapot continued to be used as a reference object for increasingly advanced graphics techniques Over the following decades editions of computer graphics journals such as the ACM SIGGRAPH s quarterly regularly featured versions of the teapot faceted or smooth shaded wireframe bumpy translucent refractive even leopard skin and furry teapots were created Having no surface to represent its base the original teapot model was not intended to be seen from below Later versions of the data set fixed this The real teapot is 33 taller ratio 4 3 5 than the computer model Jim Blinn stated that he scaled the model on the vertical axis during a demo in the lab to demonstrate that they could manipulate it They preferred the appearance of this new version and decided to save the file out of that preference 6 Versions of the teapot model or sample scenes containing it are distributed with or freely available for nearly every current rendering and modelling program and even many graphic APIs including AutoCAD Houdini Lightwave 3D MODO POV Ray 3ds Max and the OpenGL and Direct3D helper libraries Some RenderMan compliant renderers support the teapot as a built in geometry by calling RiGeometry teapot RI NULL Along with the expected cubes and spheres the GLUT library even provides the function glutSolidTeapot as a graphics primitive as does its Direct3D counterpart D3DX D3DXCreateTeapot While D3DX for Direct3D 11 does not provide this functionality anymore it is supported in the DirectX Tool Kit 7 Mac OS X Tiger and Leopard also include the teapot as part of Quartz Composer Leopard s teapot supports bump mapping BeOS and Haiku include a small demo of a rotating 3D teapot intended to show off the platform s multimedia facilities Teapot scenes are commonly used for renderer self tests and benchmarks 8 9 Original teapot model edit The original physical teapot was purchased from ZCMI a department store in Salt Lake City in 1974 It was donated to the Boston Computer Museum in 1984 where it was on display until 1990 It now resides in the ephemera collection at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View California where it is catalogued as Teapot used for Computer Graphics rendering and bears the catalogue number X00398 1984 10 The original teapot the Utah teapot was based on used to be available from Friesland Porzellan de once part of the German Melitta group 11 12 Originally it was given the rather plain name Haushaltsteekanne household teapot 13 the company only found out about their product s reputation in 2017 whereupon they officially renamed it Utah Teapot It was available in three different sizes and various colors the one Martin Newell had used is the white 1 4L Utah Teapot 14 Appearances edit nbsp The Six Platonic Solids an image that humorously adds the Utah teapot to the five standard Platonic solidsOne famous ray traced image by James Arvo and David Kirk in 1987 15 shows six stone columns five of which are surmounted by the Platonic solids tetrahedron cube octahedron dodecahedron icosahedron The sixth column supports a teapot 16 The image is titled The Six Platonic Solids with Arvo and Kirk calling the teapot the newly discovered Teapotahedron 15 This image appeared on the covers of several books and computer graphic journals The Utah teapot sometimes appears in the Pipes screensaver shipped with Microsoft Windows 17 but only in versions prior to Windows XP and has been included in the polyhedra XScreenSaver hack since 2008 18 Jim Blinn in one of his Project MATHEMATICS videos proves an amusing but trivial version of the Pythagorean theorem construct a 2D teapot on each side of a right triangle and the area of the teapot on the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the areas of the teapots on the other two sides 19 Loren Carpenter s 1980 CGI film Vol Libre features the teapot appearing briefly at the beginning and end of the film in the foreground with a fractal rendered mountainscape behind it Vulkan and OpenGL graphics APIs feature the Utah teapot along with the Stanford dragon and the Stanford bunny on their badges 20 With the advent of the first computer generated short films and later full length feature films it has become an in joke to hide the Utah teapot in films scenes 21 For example in the movie Toy Story the Utah teapot appears in a short tea party scene The teapot also appears in The Simpsons episode Treehouse of Horror VI in which Homer discovers the third dimension 22 In The Sims 2 a picture of the Utah teapot is one of the paintings available to buy in game titled Handle and Spout An origami version of the teapot folded by Tomohiro Tachi was shown at the Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art in Israel in a 2007 2008 exhibit 23 nbsp Smithfield Utah public sculpture in Dublin IrelandIn Oct 2021 Smithfield Utah by Alan Butler which was inspired by the Utah teapot was unveiled in Dublin Ireland 24 25 During the opening of The Amazing Digital Circus the teapot can be seen spinning among different 3D objects OBJ conversion editAlthough the original tea set by Newell can be downloaded directly this tea set is specified using a set of Bezier patches in a custom format which can be difficult to import directly into many popular 3D modeling applications As such a tesselated conversion of the dataset in the popular OBJ file format can be useful One such conversion of the complete Newell teaset is available on the University of Utah website 3D printing editThrough 3D printing the Utah Teapot has come full circle from being a computer model based on an actual teapot to being an actual teapot based on the computer model It is widely available in many renderings in different materials from small plastic knick knacks to a fully functional ceramic teapot It is sometimes intentionally rendered as a low poly object to celebrate its origin as a computer model citation needed In 2009 a Belgian design studio Unfold 3D printed the Utah Teapot in ceramic with the objective of returning the iconographic teapot to its roots as a piece of functional dishware while showing its status as an icon of the digital world 26 In 2015 the California based company Emerging Objects followed suit but this time printed the teapot along with teacups and teaspoons out of actual tea 27 Gallery edit nbsp The Utah teapot nbsp Environment mapping on the teapotSee also edit3D modeling Stanford bunny Stanford dragon Suzanne 3D model Cornell box List of common 3D test models List of filmmaker s signatures LennaReferences edit Dunietz Jesse February 29 2016 The Most Important Object In Computer Graphics History Is This Teapot Nautilus Retrieved March 3 2019 Mark Kilgard February 23 1996 11 9 glutSolidTeapot glutWireTeapot www opengl org Retrieved October 7 2011 Torrence Ann 2006 Martin Newell s original teapot Copyright restrictions prevent ACM from providing the full text for this work ACM SIGGRAPH 2006 Teapot on SIGGRAPH 06 p 29 doi 10 1145 1180098 1180128 ISBN 978 1 59593 364 5 S2CID 23272447 Article No 29 The Utah Teapot CHM Revolution Computer History Museum Retrieved March 20 2016 The Utah Teapot www holmes3d net Retrieved July 10 2021 Seymour Mike July 25 2012 Founders Series Industry Legend Jim Blinn fxguide com Archived from the original on July 29 2012 Retrieved April 15 2015 DirectX Tool Kit GitHub November 29 2022 Wald Ingo Benthin Carsten Slusallek Philipp 2002 A Simple and Practical Method for Interactive Ray Tracing of Dynamic Scenes PDF Technical Report Computer Graphics Group Saarland University Archived from the original PDF on March 23 2012 Klimaszewski K Sederberg T W 1997 Faster ray tracing using adaptive grids IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications 17 1 42 51 doi 10 1109 38 576857 S2CID 29664150 Original Utah Teapot at the Computer History Museum September 28 2001 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Sander Antje Siems Maren Wordemann Wilfried Meyer Stefan Janssen Nina 2015 Siems Maren ed Melitta und Friesland Porzellan 60 Jahre Keramikherstellung in Varel Melitta and Friesland Porzellan 60 years manufacturing of ceramics in Varel Schloss Museum Jever de in German Vol Jever Heft 33 1 ed Oldenburg Germany Isensee Verlag de ISBN 978 3 7308 1177 1 Begleitkatalog zur Ausstellung Jeverland in Ton gebrannt 48 pages Friesland Porzellan FrieslandPorzel March 24 2017 The original Utah Teapot was always produced by Friesland We were part of the Melitta Group once thats right Got yours already Tweet via Twitter Eine Teekanne als Filmstar in German Radio Bremen Archived from the original on April 1 2019 Retrieved March 1 2019 Teekanne 1 4l Weiss Utah Teapot in German Friesland Versand GmbH Archived from the original on March 29 2023 Retrieved November 15 2023 a b Arvo James Kirk David 1987 Fast ray tracing by ray classification ACM SIGGRAPH Computer Graphics 21 4 55 64 doi 10 1145 37402 37409 Carlson Wayne 2007 A Critical History of Computer Graphics and Animation OSU edu Archived from the original on February 12 2012 Retrieved April 15 2015 Windows NT Easter Egg Pipes Screensaver The Easter Egg Archive Retrieved May 5 2018 changelog Added the missing Utah Teapotahedron to polyhedra Xscreensaver August 10 2008 Project Mathematica Theorem Of Pythagoras NASA 1988 Event occurs at 14 00 Retrieved July 28 2015 via archive org Rob Williams March 8 2018 Khronos Group Announces Vulkan 1 1 Techgage Networks Retrieved January 18 2020 Tempest in a Teapot Continuum Winter 2006 2007 Archived from the original on July 12 2014 Pacific Data Images Homer3 Archived from the original on July 24 2008 Tomohiro Tachi Treasures of Origami Art Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art August 17 2007 Retrieved June 18 2021 Dublin City Council commission of public sculpture for Smithfield Square PDF Retrieved April 23 2023 Central Area Smithfield Square Lower Sculpture Dublin Retrieved April 23 2023 Utanalog Ceramic Utah Teapot Unfold Design Studio October 28 2009 Retrieved May 12 2015 Virginia San Fratello amp Ronald Rael 2015 The Utah Tea Set Emerging Objects Retrieved May 12 2015 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Utah teapot Image of Utah teapot at the Computer History Museum Newell s teapot sketch at the Computer History Museum S J Baker s History of the teapot Archived November 20 2014 at the Wayback Machine including patch data Teapot history and images from A Critical History of Computer Graphics and Animation Wayback Machine copy WebGL teapot demonstration History of the Teapot video from Udacity s online Interactive 3D Graphics course The World s Most Famous Teapot Tom Scott explains the story of Martin Newell s digital creation YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Utah teapot amp oldid 1207126241, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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