Why Chinese Manufacturing Wins - YouTube

Channel: Wendover Productions

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At the end of the first millennium, around 1000 AD, China was definitively the most powerful
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country in the world.
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More than a third of the world lived within its borders, it’s technology was the most
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advanced in existence, and its economy accounted for an astronomical 50% of the worlds GDP.
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The west paled in comparison to China, but eventually, Europe arose from its dark ages,
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the importance of China diminished, and the west came to rule the world.
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Today that is still largely the case, but China is rising again.
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In 1978 China had a GDP of only $200 billion, only about 4% of the world’s GDP, but nowadays
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that GDP has risen to $11 trillion and accounts for 15% of all economic activity in the world.
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This economic renaissance of the last 40 years is largely thanks to one industry—manufacturing.
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We’ve come to accept that China is the world’s factory, but it wasn’t always this way.
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In the early 20th century goods were often just produced right near where they were sold.
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America made American goods, Europe made European goods.
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It wasn’t until cheap, worldwide shipping became available that the production side
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of a company could be relocated to the other side of the world, but why did China win?
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How did this country become the manufacturing giant it is today?
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In 1978, Deng Xiaoping took power in the People’s Republic of China.
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He quickly visited Bangkok, Singapore, and other flourishing Asian cities and was convinced
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that, in order to succeed, China needed to open itself up to the outside world, at least
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to an extent.
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He gave people control of their farms, privatized businesses, and, most importantly, allowed
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foreign investment in the country for the first time in decades.
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He opened up four special economic zones with tax incentives and exemption from the oversight
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that the rest of the country saw on its investments and trade activity.
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These four zones were essentially the free market portions of China, but none was more
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successful than this one—Shenzhen in the Guangdong Province so I went there to see
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what it was like.
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Before its designation as a special economic zone in 1980, Shenzhen was a tiny town with
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about 30,000 inhabitants but today that’s grown to nearly 18 million people.
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That means its size rivals that of New York and London.
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It’s believed that Shenzhen might have been the single fastest growing city in human history.
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Every other Special Economic Zone was an established area before its designation, but Shenzhen
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made sense as a spot where China could embrace the west as it lay just north of the border
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of Hong Kong—what was at the time a British territory.
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Today Shenzhen is the electronics manufacturing capital of the world.
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“Shenzhen as a city is really known for two things.
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One is manufacturing capabilities especially for consumer electronics products and second,
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its gravitation for talents or human resources especially on the product development or research
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and development disciplines.”
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Apple, Samsung, Microsoft, Sony, Canon—they all manufacture products here in Shenzhen.
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In fact, 90% of the world’s electronics are made at least in part in this city.
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Everything just costs less in China so labor costs less too.
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Where a factory in the United States might pay upwards of $10-15 an hour, a Chinese laborer
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would happily accept $3 or $4 an hour in Shenzhen.
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When I was there I withdrew the equivalent of $80 from the ATM upon arrival and left
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four days later with cash leftover.
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A 30 minute taxi ride cost about $7 US dollars.
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A full meal at a local place was about $3.
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But China isn’t cheap entirely naturally.
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China has artificially depressed the value of their currency.
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Up until 2005, the Chinese government just said that the exchange rate was 8.27 yuan
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per dollar and that was that.
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They then went a few years allowing it to increase in value within a margin, but in
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2008 they pegged its value again to make Chinese exports more attractive during the financial
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crisis.
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Nowadays, the government just picks a exchange rate daily and lets the currency fluctuate
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from it by up to 2%.
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This just makes it so western companies can buy more for less.
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China also doesn’t charge taxes on exports while the US doesn’t charge taxes on imports.
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The US doesn’t even charge customs fees for some products like tablet PC’s so some
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products can make it all the way from their factory in China to stores in the US completely
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tax free.
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When I was in Shenzhen I visited a company called Anker.
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They make all sorts of consumer electronics but chances are if you have something from
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them, it’s one of their portable batteries.
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I asked their CEO why so many electronics companies are now based in Shenzhen.
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“So the advantage is that, you know, we’re close to the supply chain so everything is
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faster.
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Right, so, instead of like, you know, you do a mock up and you see it two weeks later
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here you send design to mockup and you receive it, like, three days later.”
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In Shenzhen there are markets where you can buy every part imaginable, there are factories
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ready to build prototypes in a matter of days, there are engineers ready to work at the drop
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of a hat.
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Development just happens faster in Shenzhen.
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A US company might use the same factories as one based in Shenzhen but the geographical
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distance makes production slower.
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In addition, word travels fast in Shenzhen.
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A few years ago Anker was first-to-market with a technology called PowerIQ that allows
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for faster device charging.
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The engineers from Anker told me that a big reason they were able to go to market before
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the western companies was because they heard about it first thanks to their proximity to
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other engineers and companies.
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Shenzhen just produces things better and faster, but a product isn’t just a physical item.
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“Honestly being in Shenzhen for this company is an advantage for the supply chain that
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we can develop good products with a competitive price but for the brand its also a kind of
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a challenge.”
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What Shenzhen can’t build as well is brands.
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Certain companies like Anker have been able to to an extent thanks to smart PR and marketing,
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but some other companies just don’t bother.
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Lucrative western consumers want familiar and approachable feeling brands but cultural
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differences and geographic distance often make China based companies just seem different.
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All across Shenzhen I saw these boxes filled with rentable portable chargers and as it
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turns out, it was an Anker product but the Chinese designed product didn’t really succeed
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in the western market.
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“Talking about AnkerBox, the product is initially designed for the western market,
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however, actually, our trial in Seattle wasn’t that successful so we realized that, first
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of all, that US people actually, when they go to a bar they actually really go there
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drinking instead of looking at their phones.
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Well if you walk into a bar in China you’ll find that actually, like 20 tables of people
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standing around looking at their phones.”
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When the designers are thousands of miles away from the consumer they might not be as
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knowledgeable of their wants.
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Some companies have sprung up in Shenzhen whose whole business is to develop and produce
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products without a brand.
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They’re called “white label companies.”
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They might produce earphones, for example, then sell them to a western audio company
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who will attach their brand and sell the product at a mark-up.
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Despite it’s enormous role in increasing the GDP of China 30-fold in the last 30 years,
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manufacturing is not an entirely sustainable industry for the country long-term.
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The problem is that, rather ironically, the economic growth that manufacturing spurred
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in China has increased labor prices to a point where their manufacturing is less competitive.
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Before manufacturing came in China was a country of poor, rural farmers but today China has
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a real middle class and cities that are expensive to live in.
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It used to be that workers like the ones at Anker’s factory moved to the city for a
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few years when they were young to make money for their family back home but nowadays people
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are moving to cities permanently and want to be able to set up solid, middle class,
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urban lives.
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The average cost for real-estate in central Shenzhen is almost $1,200 per square foot.
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That’s even higher than San Francisco and New York.
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Even when workers live outside the city center, higher wages are necessary even just to pay
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for housing.
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At the same time manufacturing is becoming less labor intensive every day as robots and
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automation are becoming increasingly advanced and inexpensive.
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In 2015 China launched a initiative spending hundreds of billions of dollars each year
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to upgrade and automate factories in order to keep prices low, but this will likely do
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little to keep companies from packing up shop and moving elsewhere.
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Manufacturing lines that can be automated are likely to move back to the United States
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and the rest of the western market.
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Robots cost the same whether they’re in the United States or China so manufacturing
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products in the US helps save on shipping costs and certainly is good for PR.
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At the same time, the labor intensive jobs that China prospered on in past decades are
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moving to less developed and less expensive countries like Vietnam, Bangladesh, and India.
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Chinese manufacturing firms are responding to this by opening up their own factories
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all across the world—everywhere from Africa to the United States itself.
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The model that might work for China in the future is that of Anker—Chinese based firms
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that can take advantage of their proximity to the production lines to cut down on development
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cost and time.
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Shenzhen based start-ups like Anker, DJI, and OnePlus have already succeeded in taking
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advantages of this proximity, but more are being established each day.
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If you see a hardware-based Kickstarter campaign, there’s a good chance it comes from Shenzhen.
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10 years ago a company would be hard-pressed to succeed in Shenzhen as its own brand because
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historically the retailer has acted as a barrier in between the manufacturer and consumer,
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but with the rise of Amazon and other e-commerce sites its now possible for eastern companies
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to sell directly to the western consumer in a system that rewards for quality over price.
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The time really is ripe for Chinese entrepreneurship.
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While Silicon Valley might be the dominant area for software start-ups, its hard to rival
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Shenzhen as an ecosystem for hardware development and manufacturing.
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I have to give a huge thanks to Anker for bringing me out to Shenzhen to research and
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film this video.
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It truly would not have been possible without them and they gave me complete creative control
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over the video.
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I’ve actually owned and used an Anker battery for over five years thats never broken down
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even when it’s been accidentally submerged twice and dropped countless times but luckily
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they upgraded me to one of their newest ones which I love.
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The main thing I want to plug for them is their “Power it Up” contest going on right
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now.
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10 winners will each get $2,000 in cash and a bunch of free Anker products.
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To enter you make a video up to 1 minute long about an unpleasant or awkward situation caused
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by running out of power, upload it to youtube, then share it on their page and the 10 highest
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voted ones at the end of the contest win.
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The link to enter is in the description so good luck!
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Aside from that, please be sure to check out my podcast Showmakers and subscribe to this
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channel to get all my future videos right when they come out.
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Thanks again for watching and I’ll see you next week for another Wendover Productions
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video.