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Looking forward to these fun rookie matchups

Here are some rookie-against-rookie battles we can't wait to see in 2020.




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Rocking-chair capacitive deionization with flow-through electrodes

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2020, 8,8476-8484
DOI: 10.1039/C9TA14112J, Paper
Yong Liu, Xin Gao, Kai Wang, Xinyue Dou, Haiguang Zhu, Xun Yuan, Likun Pan
Flow-through Rocking-chair Capacitive Deionization system with ultrahigh desalination rate is built for the first-time, in which sodium-pre-intercalated MnO2 coated carbon nanofiber aerogels are employed as the flow-through electrode.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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A universal cross-linking binding polymer composite for ultrahigh-loading Li-ion battery electrodes

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2020, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D0TA00714E, Paper
Dong Wang, Qian Zhang, Jie Liu, Erying Zhao, Zhenwei Li, Yu Yang, Ziyang Guo, Lei Wang, Shanqing Zhang
A general, facile-operability, and sustainable strategy to achieve ultrahigh-loading electrodes has been proposed that is simply replacing the traditional PVDF binder with an eco-friendly and robust c-PAA-XG binder with a high-efficiency damper.
To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Assam keen to woo MNCs looking to move out of China

Multinational companies looking to move out of China should consider Assam, with its abundant natural resources, strategic location and robust industrial infrastructure, as their destination for setting up production facilities in India, state Industries Minister Chandra Mohan Patowary said on Wednesday.




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Breaking ground: a celebration of women composers / Natalie Mannix, Stephanie Bruning

MEDIA PhonCD M316 bre




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Invest Rs 10,000 and earn Rs 30,000 per month by starting pickle making business

For pickle making business you will be required to obtain a license. 




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The good neighbor: the life and work of Fred Rogers / Maxwell King

Browsery PN1992.4.R56 K56 2018




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Thinking about things / Mark Sainsbury

Browsery B105.T54 S25 2018




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Unbound: transgender men and the remaking of identity / Arlene Stein

Browsery HQ77.9.S74 2018




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Black girl baking: wholesome recipes inspired by a soulful upbringing / Jerrelle Guy, founder of Chocolate for Basil

Browsery TX763.G89 2018




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More with less: whole food cooking made irresistibly simple / Jodi Moreno

Browsery TX833.5.M674 2018




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Sweet Home Cafe cookbook: a celebration of African American cooking / Albert G. Lukas and Jessica B. Harris, with contributions by Jerome Grant ; foreword by Lonnie G. Bunch III ; introduction by Jacquelyn D. Serwer ; in association with the National Muse

Browsery TX715.2.A47 L85 2018




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Between Harlem and Heaven: Afro-Asian-American cooking for big nights, weeknights, & every day / J.J. Johnson and Alexander Smalls ; with Veronica Chambers ; photography by Beatriz da Costa ; food styling by Roscoe Betsill

Browsery TX715.2.A47 J64 2018




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Hacking life: systematized living and its discontents / Joseph M. Reagle Jr

Browsery HM851.R432 2019




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Hanging out, messing around, and geeking out: kids living and learning with new media / Mizuko Ito, Sonja Baumer, Matteo Bittanti, danah boyd, Rachel Cody, Becky Herr-Stephenson, Heather A. Horst, Patricia G. Lange, Dilan Mahendran, Katynka Z. Martín

Browsery HQ799.2.M352 H36 2019




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Around 30 Indian institutions are working to develop a nCoV-19 vaccine

A few of them are expected to move into clinical trials later this year.




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Decision making theories and methods based on interval-valued intuitionistic fuzzy sets Shuping Wan, Jiuying Dong

Online Resource




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The psychology of problem solving: the background to successful mathematics thinking / Alfred S. Posamentier (City University of New York, USA) [and three others]

Dewey Library - QA63.P67 2020




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Patently mathematical: picking partners, passwords, and careers by the numbers / Jeff Suzuki

Hayden Library - QA41.S9395 2019




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Stress corrosion cracking: theory and practice / edited by V.S. Raja and Tetsuo Shoji

Barker Library - TA462.S77 2011




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Aluminum dreams: the making of light modernity / Mimi Sheller

Hayden Library - TA480.A6.S48 2014




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Bigg Boss' Manveer: People are making me feel like a star

'Manu had some experience, as he had played a reality show before. He knew how to play in front of the camera. I saved Manu from nominations by shaving of my beard during a task. But the same day, I got into trouble because the other person (Rohan Mehra) did not save me. I realised that if the game will continue like this, I will have to play smart.' Manveer Gurjar then played so smart, he won Bigg Boss 10!




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'You will be seeing me kicking a lot of butts'

'It's been two and a half years since I debuted and I am happy with my journey at the moment. If you are passionate about something, with hard work and opportunity, you will continue as long as you are enjoying what you do.' Kiara Advani is very excited about her next Machine.






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Enhancing P3HT/PCBM blend stability by thermal crosslinking using poly(3-hexylthiophene)-S,S-dioxide

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2020, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D0TC00109K, Paper
M. Milanovich, T. Sarkar, Y. Popowski, J. Z. Low, L. M. Campos, S. Kenig, G. L. Frey, E. Amir
A statistical copolymer containing thiophene and thiophene-S,S-dioxide rings was utilized as a thermal crosslinker in a blend of P3HT and PCBM, demonstrating an effective strategy for preventing agglomeration of PCBM and enhancing blend stability.
To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Seeking optimized transformer oil-based nanofluids by investigation of the modification mechanism of nano-dielectrics

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2020, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D0TC01521K, Paper
Fan Xu, Hongxia Wang, Shuaiqi Xing, Ming Tang, Huijuan Zhang, Yu Wang
The modification mechanism of nano-additives on the electrical properties of transformer oil-based nanofluids has systematically been studied from a micro-perspective.
To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Customizing coaxial stacking VS2 nanosheets for dual-band microwave absorption with superior performance in the C- and Ku-bands

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2020, 8,5923-5933
DOI: 10.1039/D0TC00763C, Paper
Deqing Zhang, Huibin Zhang, Junye Cheng, Hassan Raza, Tingting Liu, Bin Liu, Xuewei Ba, Guangping Zheng, Guohua Chen, Maosheng Cao
Engineering microwave absorption materials with absorption in multiple bands and strong absorption performance in the C-band remains challenging to date.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Growth Hacking For Dummies


 

Hack your business growth the scientific way

Airbnb. Uber. Spotify. To join the big fish in the disruptive digital shark tank you need to get beyond siloed sales and marketing approaches. You have to move ahead fast—with input from your whole organization—or die. Since the early 2010s, growth hacking culture has developed as the way to achieve this, pulling together multiple talents—product managers, data analysts, programmers, creatives, and yes,



Read More...




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The New Rules of Marketing and PR: How to Use Content Marketing, Podcasting, Social Media, AI, Live Video, and Newsjacking to Reach Buyers Directly, 7th Edition


 

The seventh edition of the pioneering guide to generating attention for your idea or business, packed with new and updated information

In the Digital Age, marketing tactics seem to change on a day-to-day basis. As the ways we communicate continue to evolve, keeping pace with the latest trends in social media, the newest online videos, the latest mobile apps, and all the other high-tech influences can seem an almost impossible task. How can you keep



Read More...




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The institute: a novel / Stephen King

Dewey Library - PS3561.I483 I57 2019




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The outsider: a novel / Stephen King

Hayden Library - PS3561.I483 O98 2018




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Wallace Stevens: The Making of the Poem / Frank Doggett

Online Resource




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Ahab's rolling sea: a natural history of Moby-Dick / Richard J. King

Dewey Library - PS2384.M62 K56 2019




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Booth Tarkington: novels & stories / Booth Tarkington ; Thomas Mallon, editor

Dewey Library - PS2971.M35 2019




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The world-ending fire: the essential Wendell Berry / selected and with an introduction by Paul Kingsnorth

Hayden Library - PS3552.E75 W66 2018




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Racial worldmaking: the power of popular fiction / Mark C. Jerng

Hayden Library - PS374.R34 J46 2018




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A New Orleans author in Mark Twain's court: letters from Grace King's New England sojourns / edited by Miki Pfeffer

Dewey Library - PS2178.A44 2019




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The man they wanted me to be: toxic masculinity and a crisis of our own making / Jared Yates Sexton

Hayden Library - PS3619.E9835 Z46 2019




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Race and upward mobility: seeking, gatekeeping, and other class strategies in postwar America / Elda María Román

Dewey Library - PS153.M56 R66 2018




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Networking and computation: technology, modeling and performance / Thomas G. Robertazzi, Li Shi

Online Resource




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Web, artificial intelligence and network applications: proceedings of the Workshops of the 34th International Conference on Advanced Information Networking and Applications (WAINA-2020) / Leonard Barolli, Flora Amato, Francesco Moscato, Tomoya Enokido, M

Online Resource




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You & Me: a Peking Opera / a production of Accentus Music in association with China National Centre for the Performing Arts

Browsery DVD Z61 you




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Thank you for smoking (2005) / written and directed by Jason Reitman [DVD].

[U.K.] : 20th Century Fox, [2007]




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King Kong (Motion picture : 1933)




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Theatre, social media, and meaning making / Bree Hadley

Hadley, Bree, author




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Musical emotions explained : unlocking the secrets of musical affect / Patrik N. Juslin

Juslin, Patrik N., author




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Thinking through theatre and performance / edited by Maaike Bleeker, Adrian Kear, Joe Kelleher and Heike Roms




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Making Room for Variation

Making a brand feel unified, cohesive, and harmonious while also leaving room for experimentation is a tough balancing act. It’s one of the most challenging aspects of a design system.

Graphic designer and Pentagram partner Paula Scher faced this challenge with the visual identity for the Public Theater in New York. As she explained in a talk at Beyond Tellerrand:

I began to realize that if you made everything the same, it was boring after the first year. If you changed it individually for each play, the theater lost recognizability. The thing to do, which I totally got for the first time after working there at this point for 17 years, is what they needed to have were seasons.

You could take the typography and the color system for the summer festival, the Shakespeare in the Park Festival, and you could begin to translate it into posters by flopping the colors, but using some of the same motifs, and you could create entire seasons out of the graphics. That would become its own standards manual where I have about six different people making these all year (http://bkaprt.com/eds/04-01/).

Scher’s strategy was to retain the Public Theater’s visual language every year, but to vary some of its elements (Fig 4.1–2). Colors would be swapped. Text would skew in different directions. New visual motifs would be introduced. The result is that each season coheres in its own way, but so does the identity of the Public Theater as a whole.

Fig 4.1: The posters for the 2014/15 season featured the wood type style the Public Theater is known for, but the typography was skewed. The color palette was restrained to yellow, black, and white, which led to a dynamic look when coupled with the skewed type (http://bkaprt.com/eds/04-02/).
Fig 4.2: For the 2018 season, the wood type letterforms were extended on a field of gradated color. The grayscale cut-out photos we saw in the 2014/15 season persisted, but this time in lower contrast to fit better with the softer color tones (http://bkaprt.com/eds/04-03/).

Even the most robust or thoroughly planned systems will need to account for variation at some point. As soon as you release a design system, people will ask you how to deviate from it, and you’ll want to be armed with persuasive answers. In this chapter, I’m going to talk about what variation means for a design system, how to know when you need it, and how to manage it in a scalable way.

What Is Variation?

We’ve spent most of this book talking about the importance of unity, cohesion, and harmony in a design system. So why are we talking about variation? Isn’t that at odds with all of the goals we’ve set until now?

Variation is a deviation from established patterns, and it can exist at every level of the system. At the component level, for instance, a team may discover that they need a component to behave in a slightly different way; maybe this particular component needs to appear without a photo, for example. At a design-language level, you may have a team that has a different audience, so they want to adjust their brand identity to serve that audience better. You can even have variation at the level of design principles: if a team is working on a product that is functionally different from your core product, they may need to adjust their principles to suit that context.

There are three kinds of deviations that come up in a design system:

  • Unintentional divergence typically happens when designers can’t find the information they’re looking for. They may not know that a certain solution exists within a system, so they create their own style. Clear, easy-to-find documentation and usage guidelines can help your team avoid unintentional variation.
  • Intentional but unnecessary divergence usually results from designers not wanting to feel constrained by the system, or believing they have a better solution. Making sure your team knows how to push back on and contribute to the system can help mitigate this kind of variation.
  • Intentional, meaningful divergence is the goal of an expressive design system. In this case, the divergence is meaningful because it solves a very specific user problem that no existing pattern solves.

We want to enable intentional, meaningful variation. To do this, we need to understand the needs and contexts for variation.

Contexts for Variation

Every variation we add makes our design system more complicated. Therefore, we need to take care to find the right moments for variation. Three big contextual changes are served by variation: brand, audience, and environment.

Brand

If you’re creating a system for multiple brands, each with its own brand language, then your system needs to support variations to reflect those brands.

The key here is to find the common core elements and then set some criteria for how you should deviate. When we were creating the design system for our websites at Vox Media, we constantly debated which elements should feel more expressive. Should a footer be standardized, or should we allow for tons of customization? We went back to our core goals: our users were ultimately visiting our websites to consume editorial content. So the variations should be in service of the content, writing style, and tone of voice for each brand.

The newsletter modules across Vox Media brands were an example of unnecessary variation. They were consistent in functionality and layout, but had variations in type, color, and visual treatments like borders (Fig 4.3). There was quite a bit of custom design within a very small area: Curbed’s newsletter component had a skewed background, for example, while Eater’s had a background image. Because these modules were so consistent in their user goals, we decided to unify their design and create less variation (Fig 4.4).

Fig 4.3: Older versions of Vox Media’s newsletter modules contained lots of unnecessary visual variation.
Fig 4.4: The new, unified newsletter modules.

The unified design cleaned up some technical debt. In the previous design, each newsletter module had CSS overrides to achieve distinct styling. Some modules even had overrides on the primary button color so it would work better with the background color. Little CSS overrides like this add up over time. Whenever we released a new change, we’d have to manually update the spots containing CSS overrides.

The streamlined design also placed a more appropriate emphasis on the newsletter module. While important, this module isn’t the star of the page. It doesn’t need loud backgrounds or fancy shapes to command attention, especially since it’s placed around article content. Variation in this module wasn’t necessary for expressing the brands.

On the other hand, consider the variation in Vox Media’s global header components. When we were redesigning the Verge, its editorial teams were vocal about wanting more latitude to art-direct the page, guide attention toward big features, and showcase custom illustrations. We addressed this by creating a masthead component (Fig 4.5) that sits on top of the global header on homepages. It contains a logo, tagline, date, and customizable background image. Though at the time this was a one-off component, we felt that the variation was valuable because it would strengthen the Verge’s brand voice.

Fig 4.5: Examples of the Verge's masthead component

The Verge team commissions or makes original art that changes throughout the day. The most exciting part is that they can use the masthead and a one-up hero when they drop a big feature and use these flexible components to art-direct the page (Fig 4.6). Soon after launch, the Verge masthead even got a Twitter fan account (@VergeTaglines) that tweets every time the image changes.

Fig 4.6: The Verge uses two generic components, the masthead and one-up hero, to art-direct its homepages.

Though this component was built specifically for the Verge, it soon gained broader application with other brands that share Vox’s publishing platform, Chorus. The McElroy Family website, for example, needed to convey its sense of humor and Appalachian roots; the masthead component shines with an original illustration featuring an adorable squirrel (Fig 4.7).

Fig 4.7: The McElroy Family site uses the same masthead component as the Verge to display a custom illustration.
Fig 4.8: The same masthead component on the Chicago Sun-Times site.

The Chicago Sun-Times—another Chorus platform site—is very different in content, tone, and audience from The McElroy Family, but the masthead component is just as valuable in conveying the tone of the organization’s high-quality investigative journalism and breaking news coverage (Fig 4.8).

Why did the masthead variation work well while the newsletter variation didn’t? The variations on the newsletter design were purely visual. When we created them, we didn’t have a strategy for how variation should work; instead, we were looking for any opportunity to make the brands feel distinct. The masthead variation, by contrast, tied directly into the brand strategy. Even though it began as a one-off for the Verge, it was flexible and purposeful enough to migrate to other brands.

Audience

The next contextual variation comes from audience. If your products serve different audiences who all need different things, then your system may need to adapt to fit those needs.

A good example of this is Airbnb’s listing pages. In addition to their standard listings, they also have Airbnb Plus—one-of-a-kind, high quality rentals at higher price points. Audiences booking a Plus listing are probably looking for exceptional quality and attention to detail.

Both Airbnb’s standard listing page and Plus listing page are immediately recognizable as belonging to the same family because they use many consistent elements (Fig 4.9). They both use Airbnb’s custom font, Cereal. They both highlight photography. They both use many of the same components, like the date picker. The iconography is the same.

Fig 4.9: The same brand elements in Airbnb’s standard listings (above) are used in their Plus listings (below), but with variations that make the listing styles distinct.

However, some of the design choices convey a different attitude. Airbnb Plus uses larger typography, airier vertical space, and a lighter weight of Cereal. It has a more understated color palette, with a deeper color on the call to action. These choices make Airbnb Plus feel like a more premium experience. You can see they’ve adjusted the density, weight, and scale levers to achieve a more elegant and sophisticated aesthetic.

The standard listing page, on the other hand, is more functional, with the booking module front and center. The Plus design pulls the density and weight levers in a lighter, airier direction. The standard listing page has less size contrast between elements, making it feel more functional.

Because they use the same core building blocks—the same typography, iconography, and components—both experiences feel like Airbnb. However, the variations in spacing, typographic weights, and color help distinguish the standard listing from the premium listing.

Environment

I’ve mainly been talking about adding variation to a system to allow for a range of content tones, but you may also need your system to scale based on environmental contexts. “Environment” in this context asks: Where will your products be used? Will that have an impact on the experience? Environments are the various constraints and pressures that surround and inform an experience. That can include lighting, ambient noise, passive or active engagement, expected focus level, or devices.

Shopify’s Polaris design system initially grew out of Shopify’s Store Management product. When the Shopify Retail team kicked off a project to design the next generation point-of-sale (POS) system, they realized that the patterns in Polaris didn’t exactly fit their needs. The POS system needed to work well in a retail space, often under bright lighting. The app needed to be used at arm’s length, twenty-four to thirty-six inches away from the merchant. And unlike the core admin, where the primary interaction is between the merchant and the UI, merchants using the POS system needed to prioritize their interactions with their customers instead of the UI. The Retail team wanted merchants to achieve an “eyes-closed” level of mastery over the UI so they could maintain eye contact with their customers.

The Retail team decided that the existing color palette, which only worked on a light background, would not be clear enough under the bright lights of a retail shop. The type scale was also too small to be used at arm’s length. And in order for merchants to use the POS system without breaking eye contact with customers, the buttons and other UI elements would need to be much larger.

The Retail team recognized that the current design system didn’t support a variety of environmental scenarios. But after talking with the Polaris team, they realized that other teams would benefit from the solutions they created. The Warehouse team, for example, was also developing an app that needed to be used at arm’s length under bright lights. This work inspired the Polaris team to create a dark mode for the system (Fig 4.10).

Fig 4.10: Polaris light mode (left) and dark mode (right).

This feedback loop between product team and design system team is a great example of how to build the right variation into your system. Build your system around helping your users navigate your product more clearly and serving content needs and you’ll unlock scalable expression.




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Iraq emerging as Opec's main laggard in making record output cut: Report

Iraq has yet to inform its regular oil buyers of cuts to its exports, suggesting it is struggling to fully implement an Opec deal with Russia and other producers on a record supply cut, traders and industry sources said. Smaller producers such as Nigeria and Angola could also hurt the Opec+ group's efforts to cut output by 9.7 million barrels per day from May 1.