110 comments

  • arian_ an hour ago

    Anthropic renting out the data center Elon built for Grok is the kind of plot twist you can't make up.

    • brokencode an hour ago

      Pretty smart for SpaceX though. They’re turning an asset they made for a money-pit (Grok) into probably a major source of revenue ahead of their IPO.

      • 23rf 2 minutes ago

        Its not even that. Its better to be involved in the game with a leader/help out a competitor who is competing against someone you don't like and don't want them to win, than to sit it out.

    • cedws 8 minutes ago

      It was pretty obvious to me that the merger was a way of quietly shutting xAI down in a way that keeps investors happy. With it also being used as a vehicle to offload the Twitter debt to the public, he certainly has good accountants.

    • dboreham 5 minutes ago

      I'm just relieved to read that it isn't in fact...in space.

    • aurareturn 31 minutes ago

      Plot twist but makes perfect sense for both companies.

      Anthropic gets the compute they so desperately need to keep growing. Elon rents out compute that xAI couldn't make use of due to little demand for Grok. SpaceX gets revenue on the books for IPO.

      PS. I want to translate this part:

        We’re very intentional about where we’ll add capacity—partnering with democratic countries whose legal and regulatory frameworks support investments of this scale
      
      To real speak:

        We're putting profits above anything else. Yes, Elon is a far right guy who supported Trump, a president who isn't very democratic, but we're just really desperate for more money. We're also trying to make you forget that xAI is funded by Middle East non-democratic governments. Heck, we'll even buy compute from China if we can sell Anthropic models there.
      • 2ndorderthought 3 minutes ago

        Don't forget the whole, "maybe this will make it easier for xAi to distill anthropic models and we can make another attempt at mechahitler"

  • mirzap an hour ago

    Doubling the five-hour rate limits is merely a marketing stunt if the weekly rates are not also doubled. It simply means that you can reach the weekly limits in three days instead of five.

    • swalsh an hour ago

      I have never come close to my weekly limit, but have hit my hourly limit frequently.

      • codazoda 7 minutes ago

        Same. I hit limits after 45 minutes. I'm on a measly Pro plan. I'm usually building small, open source projects, often from scratch. I only work on these projects in a 2-hour window in the morning. This is my "free time" development. I hope this change helps, because I was days away from switching back to Codex, though I like Claude Code a bit better these days.

        I also hope that the fact I had OpenClaw in my sandbox once is not why I hit these limits so damn fast. I don't use it anymore and I've tried to rid my sandbox of anything "openclaw" but it is in my git history in various places on various projects. Claude doesn't seem to be transparent about this limitation.

        • piyh a minute ago

          Are you using haiku for most tasks? I'm in the Google ecosystem so I'm curious how it is on the other side.

      • mirzap an hour ago

        For me it's the opposite. I almost never hit hourly limit, but I hit weekly limit in about 5 days.

        • nickthegreek 29 minutes ago

          Would be more meaningful if everyone said what plan they are on, as there are 3 different ones that users could be discussing.

          • replygirl 21 minutes ago

            last week with claude i saturated a team premium seat at day 6 of its cycle, and a max 20x seat at day 4, plus ~$150 extra usage spend, with a 60hr work week where i am not even primarily an IC, as well as a codex 20x plan at day 3 with a personal project

          • mirzap 25 minutes ago

            I'm on $200 Max plan

        • extr 35 minutes ago

          What does your usage look like day to day? Are you using a low level amount all day long? I'm with the others here, I've never hit the weekly limit ever, only the hourly, and I consider myself a heavy user.

          • mirzap a minute ago

            I dedicate a significant amount of time to defining the precise actions that agents should perform (PRD/ADR). I break down the feature sets into Milestones and slices (tasks). These tasks are small, well-defined, and scoped. I have a prompt template that the “architect” agent prepares whenever I want to initiate a new feature. This ensures that the prompt structure remains consistent and standardized over time. The generated prompt is then pasted to the “orchestrator,” which performs context discovery (using Repoprompt) and finalizes the plan then proceeds to launch subagents to do the work.

            Based on the size and complexity of the task, as well as any inter-task dependencies, the orchestrator deploys one or more subagents (sometimes 5 or 6 subagents) to work on these mini tasks. Once all tasks are completed, the orchestrator initiates verification and launches a review workflow. This workflow uses the original prompt, acceptance criteria, repository internal guidelines, and relevant skills to conduct a thorough review of the agents’ work.

            Typically, there are one or two review iterations, during which the review agent identifies any issues. Sometimes, I may also notice issues and have to "steer" the orchestrator. The time required for a slice to complete ranges from 30 minutes to 4 or 5 hours, depending on its size, complexity, and the number of subtasks it contains.

            Only if I run about 3 such orchestration in parallel I can reach hourly limit.

      • headcanon 40 minutes ago

        same, I struggle to use more than half of my weekly, even if I max out my 5-hour windows regularly during the day.

    • druskacik 26 minutes ago

      For me personally, I have the basic Claude Code subscription that I use to rewind on some evenings or on weekend, to code a bit for 1-2 hours. I have like 3-5 session with it every week.

      The 5h windows are frustrating because I can go through them quickly if I have a more complex task. I haven't yet met the weekly limit. I'd say there are many cases similar to mine.

    • sidrag22 32 minutes ago

      I've found with opus 4.6 which im still stubbornly using i can burn about 10% of the weekly within a 5 hour window with my workflow.

      Mentally i think about the weekly usage in terms of usage per day so about 14% per day which results in me not using that much early in the week so i can kinda "burn freely" later on. which leads me to a spot where usually on the final two days im sorta thinking about how can i expend that usage ive "saved".

      the 5 hour windows make this harder, sometimes the final day of the week im trying to get that 10% in every 5 hour window of my waking hours and i HATE that, i wanna work when i am most productive, not around some ridiculous window of time, i dont wanna think "I am gonna be utilizing claude the most around 11am so i should send a dumb message to haiku to get my 5 hour window started at 7:30am so i can have it roll over at 12:30."

      So im happy about this change sure. But it is 100% them creating a problem and pretending having some relief from that problem is them doing their users a favor. I understand they are doing it to lower peak hours usage and all that, I still despise it.

    • varispeed 38 minutes ago

      Who cares about rate limits if they serve your prompt using dumbed down model.

  • 0xbadcafebee 38 minutes ago

    Colossus 1 datacenter is the one using illegal power, is poisoning the air for poor communities near Memphis, and is potentially poisoning the water. It's likely the additional demand on the grid will cause massive blackouts during extreme weather events, putting residents at further risk. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colossus_(supercomputer)#Envir...

    So you can put Anthropic on your list of companies that like to talk big about safety, but when the rubber hits the road, profits matter more than safety.

  • htrp 2 hours ago

    >Higher usage limits

    >The following three changes—all effective today—are aimed at improving the experience of using Claude for our most dedicated customers.

    >First, we’re doubling Claude Code’s five-hour rate limits for Pro, Max, Team, and seat-based Enterprise plans.

    >Second, we’re removing the peak hours limit reduction on Claude Code for Pro and Max accounts.

    >Third, we’re raising our API rate limits considerably for Claude Opus models,

    Looks like Elon's finally giving up on XAI and just selling the compute

    • peder an hour ago

      > Looks like Elon's finally giving up on XAI and just selling the compute

      I don't think that's certain yet, but I do think that the open-source models like Gemma and Qwen are getting so good so fast that even Anthropic has real risk around the long-term value of their models and tooling.

      Basically, if I'm Anthropic or xAI, I try to get revenue whenever and wherever possible and see what sticks. There's no value in playing for monopolistic control when everything is so volatile.

      • swalsh 43 minutes ago

        There's always money in the giggawatt datacenter

    • petercooper an hour ago

      I don't know if it relates to the same data centers, but this also comes hours after several still recent Grok models were deprecated at short notice. Grok 4.1 Fast is the cheapest way to do research on X (cheaper than the X API!) and it's gone on May 15: https://docs.x.ai/developers/models - freeing up compute to sell?

      • swalsh 40 minutes ago

        Fuck, I loved grok 4.1, it was a really capable model for the money.

        I'd run agents consuming hundreds of millions of tokens for less than a hundred dollars.

    • JustSkyfall 2 hours ago

      Probably a good idea in all honesty. xAI is a deeply unserious lab

      • throwa356262 an hour ago

        From a technical standpoint xAI is basically Gemini team B who were give A+ salaries to join the company.

        But even then, I suspect their hands were tied in some areas because Elon had some expectations from his AI.

      • cyanydeez 2 hours ago

        There's only so much determinism you can create when you try not to filter (read CENSOR) your LLM.

    • spikels 20 minutes ago

      No I don't ever give up. I would have to be dead or completely incapacitated.

      -Elon

      https://x.com/XFreeze/status/2012390928221094335

    • kingstnap an hour ago

      The details are secret. It very well could be wasted GPU time but Anthropic could have made a killer offering as well.

      I'm just speculating, but a particularly killer offering Elon wouldnt be able to refuse would be if Anthropic agreed to give them some training data / technology.

      • swalsh 42 minutes ago

        Billions in revenue just before your IPO isn't a bad deal either.

    • croes 36 minutes ago

      Or he just got leverage on a competitor

  • gpugreg an hour ago

    > As part of this agreement, we have also expressed interest in partnering with SpaceX to develop multiple gigawatts of orbital AI compute capacity.

    Anthropic is either taking this space business more serious than the general public, or posting this sentence was part of the deal to get the compute.

    • Sevii 38 minutes ago

      Anthropic needs any compute they can get. So if Elon wants to build orbital data centers Anthropic would be happy to run models on it. There isn't really any doubt Elon can build orbital data centers the question is if they are economical compared to earth based.

    • anthonypasq 17 minutes ago

      most of the big tech ceos have mentioned this.

    • joshstrange 42 minutes ago

      Ehh, I think they are just "kissing the ring". This was part of the agreement for the terrestrial datacenter access, pretend like the space orbital compute is more than the boondoggle that it clearly is.

      I want to be clear, I do think that one day something like that will exist, I just don't think it's anywhere close to being a reality, much like FSD.

      Also it costs them, almost [0], nothing to say it and then later come up with some reason why they are no longer interested.

      [0] Maybe a little bit of respect

    • JMKH42 an hour ago

      I don't think space compute is going to work out, but I would certainly say "yes happy to buy space compute from you in the future if you offer it at a good price"

      If it happens it happens, if not, it doesn't.

      • CamperBob2 32 minutes ago

        It makes no sense. We're being presented with a forced choice -- put them in space, or put them in the middle of downtown Seattle.

        This is stupid. I don't understand what's happening... specifically, what mental virus is spreading that lowers everybody's IQ by 10-20 points, evidently including my own. Put the data centers in the ocean, powered by solar and networked with Starlink or LEO. Put them in the desert. Put them 20 miles south of Nowhere, Idaho.

        But space?!

        • Karrot_Kream 21 minutes ago

          Because the US has levied high tariffs on solar cells, can't build their own solar cells economically enough, and has such a torrid permitting system that it can't build transmission lines.

          Elon claims (which I take with a huge grain of salt because he's made endless broken promises in investor calls and interviews) that he disagrees with the administration's stance on solar and would use it to power his DCs if he could, but contends that permitting is a huge problem.

          The US needs to figure out how to build again.

          > This is stupid. I don't understand what's happening... specifically, what mental virus

          "Be kind. Don't be snarky. Converse curiously; don't cross-examine. Edit out swipes"

          • CamperBob2 20 minutes ago

            What does that have to do with my point? Space-based data centers need solar cells too. They are just like terrestrial data centers, only more expensive. For every dollar you save on the PV array, you'll spend two more on radiators.

            And you don't need permits in international waters, any more than you need them in orbit. Lease space on container ships.

            • Karrot_Kream 18 minutes ago

              The argument is that it's too hard to gain the necessary approvals on Earth such that space is faster and easier. Not sure I buy it fully (I do see it somewhat), but that's the argument.

    • re-thc 32 minutes ago

      > or posting this sentence was part of the deal to get the compute

      All it says is expressed interest.

      That's like asking a casual how are you...

    • Rover222 39 minutes ago

      It’s weird to not take this seriously. It’s obvious it’s serious and they’re pursuing it.

  • everfrustrated 3 minutes ago

    For those who haven't been following the build out.

    xAI has added about 500MW of nvidia gpu capacity in ~April

    and will add another 500MW before the end of the year totaling about 2GW.

  • cbg0 an hour ago

    They're doubling the five hour limits, but no mention about the weekly limit. So overall it's the same maximum usage, right?

    • adriand an hour ago

      I think so, but that's also really great because I frequently run into the five hour caps, but very rarely use my entire weekly allotment. There are lots of situations where I do things like write the plan for all the work that has to get done, and then set a reminder to execute the plan after I get home, when I'm done making dinner (because e.g. my five hour cap ends at 6pm). Higher caps for the five hour period is a lot more convenient.

      • novaleaf 17 minutes ago

        I (and many others) are the opposite. I run out of quota is 4-5 days. Generally no issues with the 5hr cap. ($200 sub)

    • joncik91 an hour ago

      Some get the reset, some don't it seems :(

  • antipaul an hour ago

    "All of [SpaceX]'s compute capacity at Colossus 1"

    SpaceX/xAI also has Colossus 2, with double or more the GPUs

    Seems xAI will still be around

  • skeledrew an hour ago

    Oh. Just as I'm in the process of migrating to Pi+Qwen (local). This was probably going to be my last month on the Pro sub as I'm seriously fed up with the limits and degradation that started weeks after I signed up. Let's see how this shakes out.

  • 2001zhaozhao 4 minutes ago

    I mean, as someone who has the Max 20x plan and uses it only outside work (so I could not hit anywhere close to the weekly limit at all), I'll gladly take the 5-hour limit doubling.

    My first impression to this post is "what the hell are they thinking?", but actually it seems like a decent move by them.

    They basically made it so that normal users can better utilize their plan while not benefitting the backgroundagentmaxxers and stealth openclaw abusers in the ranks of their subscription audience.

    Hopefully this leads to a loosening of harness restrictions later.

  • boramalper an hour ago

    I wonder if it's just Elon realising that xAI can't beat OpenAI and thus deciding to give all his compute capacity to Anthropic instead.

    Certainly an interesting day for xAI.

    • bpodgursky an hour ago

      Building datacenters plays to his strengths. It's a good partnership if he can stomach it.

      • consumer451 an hour ago

        I would think that stomaching Musk would be that hard part. Just goes to show how compute-constrained Anthropic is at this time.

        He literally did a Nazi salute on stage, twice! Check the video, and tell me what you see.

        • w4yai 11 minutes ago

          If it is a Nazi salute, it's a real bad one !

        • 1234letshaveatw 33 minutes ago

          meh, he's no Graham Platner

  • int32_64 an hour ago

    What's the current status of the 'biggest computer wins' vs. specialized proprietary research/data in the AI arms race? People had such high hopes for xAI because of the monster machine Elon built. Or has xAI just turned over too much staff too quickly?

  • minimaxir an hour ago

    > First, we’re doubling Claude Code’s five-hour rate limits for Pro, Max, Team, and seat-based Enterprise plans.

    The fine-print-omission appears to be that weekly limits are not doubled. The progressive 5-hour rate limit shrinking was indeed an efficiency blocker that finally convinced me to cancel, but being only able to get 4 full sessions a week as opposed to 8 doesn't compell me to resubscribe.

    • dw_arthur 8 minutes ago

      For my hobbyist purposes Deepseek v4 Flash has replaced Claude Code because I was also sick of hitting 5 hour limits with Claude. Right now, the only thing I miss from Claude is multi-modal image support. I can work around no image support since I can use v4 Flash all day and spend around $1. I am aware Deepseek is currently discounting their API at 75% off so I may try out another provider once the discount is gone at the end of the month.

      At this point if feels like if you properly scope your work open weight LLMs are adequate.

  • swalsh 44 minutes ago

    Models are a commodity, let's say Elon actually figures out building datacenters in space, or maybe he continues to be the leader of building earth based datacenters. Probably better business to not have yourself as your only customer. Dogfood, and open it to all.

    • mplewis 44 minutes ago

      The first is impossible and the second isn't happening and won't happen.

      • croes 40 minutes ago

        I wouldn’t say impossible but not effective

    • nextstep 36 minutes ago

      the leader of building earth-based datacenters lol

      what are we even talking about

  • y42 an hour ago

    I want to believe. A couple of weeks ago I fell into this "trap", they offered a similar thing. I subscribed to the Pro Plan. Had fun for a couple of weeks and then I entered frustration phase. I love the product, but I hate those up and downs. My rant made it to HN front page - which I am not happy of. I want the stuff I build to be seen on the front page.

  • Philpax 2 hours ago
    • quinncom an hour ago

      One of the reasons I refuse to use xAI’s models is because of the outsized negative environmental impacts of the methane gas turbines.

      Now I have to avoid Claude too.

      • bottlepalm 27 minutes ago

        If you can make up an inconsequential arbitrary rationalization to not use a service then I’m sure you can do the opposite to convince yourself to use it.

        That’s what virtue signaling is I guess - the action you’re taking is pointless, the only point is to tell everyone you’re taking it therefore feed the narrative forward?

        The entire economy runs off gas turbines though this is the thing you boycott?

        • formvoltron 9 minutes ago

          gas turbines generally are for peaking. Not for base load.

          Hopefully Elon lets you into his glass bubble when the s** cooks on the fan.

    • thrownthatway an hour ago

      Why?

      • chainwax an hour ago

        I think he's referring to the fact that Colossus is powered by fossil fuels.

        • kfrzcode an hour ago

          literally the entire economy is powered by fossil fuels

          • HarHarVeryFunny 14 minutes ago

            As far as electricity goes, the US is currently 50/50 fossil fuels and renewables (solar, wind, etc).

        • thrownthatway an hour ago

          What’s wrong with burning fossil fuels for electricity?

          • formvoltron 5 minutes ago

            Maybe because nature put them in the ground for a reason?

            Minor risk that taking what took 200 million years to put into the ground out in a few hundred years?

          • morgoths_bane 37 minutes ago

            It may be more productive to ask what is right with burning fossil fuels for electricity right in the middle of marginalized communities that have to bear the cost of this pollution for AI slop.

  • tanh an hour ago

    Wouldn't trust them not to take a copy and use it to distill. Wonder what security there is

  • amacbride an hour ago

    As a bonus, it looks like they reset limits a few minutes ago -- I went from 53% of my weekly allotment to 0%.

    • readitalready 25 minutes ago

      Not for me. 2 Claude Max 20x accounts here both at high usage on weekly allotments.

  • nethunters an hour ago

    Hopefully this filters through to Copilot's recent rate-limits

  • athrow an hour ago

    Anthropic taketh and Anthropic giveth.

    • HarHarVeryFunny 17 minutes ago

      Exactly.

      Today they say this, then tomorrow they'll silently reduce limits and argue with anyone who calls them on it.

  • lairv an hour ago

    For a space that supposedly had "no moat", the number of players still competing for frontier models seems to be shrinking pretty fast

    • swader999 40 minutes ago

      What's going to be the hit on our atmosphere when the data centers re enter? I guess it won't matter as the AI will replace the humans by then for the GDP and tax base.

  • Rover222 35 minutes ago

    Reading the comments here again surprises me how in an anti-Elon bubble most folks are. They are renting out spare Colossus 1 capacity. Colossus 2 is still coming online. Orbital data centers are really the plan in the next few years. XAi is still behind, but not a disaster considering how late they entered (and Elon’s unfortunate fixation on anime characters).

    SpaceX is extremely uniquely positioned to crush the rest of the world combined in order to orbital data centers.

  • iamleppert an hour ago

    Hopefully they will work on response time. I've been noticing it taking 5+ minutes for each turn, for not complicated requests. Seems to vary based on time of day too.

  • Marciplan an hour ago

    If Anthropic and SpaceX and OpenAI are all going public this year then this is a clever move to stick it to OpenAI. However, I'm kinda sus of my Claude subscription now

  • 4b11b4 26 minutes ago

    I mean... seems like a no-brainer

  • stavros an hour ago

    > First, we’re doubling Claude Code’s five-hour rate limits for Pro, Max, Team, and seat-based Enterprise plans.

    Ok I guess, this was a bit of a hassle, but you're not increasing my weekly allowance, you're just not annoying me as often.

    > Second, we’re removing the peak hours limit reduction on Claude Code for Pro and Max accounts.

    It wasn't a limit reduction (as in, I didn't have a lower 5-hour limit), it was "tokens are more expensive" and it ate my weekly limits faster. This should never have been instituted to begin with.

    > Third, we’re raising our API rate limits considerably for Claude Opus models, as shown in the table below:

    Meh.

    This is why I don't care for all the "it's a subscription, you're free to not use it!" arguments here. It's not an all-you-can-eat subscription with some generous fair use limits, it's a "X tokens per month for $Y", and they keep lowering the X unilaterally and in secret.

  • SilverElfin an hour ago

    > As part of this agreement, we have also expressed interest in partnering with SpaceX to develop multiple gigawatts of orbital AI compute capacity.

    Disgusting. For an allegedly not evil company, they’re very willing to pollute our night skies as well as partner up with a CEO who has been fanning the flames of extremism (particularly the emboldened racists / supremacists of the far right).

    • treme an hour ago

      CEO that accelerated eletric car industry by 10 years

      CEO that accelerated space industry by 10+ years

      CEO that accelerated HCI industry by 10 years

      • triceratops 30 minutes ago

        > CEO that accelerated eletric car industry by 10 years

        China was doing this regardless. It was a national security issue for them.

      • SilverElfin 43 minutes ago

        I’m sure that’ll comfort all the minorities affected by the rampant amplification of extremists on Twitter. I don’t disagree those are big achievements but also they’re irrelevant to those who feel the impact of Musk’s own extremism, and their lives would be unchanged if none of the Musk companies existed. If you’re unaffected by racism then it’s going to feel easy to only look at the positives of Musk.

      • etchalon an hour ago

        A person can do good and bad things.

      • croes 36 minutes ago

        Pablo Escobar built hospitals. Ted Bundy saved lives on a suicide hotline

        so what?

        Nobody is 100% evil

        Musk helped dismantling USAID which leads to many people’s death.

    • woah an hour ago

      Once they send the cooling water up into orbit, it's gone for good

    • noworriesnate an hour ago

      I doubt it'll ever happen because heat dissipation will be a big problem, but this is likely in response to the proliferation of data centers. I would rather have data centers in space than convert countryside to concrete and metal jungles.

    • richwater an hour ago

      > pollute our night skies

      This is not a serious argument.

      • josefresco an hour ago

        It is very much a valid argument. SpaceX has been working on this issue for years.

        https://theconversation.com/a-million-new-spacex-satellites-...

        FTA: "SpaceX has done a lot of engineering work to make its Starlink satellites fainter. They are still too bright for research astronomy, but thanks to new coatings, their brightness has not increased dramatically even as SpaceX has launched larger and larger satellites."

        • skeledrew 31 minutes ago

          I acknowledge there's an issue here, but I don't think it makes sense to label it "pollution". When something is polluted it generally means using it can lead to some form of harm, directly or indirectly. I fail to see how confusing satellites for stars stars causes harm, per se (though of course it would suck to be an astronomer).

          • akarlsten 8 minutes ago

            Starlink constellations will lead to a world where there is absolutely nowhere you can go where you cant see man-made junk. No truly pristine wilderness anywhere without being able to see formations of glowing dots helping "off-grid" idiots stream Netflix. It's spiritually harmful if nothing else.

            Also who said pollution has to be harmful? Light pollution is a thing, and this is the same class of problem.

            Why dont they dip the satellites in vantablack to make them truly invisible?

      • SilverElfin an hour ago

        Of course it’s a serious argument. Anyone using telescopes or doing Astro photography now sees Starlink satellites leaving trails all over the place. And that’s with a small number compared to the 1 million satellites they are proposing. It’s a public resource that a private company is stealing from all of us.

    • bigyabai an hour ago

      "HN pretends that companies have morals: Part 48,037,986"

      • slopinthebag an hour ago

        Counterpoint: Valve

        Which is kind of like the exception that proves the rule hahaha

        • minimaxir an hour ago

          You haven't been following the discourse around a) how Steam handles GenAI disclosures and b) how Steam handles forum/review moderation.

          People haven't been saying "GabeN can do no wrong" for awhile.

          • slopinthebag an hour ago

            I was motivated to post this because I was just reading a thread where many users were praising Valve and GabeN for how their company is run, but I'm curious to read more about A & B.

        • bigyabai an hour ago

          Valve isn't moral, they're just privately owned. CS cases have given them enough fuck-you money to rehabilitate their image in any way they see fit.

    • morpheos137 an hour ago

      orbital data center == scam company. if you don't understand physics or economics why should i trust you in simpler things. if you do understand are are lying why should i trust you. anthropic and their holier than though SV brand is cooked.

  • hparadiz an hour ago

    Give them whatever they need. Time to go to the moon.