Max Kane

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Max Kane

Max Kane

@maxekane

CEO of Novella - Complicated Insurance Made Simple || Occasionally blog: https://t.co/GXlDJKRtkN

New York, NY Katılım Nisan 2009
1.5K Takip Edilen446 Takipçiler
Max Kane
Max Kane@maxekane·
@Nick_Lamparelli Theoretically, yeah. But most insurtechs are not really AI native. Even systems built 5 years ago need to be scrapped and entirely rebuilt for AI. The recency advantage here is so strong given the pace technology is moving
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🇱 🇦 🇲 🇵 🇸
🇱 🇦 🇲 🇵 🇸@Nick_Lamparelli·
@maxekane Do insurtechs have an advantage here? I would expect any firm started in the last 5-10 years to brag about how they don't have the issues these other firms have and are built on AI now. DO they have an advantage?
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Insurtech Bro
Insurtech Bro@insurtechbro·
Agreed here, it’s an uphill battle for incumbents in terms of adoption. For new ai-native companies I think the best way is to make the front door of the process mirror the existing way and use AI in the background to unwind all the mess and serve the user faster. Insurance example, agents get tired of portals so just let them email submissions in the same way they do today but get back to them in 5 minutes instead of 5 days to win them over…
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Max Kane
Max Kane@maxekane·
Crosby team is crushing, congrats @ryanjdaniels and @jsarihan! Proud to be a small day 1 supporter
Ryan Daniels@ryanjdaniels

📣 Update: we raised our $60m Series B from @Lux_Capital, @IndexVentures and @01Advisors, with participation from @sequoia, @eladgil and @BainCapVC . When we came out of stealth 283 days ago, we had negotiated contracts worth $30m for our clients. As of last month, that number is over $1 billion. We work with the most ambitious companies in the world, including @tryramp, @clay and @RogoAI. Today, we want you to hear from some of them directly. Contracts are the rails of commerce. @crosbylegal is a hybrid AI law firm that gets them signed 80% faster. We’re announcing our Series B to keep scaling the dream law firm.

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Max Kane retweetledi
Ryan Daniels
Ryan Daniels@ryanjdaniels·
📣 Update: we raised our $60m Series B from @Lux_Capital, @IndexVentures and @01Advisors, with participation from @sequoia, @eladgil and @BainCapVC . When we came out of stealth 283 days ago, we had negotiated contracts worth $30m for our clients. As of last month, that number is over $1 billion. We work with the most ambitious companies in the world, including @tryramp, @clay and @RogoAI. Today, we want you to hear from some of them directly. Contracts are the rails of commerce. @crosbylegal is a hybrid AI law firm that gets them signed 80% faster. We’re announcing our Series B to keep scaling the dream law firm.
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Max Kane
Max Kane@maxekane·
This is such a stupid take. @ggreenwald contradicts himself in the tweet itself. Yes, the term terrorist is subjective. When somebody causes terror, they’re a terrorist. When they stop, they’re no longer a terrorist. A core tenant of the west that @ggreenwald rejects is our way of life is good - dare I say the best! American superiority has led to fewer deaths and more wealth than any ruling power in history. Acting against that makes you a terrorist to American interests. Since we believe our way of life is great, we fight terrorist who oppose it incessantly. When they change, or recognize that our way of life is great, we stop fighting them. Is there some conspiracy here I’m missing? @ggreenwald rejects that the American/western way of life is great. That’s why he fights against it. He said on his debate with @KonstantinKisin the he views America as “the most destabilizing force in the world”. Great - then why is he still here? @ggreenwald if you so strongly embrace those who oppose our way of life, why not go join them? You have freedom of movement.
Glenn Greenwald@ggreenwald

There is no emptier, more malleable or more manipulative propaganda term than "terrorist": just an empty word to demonize US enemies and justify war and attacks on core liberties. All these Al Qaeda "terrorists" are now nice allies given their subservience to the US and Israel:

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Grant Horvat
Grant Horvat@GrantHorvatGolf·
Honest thoughts/reactions to the Scottie Scheffler video? ⬇️
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yoni rechtman
yoni rechtman@yrechtman·
Nominal stages (seed, A, B etc.) don’t really matter. Instead, the only important distinction is between risk and scale. Everything else is nomenclature and posturing along a gradient. Full post at the link below. Too long to screenshot.
yoni rechtman tweet media
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Max Kane
Max Kane@maxekane·
I know nothing about tariffs. But out of fear of me getting kicked off @X if I don’t opine, here’s my best attempt: The simple explanation is that this is just a way to renegotiate better trade deals. That’s the Occam’s razor. But @realDonaldTrump, @elonmusk and Co see the deficit as existential, as it probably is. Paying off that deficit at current rates is impossible, the interest expense alone is staggering. In order to bring rates down, markets need to come down first. Theoretically, the 3D chess move here is: Tariffs > Market crash > Lower rates > refi debt to make it more manageable. Folks around the admin have floated this along with eliminating income tax in a post tariff world (where tariffs make up the missing government revenue). In theory, the 4D chess move could be: Tariffs > Market crash > Lower rates > refi debt to make it more manageable > eliminate income tax > market fly > increase tax revenue from increased spending > start paying off principal of debt Trying to play 4D chess with the global economy is nuts. But if anyone would do it, it would be a lame duck @realDonaldTrump who doesn’t actually care his political future but cares about his legacy of fixing Americas debt problem.
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Max Kane
Max Kane@maxekane·
@peter_brecht If E&S was an efficient market, a distributor would know the best home for every risk. Being that it's structurally inefficient, underwriters are bending their guidelines to make things work that they probably should avoid. AI is the path to an efficient market.
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Max Kane
Max Kane@maxekane·
VCs are kind of like squirrels. They get very excited about something, go a little crazy, and then move on very, very quickly. A few months ago, AI enabled services were all-the-rage but it feels like the hype has faded somewhat. Maybe it’s due to other AI companies growing so quickly or perhaps it’s because the modern zeitgeist moves so quickly that it’s impossible to linger on a topic for more than a few weeks. When we started Novella in early 2024, we had a thesis. Injecting purpose trained AI into traditional service businesses would lead to order-of-magnitude level efficiency gains. The second part of that thesis was that value would accrue not to the technology vendor but to the new service providers built natively around AI. The rationale is simple. If AI is going to be as disruptive as we believe it will, the organizational changes required from an incumbent would be impossible to effectuate. These changes wouldn’t come from buying a new SaaS tool but from building an entirely new organization from the ground up. We set out to build this new kind of services company, where we build almost all traditional software in house and train AI tools to do exactly what we need. We would hire a small team of domain experts and use AI to superpower them. Meeting with investors for our first round in Q1 of 2024, the idea felt novel. And then, over the following months, VCs wrote blog post after blog post anointing AI enabled services as the next darling of venture investors. It felt good to be a few months ahead of the trend and validating that we were on the right path. But as quickly as AI enabled services were in vogue, they were out. Tech-Twitter moved on to the likes of Cursor, Base 44, Lovable, Icon and other companies showing growth curves we’ve never seen before. But with all the hype — and unhype — around this category, it feels timely to dive into what does an AI enabled services company look like? What makes them unique and different? And what’s it like to build one? In this post, I’ll go through our thesis, what we’ve done and how we think about building the next billion dollar AI services company — a specialty insurance brokerage. This post will be the first of a series where we dive into the details of building an AI enabled service company, breaking down everything from R&D, organizational structure, financial statement construction and more. Follow along if you’re interested. Meet Novella At Novella, we’re building the first AI native insurance wholesaler. In insurance, wholesalers help brokers find coverage for their high-risk, hard to insure customers. When a broker has an account they’re struggling to find coverage for, they come to us. We work with insurance carriers that specialize in writing high-risk business. We act as a specialty broker for the traditional broker helping them find coverage for their most complicated customers. Over the last 5 years, things like climate change, inflation and a challenging political environment in the United States have made assets that were once easy to insure, much harder to underwrite. Not a month goes by without some major story about how difficult it is to get insurance in Florida or California. But the problem isn’t unique to those states, it’s happening everywhere. A high risk customer could be a large property on the coast where flooding or inclement weather has become more prevalent in recent years; a contractor working on large new projects where ambulance chasing lawyers have made lawsuits much more common. Businesses need insurance and many of them have become much more difficult to underwrite in recent years. Novella is helping people protect those businesses. Insurance wholesaling is not new, it’s been around for decades. Until now though, it’s been an entirely human driven service without any technology. Ryan Specialty (NYSE: RYAN) does not even have an R&D expense item on their P&L. They do, however, pay out 57% of revenue in employee compensation. As is standard with traditional services businesses, they don’t invest in technology but rather expect people to manually get things done. Until AI, specifically large language models, this made sense. Specialty insurance is unstructured by nature. Every asset has a unique twist that makes it difficult to insure. Unlike simpler insurance that can be underwritten by answering a few questions and collecting fixed data points, specialty insurance underwriting is an unstructured negotiation. Wholesalers liaise between customers and underwriters crafting a unique coverage package for the specific asset being underwritten. Taking in large amounts of unstructured data and creating a unique output — in this case, an insurance quote — is what LLMs are best at. Specialty insurance has been a hassle for a long time. But until LLMs, we didn’t have the technology to fix it. Now that we do, Novella is building the first AI native insurance wholesaler. We’re building our whole tech stack AI — Agent first with people sitting on top. So far we’ve trained agents to underwrite new accounts, match them with the right underwriters, manage communications between carriers and customers and much more. Novella is building an insurance wholesaler that uses our AI — Agents to create a better experience for our customers and insurance carrier partners. All underpinned by an incredibly high level of human service that uses AI to supercharge our team. Being 10X Better When building a new venture scale company, Peter Thiel famously said if you’re not inventing something new, you better do something existing 10X better than it’s currently done. What does it mean to build a 10X better services company? You need to provide a 10X better experience to customers than whatever incumbent you’re competing against. Customers need to love your product 10X more for it to justify the switching costs. There’s another axis we can meaningfully improve on with AI — unit economics. We can use AI to create businesses that deliver 10X more value for 1/10 the cost. At Novella, when we think about being 10X better on these two axes: experience and unit economics / efficiency. On the experience side, we’ve built a platform that gives brokers more information and more control over their customers than any other wholesaler. We’ve also built AI agents that ingest and understand insurance information in seconds so we can provide tier 1 service to more customers than would be possible handling every account manually. Our AI — Agents are some of the most reliable and responsive wholesaler brokers in the world already today. And we’ve barely scratched the surface. On the unit economics, or efficiency, side it’s a little different. Every AI enabled service business has their own efficiency metrics and benchmarks. For us, Ryan Specialty’s 57% compensation margin is our benchmark. At scale, we expect to spend far less than that on compensation while also providing 10X better service to our customers. (My next Novella will dive into the financial statement construction of an AI enabled service company and how to introduce R&D spend into a manual business.) AI enabled services companies are a new animal. We haven’t seen one get to major scale so we don’t really know what these companies will look like. What is the margin profile of a company that isn’t SaaS but their service revenue looks a lot like SaaS revenue? How much revenue can an account manager be responsible for when they have scores of AI — Agents supporting their work? What is the right capitalization strategy for this kind of company? Other than servicing customers in the best way possible, I see Novella as inventing a new kind of company. We’re not the only ones doing it, there are great teams building accounting firms, law firms, staffing agencies and more. But based on our early traction, we’ll be one of the first companies to define what this new class of company looks like — an AI native service company.
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Ryan Hughes
Ryan Hughes@Ryan_Hughes_Ins·
One of the best and most accurate things I have read in a long time.
Max Kane@maxekane

VCs are kind of like squirrels. They get very excited about something, go a little crazy, and then move on very, very quickly. A few months ago, AI enabled services were all-the-rage but it feels like the hype has faded somewhat. Maybe it’s due to other AI companies growing so quickly or perhaps it’s because the modern zeitgeist moves so quickly that it’s impossible to linger on a topic for more than a few weeks. When we started Novella in early 2024, we had a thesis. Injecting purpose trained AI into traditional service businesses would lead to order-of-magnitude level efficiency gains. The second part of that thesis was that value would accrue not to the technology vendor but to the new service providers built natively around AI. The rationale is simple. If AI is going to be as disruptive as we believe it will, the organizational changes required from an incumbent would be impossible to effectuate. These changes wouldn’t come from buying a new SaaS tool but from building an entirely new organization from the ground up. We set out to build this new kind of services company, where we build almost all traditional software in house and train AI tools to do exactly what we need. We would hire a small team of domain experts and use AI to superpower them. Meeting with investors for our first round in Q1 of 2024, the idea felt novel. And then, over the following months, VCs wrote blog post after blog post anointing AI enabled services as the next darling of venture investors. It felt good to be a few months ahead of the trend and validating that we were on the right path. But as quickly as AI enabled services were in vogue, they were out. Tech-Twitter moved on to the likes of Cursor, Base 44, Lovable, Icon and other companies showing growth curves we’ve never seen before. But with all the hype — and unhype — around this category, it feels timely to dive into what does an AI enabled services company look like? What makes them unique and different? And what’s it like to build one? In this post, I’ll go through our thesis, what we’ve done and how we think about building the next billion dollar AI services company — a specialty insurance brokerage. This post will be the first of a series where we dive into the details of building an AI enabled service company, breaking down everything from R&D, organizational structure, financial statement construction and more. Follow along if you’re interested. Meet Novella At Novella, we’re building the first AI native insurance wholesaler. In insurance, wholesalers help brokers find coverage for their high-risk, hard to insure customers. When a broker has an account they’re struggling to find coverage for, they come to us. We work with insurance carriers that specialize in writing high-risk business. We act as a specialty broker for the traditional broker helping them find coverage for their most complicated customers. Over the last 5 years, things like climate change, inflation and a challenging political environment in the United States have made assets that were once easy to insure, much harder to underwrite. Not a month goes by without some major story about how difficult it is to get insurance in Florida or California. But the problem isn’t unique to those states, it’s happening everywhere. A high risk customer could be a large property on the coast where flooding or inclement weather has become more prevalent in recent years; a contractor working on large new projects where ambulance chasing lawyers have made lawsuits much more common. Businesses need insurance and many of them have become much more difficult to underwrite in recent years. Novella is helping people protect those businesses. Insurance wholesaling is not new, it’s been around for decades. Until now though, it’s been an entirely human driven service without any technology. Ryan Specialty (NYSE: RYAN) does not even have an R&D expense item on their P&L. They do, however, pay out 57% of revenue in employee compensation. As is standard with traditional services businesses, they don’t invest in technology but rather expect people to manually get things done. Until AI, specifically large language models, this made sense. Specialty insurance is unstructured by nature. Every asset has a unique twist that makes it difficult to insure. Unlike simpler insurance that can be underwritten by answering a few questions and collecting fixed data points, specialty insurance underwriting is an unstructured negotiation. Wholesalers liaise between customers and underwriters crafting a unique coverage package for the specific asset being underwritten. Taking in large amounts of unstructured data and creating a unique output — in this case, an insurance quote — is what LLMs are best at. Specialty insurance has been a hassle for a long time. But until LLMs, we didn’t have the technology to fix it. Now that we do, Novella is building the first AI native insurance wholesaler. We’re building our whole tech stack AI — Agent first with people sitting on top. So far we’ve trained agents to underwrite new accounts, match them with the right underwriters, manage communications between carriers and customers and much more. Novella is building an insurance wholesaler that uses our AI — Agents to create a better experience for our customers and insurance carrier partners. All underpinned by an incredibly high level of human service that uses AI to supercharge our team. Being 10X Better When building a new venture scale company, Peter Thiel famously said if you’re not inventing something new, you better do something existing 10X better than it’s currently done. What does it mean to build a 10X better services company? You need to provide a 10X better experience to customers than whatever incumbent you’re competing against. Customers need to love your product 10X more for it to justify the switching costs. There’s another axis we can meaningfully improve on with AI — unit economics. We can use AI to create businesses that deliver 10X more value for 1/10 the cost. At Novella, when we think about being 10X better on these two axes: experience and unit economics / efficiency. On the experience side, we’ve built a platform that gives brokers more information and more control over their customers than any other wholesaler. We’ve also built AI agents that ingest and understand insurance information in seconds so we can provide tier 1 service to more customers than would be possible handling every account manually. Our AI — Agents are some of the most reliable and responsive wholesaler brokers in the world already today. And we’ve barely scratched the surface. On the unit economics, or efficiency, side it’s a little different. Every AI enabled service business has their own efficiency metrics and benchmarks. For us, Ryan Specialty’s 57% compensation margin is our benchmark. At scale, we expect to spend far less than that on compensation while also providing 10X better service to our customers. (My next Novella will dive into the financial statement construction of an AI enabled service company and how to introduce R&D spend into a manual business.) AI enabled services companies are a new animal. We haven’t seen one get to major scale so we don’t really know what these companies will look like. What is the margin profile of a company that isn’t SaaS but their service revenue looks a lot like SaaS revenue? How much revenue can an account manager be responsible for when they have scores of AI — Agents supporting their work? What is the right capitalization strategy for this kind of company? Other than servicing customers in the best way possible, I see Novella as inventing a new kind of company. We’re not the only ones doing it, there are great teams building accounting firms, law firms, staffing agencies and more. But based on our early traction, we’ll be one of the first companies to define what this new class of company looks like — an AI native service company.

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Broker Brett
Broker Brett@Broker_Brett·
I met @maxekane through @ohitsstuart, cool things come out of #NYNY!! What Max and the bynovella.com team are up to is worth taking a look if you’re in the Commercial #Insurance game, and worth taking a look at in general if you geek out on #insurtech or #fintech.
Max Kane@maxekane

VCs are kind of like squirrels. They get very excited about something, go a little crazy, and then move on very, very quickly. A few months ago, AI enabled services were all-the-rage but it feels like the hype has faded somewhat. Maybe it’s due to other AI companies growing so quickly or perhaps it’s because the modern zeitgeist moves so quickly that it’s impossible to linger on a topic for more than a few weeks. When we started Novella in early 2024, we had a thesis. Injecting purpose trained AI into traditional service businesses would lead to order-of-magnitude level efficiency gains. The second part of that thesis was that value would accrue not to the technology vendor but to the new service providers built natively around AI. The rationale is simple. If AI is going to be as disruptive as we believe it will, the organizational changes required from an incumbent would be impossible to effectuate. These changes wouldn’t come from buying a new SaaS tool but from building an entirely new organization from the ground up. We set out to build this new kind of services company, where we build almost all traditional software in house and train AI tools to do exactly what we need. We would hire a small team of domain experts and use AI to superpower them. Meeting with investors for our first round in Q1 of 2024, the idea felt novel. And then, over the following months, VCs wrote blog post after blog post anointing AI enabled services as the next darling of venture investors. It felt good to be a few months ahead of the trend and validating that we were on the right path. But as quickly as AI enabled services were in vogue, they were out. Tech-Twitter moved on to the likes of Cursor, Base 44, Lovable, Icon and other companies showing growth curves we’ve never seen before. But with all the hype — and unhype — around this category, it feels timely to dive into what does an AI enabled services company look like? What makes them unique and different? And what’s it like to build one? In this post, I’ll go through our thesis, what we’ve done and how we think about building the next billion dollar AI services company — a specialty insurance brokerage. This post will be the first of a series where we dive into the details of building an AI enabled service company, breaking down everything from R&D, organizational structure, financial statement construction and more. Follow along if you’re interested. Meet Novella At Novella, we’re building the first AI native insurance wholesaler. In insurance, wholesalers help brokers find coverage for their high-risk, hard to insure customers. When a broker has an account they’re struggling to find coverage for, they come to us. We work with insurance carriers that specialize in writing high-risk business. We act as a specialty broker for the traditional broker helping them find coverage for their most complicated customers. Over the last 5 years, things like climate change, inflation and a challenging political environment in the United States have made assets that were once easy to insure, much harder to underwrite. Not a month goes by without some major story about how difficult it is to get insurance in Florida or California. But the problem isn’t unique to those states, it’s happening everywhere. A high risk customer could be a large property on the coast where flooding or inclement weather has become more prevalent in recent years; a contractor working on large new projects where ambulance chasing lawyers have made lawsuits much more common. Businesses need insurance and many of them have become much more difficult to underwrite in recent years. Novella is helping people protect those businesses. Insurance wholesaling is not new, it’s been around for decades. Until now though, it’s been an entirely human driven service without any technology. Ryan Specialty (NYSE: RYAN) does not even have an R&D expense item on their P&L. They do, however, pay out 57% of revenue in employee compensation. As is standard with traditional services businesses, they don’t invest in technology but rather expect people to manually get things done. Until AI, specifically large language models, this made sense. Specialty insurance is unstructured by nature. Every asset has a unique twist that makes it difficult to insure. Unlike simpler insurance that can be underwritten by answering a few questions and collecting fixed data points, specialty insurance underwriting is an unstructured negotiation. Wholesalers liaise between customers and underwriters crafting a unique coverage package for the specific asset being underwritten. Taking in large amounts of unstructured data and creating a unique output — in this case, an insurance quote — is what LLMs are best at. Specialty insurance has been a hassle for a long time. But until LLMs, we didn’t have the technology to fix it. Now that we do, Novella is building the first AI native insurance wholesaler. We’re building our whole tech stack AI — Agent first with people sitting on top. So far we’ve trained agents to underwrite new accounts, match them with the right underwriters, manage communications between carriers and customers and much more. Novella is building an insurance wholesaler that uses our AI — Agents to create a better experience for our customers and insurance carrier partners. All underpinned by an incredibly high level of human service that uses AI to supercharge our team. Being 10X Better When building a new venture scale company, Peter Thiel famously said if you’re not inventing something new, you better do something existing 10X better than it’s currently done. What does it mean to build a 10X better services company? You need to provide a 10X better experience to customers than whatever incumbent you’re competing against. Customers need to love your product 10X more for it to justify the switching costs. There’s another axis we can meaningfully improve on with AI — unit economics. We can use AI to create businesses that deliver 10X more value for 1/10 the cost. At Novella, when we think about being 10X better on these two axes: experience and unit economics / efficiency. On the experience side, we’ve built a platform that gives brokers more information and more control over their customers than any other wholesaler. We’ve also built AI agents that ingest and understand insurance information in seconds so we can provide tier 1 service to more customers than would be possible handling every account manually. Our AI — Agents are some of the most reliable and responsive wholesaler brokers in the world already today. And we’ve barely scratched the surface. On the unit economics, or efficiency, side it’s a little different. Every AI enabled service business has their own efficiency metrics and benchmarks. For us, Ryan Specialty’s 57% compensation margin is our benchmark. At scale, we expect to spend far less than that on compensation while also providing 10X better service to our customers. (My next Novella will dive into the financial statement construction of an AI enabled service company and how to introduce R&D spend into a manual business.) AI enabled services companies are a new animal. We haven’t seen one get to major scale so we don’t really know what these companies will look like. What is the margin profile of a company that isn’t SaaS but their service revenue looks a lot like SaaS revenue? How much revenue can an account manager be responsible for when they have scores of AI — Agents supporting their work? What is the right capitalization strategy for this kind of company? Other than servicing customers in the best way possible, I see Novella as inventing a new kind of company. We’re not the only ones doing it, there are great teams building accounting firms, law firms, staffing agencies and more. But based on our early traction, we’ll be one of the first companies to define what this new class of company looks like — an AI native service company.

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Dez Fleming
Dez Fleming@DezFleming·
Anybody down for a poker tournament bringing together founders, operators, and investors in NYC? Fun, low stakes way to compete + network could be sick, know of a few recurring games that go on but curious as to what people think
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