#app cost estimation
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luminoustec · 9 months ago
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icarus-showmethemoon · 8 months ago
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trying to get sterilized before Hes back in the whitehouse but ive never had ANYTHING surgical done since i was like 5 so im so lost lol
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cosysta · 2 months ago
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https://cosysta.com/app-development-cost-calculator/
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furiouslovepolice · 4 months ago
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Know & compare the monthly payments from 1 year to 10 years. This App will show you the monthly payments required for car loans lasting 1 year, 2 years, 3 years, 4 years, 5 years, 6 years, 7 years, 8 years, 9 years & 10 years. Simply enter your total loan amount and the annual interest rate. Then press "Calculate", to see the monthly payments for each loan term.
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onlineappreviews · 5 months ago
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harshathusm · 6 months ago
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How much does it cost to develop a dating app like Tinder
USM Business Systems
Services:
Mobile app development
Artificial Intelligence
Machine Learning
Android app development
RPA
Big data
HR Management
Workforce Management
IoT
IOS App Development
Cloud Migration
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creolestudios · 1 year ago
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vijay01 · 1 year ago
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Mobile Game Development Cost can be influenced by various factors. Here are five key elements that significantly impact the overall cost: Complexity of the Game,Graphics and Artwork,Platform Compatibility,Technology and Tools, Testing and Iteration.
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enixostudio · 1 year ago
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Estimating Rummy Game Development Costs in 2024
Rummy games have surged in popularity within India's gaming landscape, with the online real rummy market projected to hit an impressive ₹1.4 billion by 2024, according to Statistica. This exponential growth signifies a burgeoning market ripe for exploration, making Rummy game development an enticing prospect for businesses aiming to capitalize on this trend.
Market Expansion and Preference: The appeal of Rummy extends beyond Indian borders, cementing its status as one of the top 5 most favored card games globally. This widespread popularity, particularly in India, is further fueled by the increasing penetration of mobile devices, which provides accessibility to a larger audience.
Preference between Standalone Apps and Multigaming Integration: Both standalone Rummy applications and integration into multigaming platforms garner significant traction among players. However, overlooking Rummy's integration into multi-gaming platforms could be a strategic misstep. Integrating Rummy into a multi-gaming platform not only enhances user engagement but also broadens the platform's appeal, potentially attracting a diverse user base.
Why Real-Money Platforms Favor Rummy: Despite its distinction from traditional casino games, Rummy offers players a compelling gaming experience with minimal house advantage. This unique characteristic, coupled with its enduring popularity, makes Rummy an attractive proposition for real-money gaming platforms. The inclusion of Rummy often translates into higher player engagement and revenue generation for these platforms.
Game Development Considerations: Various factors influence the cost and scope of Rummy game development. Critical decisions include choosing between standalone and multigaming platforms, as well as selecting Rummy modes. Each mode, whether it be Points, Pool, Deals, or Raise, comes with its own set of complexities and development requirements. Additionally, integrating features such as tournaments and events can significantly enhance user engagement but may also impact development timelines and costs.
Mobile Platform and Additional Features: When developing a Rummy game for mobile platforms, businesses must weigh the pros and cons of native versus cross-platform applications. Cross-platform solutions offer versatility by catering to multiple mobile operating systems, thereby maximizing reach and minimizing development efforts. Furthermore, the inclusion of additional features beyond the basic gameplay, such as social features, in-app purchases, and player customization options, can elevate the gaming experience and drive user retention.
Cost Estimation: The cost of Rummy game development can vary significantly depending on project requirements and complexity. Basic Rummy games may start at around ₹5 lakh, catering to simpler features and platforms, while more advanced projects with extensive features and multi-platform support can cost upwards of ₹1 crore. It's essential for businesses to collaborate with experienced development partners like Enixo Studio to accurately assess project scope and obtain customized cost estimates.
Conclusion: As the Rummy gaming market continues to flourish, businesses must carefully evaluate their development strategies to capitalize on this lucrative opportunity effectively. By considering factors such as platform integration, feature set, and development costs, businesses can navigate the dynamic landscape of Rummy game development and position themselves for success in India's gaming industry. For reliable and efficient development services, companies can leverage the expertise of Enixo Studio to achieve their Rummy game development goals.
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codehunger · 1 year ago
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Decoding App Development Costs in India: What to Expect
Embarking on the journey of app development is an exciting venture, but one that often comes with questions about costs. In India, where the tech industry is thriving, understanding how much an app developer charges is crucial for planning and budgeting. In this guide, we’ll delve into the factors influencing app development costs and provide insights into what you can expect when hiring an app…
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thebibliosphere · 3 months ago
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Hi, long time lurker with hEDS, thank you for all your chronic illness information! Could you tell us a bit about the Visible app? I just downloaded it, and it seems great. Do you have their armband? Are there things about it you’ve found particularly useful / not useful? (I may have missed a post about this along the way, apologies if so)
I do have the armband and it’s been very useful for me in pinpointing which tasks burn up more energy than I realized, and also at helping predict and avoid energy crashes based on the data it’s collected.
One example I can think of is that as part of my physical rehab I try and go for a short walk around me neighborhood each day, weather and ailments permitting.
On normal days that walk will use up maybe 2.2 of my allocated pace points, which the armband helps detect and estimate via the constant monitoring of the armband.
On days when I am heading into a flare that exact same walk will suddenly cost me 12 points and the visible app will send me alerts telling me I need to slow down and rest.
I don’t feel any different, and at first I thought it was glitching and went about my day as normal, thinking the app was wrong about the rate at which I was burning through energy, but then a few hours later a major migraine started to develop and I went into a crash.
This has happened multiple times now and every time I’ve ignored it, my migraines have been debilitating/hospitalizing.
Since then I’ve started paying closer attention to when tasks are taking up more energy than usual and adjust my day accordingly, which helps me avoid major crashes. This has helped reduce my chronic migraines to moderate intensity instead of severe, which has led to the realization that there might be a metabolic factor to my migraines, pending further investigation by my medical team.
My pain from my EDS is lower too because I’m not accidentally overdoing it, and while my POTS is largely the same, that too has improved ever so slightly as I have cut down on the amount of over exertion I was unknowingly doing.
The app and armband certainly isn’t for everyone, and I do have to unpair and repair the device to my phone more than I’d like, but it’s genuinely been game changing for me in managing my chronic illnesses.
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mostlysignssomeportents · 6 months ago
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The cod-Marxism of personalized pricing
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Picks and Shovels is a new, standalone technothriller starring Marty Hench, my two-fisted, hard-fighting, tech-scam-busting forensic accountant. You can pre-order it on my latest Kickstarter, which features a brilliant audiobook read by Wil Wheaton.
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The social function of the economics profession is to explain, over and over again, that your boss is actually right and that you don't really want the things you want, and you're secretly happy to be abused by the system. If that wasn't true, why would your "choose" commercial surveillance, abusive workplaces and other depredations?
In other words, economics is the "look what you made me do" stick that capitalism uses to beat us with. We wouldn't spy on you, rip you off or steal your wages if you didn't choose to use the internet, shop with monopolists, or work for a shitty giant company. The technical name for this ideology is "public choice theory":
https://pluralistic.net/2022/06/05/regulatory-capture/
Of all the terrible things that economists say we all secretly love, one of the worst is "price discrimination." This is the idea that different customers get charged different amounts based on the merchant's estimation of their ability to pay. Economists insist that this is "efficient" and makes us all better off. After all, the marginal cost of filling the last empty seat on the plane is negligible, so why not sell that seat for peanuts to a flier who doesn't mind the uncertainty of knowing whether they'll get a seat at all? That way, the airline gets extra profits, and they split those profits with their customers by lowering prices for everyone. What's not to like?
Plenty, as it turns out. With only four giant airlines who've carved up the country so they rarely compete on most routes, why would an airline use their extra profits to lower prices, rather than, say, increasing their dividends and executive bonuses?
For decades, the airline industry was the standard-bearer for price discrimination. It was basically impossible to know how much a plane ticket would cost before booking it. But even so, airlines were stuck with comparatively crude heuristics to adjust their prices, like raising the price of a ticket that didn't include a Saturday stay, on the assumption that this was a business flyer whose employer was footing the bill:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/06/07/drip-drip-drip/#drip-off
With digitization and mass commercial surveillance, we've gone from pricing based on context (e.g. are you buying your ticket well in advance, or at the last minute?) to pricing based on spying. Digital back-ends allow vendors to ingest massive troves of commercial surveillance data from the unregulated data-broker industry to calculate how desperate you are, and how much money you have. Then, digital front-ends – like websites and apps – allow vendors to adjust prices in realtime based on that data, repricing goods for every buyer.
As digital front-ends move into the real world (say, with digital e-ink shelf-tags in grocery stores), vendors can use surveillance data to reprice goods for ever-larger groups of customers and types of merchandise. Grocers with e-ink shelf tags reprice their goods thousands of times, every day:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/03/26/glitchbread/#electronic-shelf-tags
Here's where an economist will tell you that actually, your boss is right. Many groceries are perishable, after all, and e-ink shelf tags allow grocers to reprice their goods every minute or two, so yesterday's lettuce can be discounted every fifteen minutes through the day. Some customers will happily accept a lettuce that's a little gross and liztruss if it means a discount. Those customers get a discount, the lettuce isn't thrown out at the end of the day, and everyone wins, right?
Well, sure, if. If the grocer isn't part of a heavily consolidated industry where competition is a distant memory and where grocers routinely collude to fix prices. If the grocer doesn't have to worry about competitors, why would they use e-ink tags to lower prices, rather than to gouge on prices when demand surges, or based on time of day (e.g. making frozen pizzas 10% more expensive from 6-8PM)?
And unfortunately, groceries are one of the most consolidated sectors in the modern world. What's more, grocers keep getting busted for colluding to fix prices and rip off shoppers:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/loblaw-bread-price-settlement-1.7274820
Surveillance pricing is especially pernicious when it comes to apps, which allow vendors to reprice goods based not just on commercially available data, but also on data collected by your pocket distraction rectangle, which you carry everywhere, do everything with, and make privy to all your secrets. Worse, since apps are a closed platform, app makers can invoke IP law to criminalize anyone who reverse-engineers them to figure out how they're ripping you off. Removing the encryption from an app is a potential felony punishable by a five-year prison sentence and a $500k fine (an app is just a web-page skinned in enough IP to make it a crime to install a privacy blocker on it):
https://pluralistic.net/2024/08/15/private-law/#thirty-percent-vig
Large vendors love to sell you shit via their apps. With an app, a merchant can undetectably change its prices every few seconds, based on its estimation of your desperation. Uber pioneered this when they tweaked the app to raise the price of a taxi journey for customers whose batteries were almost dead. Today, everyone's getting in on the act. McDonald's has invested in a company called Plexure that pitches merchants on the use case of raising the cost of your normal breakfast burrito by a dollar on the day you get paid:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/06/05/your-price-named/#privacy-first-again
Surveillance pricing isn't just a matter of ripping off customers, it's also a way to rip off workers. Gig work platforms use surveillance pricing to titrate their wage offers based on data they buy from data brokers and scoop up with their apps. Veena Dubal calls this "algorithmic wage discrimination":
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/12/algorithmic-wage-discrimination/#fishers-of-men
Take nurses: increasingly, American hospitals are firing their waged nurses and replacing them with gig nurses who are booked in via an app. There's plenty of ways that these apps abuse nurses, but the most ghastly is in how they price nurses' wages. These apps buy nurses' financial data from data-brokers so they can offer lower wages to nurses with lots of credit card debt, on the grounds that crushing debt makes nurses desperate enough to accept a lower wage:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/12/18/loose-flapping-ends/#luigi-has-a-point
This week, the excellent Lately podcast has an episode on price discrimination, in which cohost Vass Bednar valiantly tries to give economists their due by presenting the strongest possible case for charging different prices to different customers:
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/podcasts/lately/article-the-end-of-the-fixed-price/
Bednar really tries, but – as she later agrees – this just isn't a very good argument. In fact, the only way charging different prices to different customers – or offering different wages to different workers – makes sense is if you're living in a socialist utopia.
After all, a core tenet of Marxism is "from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs." In a just society, people who need more get more, and people who have less, pay less:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/From_each_according_to_his_ability,_to_each_according_to_his_needs
Price discrimination, then, is a Bizarro-world flavor of cod-Marxism. Rather than having a democratically accountable state that sets wages and prices based on need and ability, price discrimination gives this authority to large firms with pricing power, no regulatory constraints, and unlimited access to surveillance data. You couldn't ask for a neater example of the maxim that "What matters isn't what technology does. What matters is who it does it for; and who it does it to."
Neoclassical economists say that all of this can be taken care of by the self-correcting nature of markets. Just give consumers and workers "perfect information" about all the offers being made for their labor or their business, and things will sort themselves out. In the idealized models of perfectly spherical cows of uniform density moving about on a frictionless surface, this does work out very well:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/03/all-models-are-wrong/#some-are-useful
But while large companies can buy the most intimate information imaginable about your life and finances, IP law lets them capture the state and use it to shut down any attempts you make to discover how they operate. When an app called Para offered Doordash workers the ability to preview the total wage offered for a job before they accepted it, Doordash threatened them with eye-watering legal penalties, then threw dozens of full-time engineers at them, changing the app several times per day to shut out Para:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/08/07/hr-4193/#boss-app
And when an Austrian hacker called Mario Zechner built a tool to scrape online grocery store prices – discovering clear evidence of price-fixing conspiracies in the process – he was attacked by the grocery cartel for violating their "IP rights":
https://pluralistic.net/2023/09/17/how-to-think-about-scraping/
This is Wilhoit's Law in action:
Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_M._Wilhoit#Wilhoit's_law
Of course, there wouldn't be any surveillance pricing without surveillance. When it comes to consumer privacy, America is a no-man's land. The last time Congress passed a new consumer privacy law was in 1988, when they enacted the Video Privacy Protection Act, which bans video-store clerks from revealing which VHS cassettes you take home. Congress has not addressed a single consumer privacy threat since Die Hard was still playing in theaters.
Corporate bullies adore a regulatory vacuum. The sleazy data-broker industry that has festered and thrived in the absence of a modern federal consumer privacy law is absolutely shameless. For example, every time an app shows you an ad, your location is revealed to dozens of data-brokers who pretend to be bidding for the right to show you an ad. They store these location data-points and combine them with other data about you, which they sell to anyone with a credit card, including stalkers, corporate spies, foreign governments, and anyone hoping to reprice their offerings on the basis of your desperation:
https://www.404media.co/candy-crush-tinder-myfitnesspal-see-the-thousands-of-apps-hijacked-to-spy-on-your-location/
Under Biden, the outgoing FTC did incredible work to fill this gap, using its authority under Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act (which outlaws "unfair and deceptive" practices) to plug some of the worst gaps in consumer privacy law:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/07/24/gouging-the-all-seeing-eye/#i-spy
And Biden's CFPB promulgated a rule that basically bans data brokers:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/06/10/getting-things-done/#deliverism
But now the burden of enforcing these rules falls to Trump's FTC, whose new chairman has vowed to end the former FTC's "war on business." What America desperately needs is a new privacy law, one that has a private right of action (so that individuals and activist groups can sue without waiting for a public enforcer to take up their causes) and no "pre-emption" (so that states can pass even stronger privacy laws):
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2022/07/federal-preemption-state-privacy-law-hurts-everyone
How will we get that law? Through a coalition. After all, surveillance pricing is just one of the many horrors that Americans have to put up with thanks to America's privacy law gap. The "privacy first" theory goes like this: if you're worried about social media's impact on teens, or women, or old people, you should start by demanding a privacy law. If you're worried about deepfake porn, you should start by demanding a privacy law. If you're worried about algorithmic discrimination in hiring, lending, or housing, you should start by demanding a privacy law. If you're worried about surveillance pricing, you should start by demanding a privacy law. Privacy law won't entirely solve all these problems, but none of them would be nearly as bad if Congress would just get off its ass and catch up with the privacy threats of the 21st century. What's more, the coalition of everyone who's worried about all the harms that arise from commercial surveillance is so large and powerful that we can get Congress to act:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/12/06/privacy-first/#but-not-just-privacy
Economists, meanwhile, will line up to say that this is all unnecessary. After all, you "sold" your privacy when you clicked "I agree" or walked under a sign warning you that facial recognition was in use in this store. The market has figured out what you value privacy at, and it turns out, that value is nothing. Any kind of privacy law is just a paternalistic incursion on your "freedom to contract" and decide to sell your personal information. It is "market distorting."
In other words, your boss is right.
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Check out my Kickstarter to pre-order copies of my next novel, Picks and Shovels!
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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/01/11/socialism-for-the-wealthy/#rugged-individualism-for-the-poor
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Image: Cryteria (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HAL9000.svg
CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
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Ser Amantio di Nicolao (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Safeway_supermarket_interior,_Fairfax_County,_Virginia.jpg
CC BY-SA 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en
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theineffablesociety-dc · 5 months ago
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We have a venue!
After phone calls, emails, and chasing down sales managers over federal holiday weekends, we have finally locked down a meeting space and room block!
The Ineffable Society DC Meetup will be held at Courtyard New Carrollton-Landover on March 1, 2025 for Pay What You Can (including $0!). We have a room block with rooms priced at $123/night.
Booking link: https://www.marriott.com/event-reservations/reservation-link.mi?id=1737765175635&key=GRP&guestreslink2=true&app=resvlink
The hotel is located near the New Carrollton DC metro/Amtrak station, with a shuttle from the station to the hotel. The nearest airports are BWI (connection to Amtrak) and DCA and IAD (both on the metro). We'll also help arrange rides for people who need it. The room block pricing is available through February 7th.
If you plan to attend, we have an RSVP form we'd like you to fill out so we can get an approximate headcount for planning and make sure that any accommodations, ridesharing requests, etc all come through to where we can see them and help.
Finally: This is a free event, but it does cost money to put on. The meeting space fee, taxes, and service charge total $2,558, plus incidentals; our current estimate of how much this will cost us to put on is $2,700. If you would like to help us offset the costs, we will accept donations. Any extra funds raised over the cost of putting on the event will be donated to Alzheimer's Research UK in honor of Sir Terry.
tl;dr:
MARCH 1ST! COURTYARD NEW CARROLLTON!
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warframestuff · 2 days ago
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Isleweaver Estimated Build Sizes
Tenno,
With the arrival of Isleweaver on Wednesday, June 25th, we are sharing our rough update sizes on each platform to prepare you well in advance:
PC DirectX 11: ~2.05 GB* PC DirectX 12: ~ 3.26 GB*
PlayStation 4: ~13.29 GB** PlayStation 5: ~4.62 GB
Xbox One: ~6.70 GB Xbox Series: ~6.80 GB
Nintendo Switch: ~10.95 GB***
iOS: ~0.85 GB****
*PC DirectX11/12 Download Size: Our PC Tenno will notice that the estimated build size varies depending on which version of DirectX is being used. DirectX 11 build is smaller as this update shipped optimizations that made shaders smaller for a minor load-time cost. 
**PlayStation 4 Remaster Download Size: As noted above, our PlayStation 4 estimated build size is much larger than PlayStation 5. This is the result of our efforts to keep the install size of Warframe to a minimum. Unfortunately, we aren’t able to confirm the total amount of space saving at this time, but the patch notes will have full details!
***Nintendo Switch Remaster Download Size: For our Nintendo Switch players, Isleweaver brings you a remaster as well. This results in the overall install size of Warframe being reduced by roughly 3.03GB, bringing the total install size to 22.67GB (down from ~25.7GB). 
Some players may need to redownload the entire game if internal storage is not enough and declines the update prompt. 
****iOS Download Size: When Warframe updates via the App Store, it must redownload the base install (approximately 3.95GB) which overwrites the previous install. In other words, while CERT updates require a roughly 3.95GB download, these updates are not adding 3.95 GB to your overall app size. 
Upon the launch of the update, when you load the Warframe app, you will receive an “Update Available” popup as usual and be redirected to the App Store to do so. 
Tomorrow, make your way to Scholar’s Landing. Oraxia will be waiting!
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harshathusm · 9 months ago
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How much does it cost to develop an app like Amazon
The cost of developing an app like Amazon can be tremendous depending on the chosen feature, designs, and platforms. Choosing USM Systems for your e-commerce application development is synonymous with getting good solutions that suit your business needs. With a wide range of experience in scalable and user-friendly applications developed under their bellies, this company is at best fit to make your vision real.
USM Business Systems:
Services
Mobile app development
Artificial Intelligence
Machine Learning
Android app development
RPA
Big data
HR Management
Workforce Management
IoT
IOS App Development
Cloud Migration
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northern-passage · 11 months ago
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I'm sorry I'm new to this app and I don't know how to make my name appear, I'm Hashem the person you posted about my old and new campaigns to. I wanted to tell you that my new campaign was banned I think it's because a lot of people reported it, so I was also afraid that they would ban both campaigns so I will continue with the main campaign
https://gofund.me/93568fb0
i'm really sorry to hear that, Hashem. it's been a tough few days for fundraisers here on tumblr, especially for newer people trying to share their gfms. i apologize for that in my initial post, and i appreciate you still reaching out to me. i will keep sharing your original gofundme here and make sure people know it is legitimate.
you can find Hashem on tumblr over at @hashemsafi125 - currently his own posts only link to the now discontinued second gfm, but i have shared his first one, which has been vetted by Humanity for Gaza on instagram, #425 on their linktree. you can also find Hashem's new instagram here, and you can also check out his contact Mehvish's page, who Hashem has been communicating with since April.
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Hashem has nine people he is hoping to evacuate, meaning he needs a total of $54,000. this includes the evacuation as well estimated costs of medical care and other living expenses. it is $5,000 per adult and $2,500 per child under 16 years old. this first campaign is nearing its goal of €30,000, which will have them about half-way there.
$25,000 to evacuate Hashem, his parents, and 3 younger siblings.
$12,500 to evacuate his sister Yara, her husband, and her baby.
$8,000 to cover costs upon arrival in Egypt, including medical care, food, and housing.
$8,500 to cover transaction, withdrawal, transfer, and conversion fees and taxes.
Hashem's campaign is connected to his uncle's account in Spain, and for that reason he is fundraising in euros.
in Hashem's words:
‏Before the war, we really lived a beautiful life. We had our dreams, our goals, our home, and a wonderful life, but everything is truly over now. 
Yara studied IT and graduated university just before the war, she is a painter and loves to draw.
Ahmed was in his last year of high school  and loves video games - he used to be introverted and youthful, but this war has forced him to become a man. 
Misk is in middle school, she loves reading, reciting, cooking, and writing - we admire her for spending her time in the war still reading as much as she can. 
Abdullah, my youngest brother, is just a child - he cannot understand the horrors we are enduring and is struggling with severe depression.
And I was passionately studying medicine, so eager to achieve my dream…
The university Hashem was studying at, the Islamic University of Gaza, has now been completely destroyed by Israel, as well as the family's home. This is some of the damage IUG has sustained.
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Hashem and his family have been displaced 6 times since the invasion began, and continue to live in fear of having to run yet again.
Hashem's mother and younger brothers are now sick from the contaminated water, and Hashem is having trouble breathing due to all of the smoke and debris from Israel's constant bombing. Recently, he also sustained an injury to his leg and has been unable to receive adequate care due to malnutrition and lack of appropriate medical supplies.
The family has raised €25,685 of their current €30,000 goal. again, this is only about half of what Hashem ultimately needs. Please keep donating and sharing Hashem's campaign wherever you can.
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