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  2. Chegg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chegg

    Chegg began trading shares publicly on the New York Stock Exchange in November 2013. [15] Its IPO was reported to have raised $187.5 million, with an initial market capitalization of about $1.1 billion. [16] In 2014, Chegg entered a partnership with book distributor Ingram Content Group to distribute all of Chegg's physical textbook rentals ...

  3. Course Hero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Course_Hero

    Course Hero is an American education technology website company based in Redwood City, California which operates an online learning platform for students to access course-specific study resources and online tutors.

  4. Chegg Tutors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chegg_Tutors

    Chegg Tutors was founded in 2011 as InstaEDU and launched into public beta in May 2012. At that time, the company also announced that it had raised $1.1M in venture capital funding from The Social+Capital Partnership. [2] Two of the company's co-founders had previously run an in-home tutoring company called Cardinal Scholars.

  5. Comparison of Q&A sites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Q&A_sites

    Registration required? Price Answers.com: 2005 — All topics: English: Free Ask.fm: 2010 — Social topics: 49 languages: Yes Askbot: 2009: N/A: varies: varies: varies Ask MetaFilter: 2003 — Many topics: English: All posts are copyright to their original authors. [1] No to browse, yes to contribute Avvo: 2006 — Legal: English: Yes Baidu ...

  6. Growing Stars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Growing_Stars

    Growing Stars was established in November 2002 by Biju Mathew, an Indian-origin software engineer, and his friend Saji Philip with seed money of $500,000. [1] [2] [5] [6] Mathew recruited tutors from his hometown Kochi for math, science, and English, and the company began operations in January 2004 as a one-on-one homework outsourcing and test preparation tutoring service for students based in ...

  7. Experts Exchange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experts_Exchange

    Experts Exchange went live in October 1996. The first question asked was for a "Case sensitive Win31 HTML Editor". [1]Experts Exchange went bankrupt in 2001 [2] after venture capitalists moved the company to San Mateo, CA, and was brought back largely through the efforts of unpaid volunteers.

  8. Stack Exchange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stack_Exchange

    To start, in June 2019, more advertisements were added causing a large dispute. [29] On September 27, 2019, a moderator of multiple Stack Exchange sites, specifically Monica Cellio, was dismissed from her moderator position, allegedly connected to behavior associated with upcoming changes to the Code of Conduct (CoC) relating to gender pronouns.

  9. Subject-matter expert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subject-matter_expert

    A domain expert is frequently used in expert systems software development, and there the term always refers to the domain other than the software domain. A domain expert is a person with special knowledge or skills in a particular area of endeavour [ 8 ] (e.g. an accountant is an expert in the domain of accountancy ).