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Express Publishing is an independent UK-based publishing house with its headquarters in Berkshire. [1] The company was founded in 1988 and it specializes in English language learning and teaching and ELT educational materials. Express Publishing has established a presence in more than 90 countries, in many of them holding ministerial approvals. [2]
An SBN may be converted to an ISBN by prefixing the digit "0". For example, the second edition of Mr. J. G. Reeder Returns, published by Hodder in 1965, has "SBN 340 01381 8", where "340" indicates the publisher, "01381" is the serial number assigned by the publisher, and "8" is the check digit.
In publishing and library and information science, the term serial is applied to materials "in any medium issued under the same title in a succession of discrete parts, usually numbered (or dated) and appearing at regular or irregular intervals with no predetermined conclusion." [1]
Vulnerability of water stored in underground tanks: Reinforced concrete structures installed in wet and polluted areas, LAP Lambert Academic Publishing (2019) 621 Philippines: National ISBN 978-621-9619-02-8 Undercover: Operation Julie, The Inside Story, Hendry Publishing (2019) 622 Iran: National ISBN 978-622-601-101-3 لولا م.
In the 1960s, Express Publishing was sold to the Harte-Hanks newspaper group. [citation needed] In 1973, with the Light beating both the Express and the News in circulation numbers, a new ownership group emerged. Australian native Rupert Murdoch of News Corp bought the Express and the News from Harte-Hanks.
a 5-digit number assigned by the publisher that is unique to the publication item within the serial or book; a check digit (0-9 or X) When a PII is printed (as opposed to stored in a database), the 17-character string may be extended with punctuation characters to make it more readable to humans, as in Sxxxx-xxxx(yy)iiiii-d or Bx-xxx-xxxxx-x ...
B. Smith Style, American Express Publishing Corp. (1999–2000) Ballyhoo (1931–1939) Baltimore Saturday Visiter; Bananas, Scholastic (1975–1984) Barney Magazine (1994–2003) Barney Magazine Family (1994–1999) Baseball Hobby News (1979–1993) Baseball Magazine (1908–1957) Battleplan (1987–1989) BattleTechnology (1987–1995)
An early example of product activation was in the MS-DOS program D'Bridge Email System written by Chris Irwin, a commercial network system for BBS users and Fidonet. The program generated a unique serial number which then called the author's BBS via a dialup modem connection. Upon connection, the serial number was validated.