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Growth of the eight largest Wikibooks sites (by language), July 2003–January 2010. Wikibooks (previously called Wikimedia Free Textbook Project and Wikimedia-Textbooks) is a wiki-based Wikimedia project hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation for the creation of free content digital textbooks and annotated texts that anyone can edit.
Open Library is an online project intended to create "one web page for every book ever published". Created by Aaron Swartz, [3] [4] Brewster Kahle, [5] Alexis Rossi, [6] Anand Chitipothu, [6] and Rebecca Hargrave Malamud, [6] Open Library is a project of the Internet Archive, a nonprofit organization.
Patrol - Wikipedia's various patrols, for monitoring various page types for maintenance and general administration. Portal - what portals are and how to build them. Wikiphilosophy - the various guiding principles behind editors' actions. Keyboard shortcuts - the fast way to operate.
Z-Library (abbreviated as z-lib, formerly BookFinder) is a shadow library project for file-sharing access to scholarly journal articles, academic texts and general-interest books. It began as a mirror of Library Genesis, but has expanded dramatically. [7] [8]
The Introducing... series is a book series of graphic guides covering key thinkers and topics in philosophy, psychology and science, and many others in politics, religion, cultural studies, linguistics and other areas. Books are written by an expert in the field and illustrated, comic-book style, by a leading graphic artist.
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Reviewing the book in The New York Review of Books, he wrote: [19] Rajan, with Lionel Barber (left) and Lloyd Blankfein (right), at the Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award ceremony in 2010. While it’s a story that ties everything up in one neat package, however, it’s strongly at odds with the evidence.
The Critics. Books. The New Yorker. 93 (19): 61– 66. [11] — (December 4, 2017). "Wired : what Alexander Calder set in motion". The Critics. Books. The New Yorker. 93 (39): 73– 77. [12] — (February 12–19, 2018). "After the fall : drawing the right lessons from the decline in violent crime". The Critics. Books. The New Yorker. 94 (1 ...