A year later, answering a question from
a Time magazine reader who complained about a professor who badmouthed Wikipedia as a legitimate research source, Wales no doubt surprised the reader by answering, «I would agree with your teachers that that isn't the right way to use Wikipedia.
Not exact matches
Next Issue has more than 100,000 users in Canada, says Maich, with
readers spending the same amount of
time with the content as if it were a print
magazine, rather than a website.
At the same
time, as people increasingly consume
magazine content online on their phones or on social media sites while out in public, Playboy
readers objected to pornographic photos considered NSFW: Not Suitable For Work.
When I left school and embarked on my first real business adventure, Student
magazine, it was at
times a real struggle to keep our small group motivated and make ends meet, though we didn't want our
readers to be aware of this.
Time will tell whether Salon's move is a financial success or whether
reader backlash will force the
magazine to reconsider.
Dear
reader This year has already been very eventful for us, with Swiss Venture Capital Report published in a
magazine format for the first
time, the change of structure to a foundation and the filling of the foundation board with high - profile representatives of the start - up ecosystem from all over Switzerland.
Readers of the New York
Times, which Alasdair MacIntyre has called «that parish
magazine of affluent and self - congratulatory liberal enlightenment,» will have noticed the appearance on its op - ed pages of a relatively new genre of sermonizing.
But is there a vast difference between the information offered in People
magazine and the columns in the New York
Times that inform
readers using sources «at a high level»?
It's here that you develop your thinking along with your
readers — this blog has the space and
time to build a proper picture and it is able to evolve through conversations in it and its role is more flexible than a mere cartoon being printed in a
magazine.
About mar» sel Since its inception in 2009, mar» sel has achieved numerous awards and accolades including Wine Spectator's Award of Excellence, Best Fine Dining and Romantic Restaurant in the South Bay by Los Angeles
Times Reader's Choice Awards, Best Romantic Rendezvous by South Bay
Magazine, Best Special Occasion Restaurant and Wine List by Palos Verdes Patch
Reader's Choice Awards, Best Décor by Zagat Los Angeles Restaurants Survey, and Trip Advisor Certificate of Excellence.
AUTHOR AND FORMER New York
Times sports columnistRobert Lipsyte calls Dave Zirin «the best young sportswriter inAmerica,» but
readers don't turn to Zirin's columns in Slam
magazine and onedgeofsports.com for scores - and - sweat stories.
Many
readers were first exposed to your reporting on character through your article in the New York
Times Magazine in September 2011, which was titled «What If the Secret to Success Is Failure?»
Michael's work has been featured in various media, including the New York
Times, the Washington Post, USA Today, Newsweek,
Time, People
Magazine,
Reader's Digest, the Wall Street Journal, Forbes
Magazine, Parenting, Good Housekeeping, Redbook, and on the Today Show, Good Morning America, CNN, PBS and National Public Radio.
The cover was risky but a brilliant hook by
Time Magazine to attract
readers, and they achieved their goal.
Shashi Tharoor wrote in
Time Magazine that the book «reveals a side of Churchill largely ignored in the West and considerably tarnishes his heroic sheen», noting that «Mukerjee's prose is all the more devastating because she refuses to voice the outrage most
readers will feel on reading her exhaustively researched, footnoted facts.»
Such momentous, fast - breaking stories can be the bane of monthly print
magazines because long publication lead
times dictated that we would not be able to share the story with our print
readers in any detail until our December issue — an eternity in the 24/7 universe of modern media.
Thirty years ago this month, a group of editors from
Time magazine launched DISCOVER, a new
magazine that would explain the amazing advances of science in a format and style that any curious
reader could enjoy.
Mariette: The other half of that quote is «Information also wants to be expensive,» and it goes on to explain that because if you want quality information, that takes
time to produce and it is thus very precious; and I think it's with that half of the quote in mind that Scientific American and other publications need to make these step - by - step choices to find out what ultimately will be best for you, our
readers, because if the
magazine does not have a working model of providing good quality material, then no one is served.
In Beyond Biocentrism, acclaimed biologist Robert Lanza, one of
TIME Magazine's 100 Most Influential People in 2014, and leading astronomer Bob Berman, take the
reader on an intellectual thrill - ride as they re-examine everything we thought we knew about life, death, the universe and the nature of reality itself.
Long
time readers know my favourite piece of writing on the subject is by Cristina Luiggi for The Scientist
magazine which I profiled here in a Feb. 7, 2013 posting.
I'm not a
reader of fashion articles or
magazines due to lack of spare
time, so I'm always delighted to glean some vital info on the fashion world from ladies like you who are kind enough to enlighten their audience.
When
Time Out
magazine recently ran a cover story offering free online dating for every
reader, it was dangling a huge metaphorical carrot.
Recent updates: Added 1/14: First Showing (additional critic), Slashfilm (additional critic) Added 1/8: Birth.Movies.Death (additional critics), Parallax View, The Tracking Board Added 1/7: Film Journey, The Film Stage (additional critic), First Showing (additional critic) Added 1/5: The Film Stage (additional critics), In Review, Moving Picture Blog, The Playlist (additional critics), Slashfilm (additional critics), Taste of Cinema Added 1/3: CBS News, Den of Geek [UK], Film Pulse, The Film Stage (substituted individual lists for consensus list), Hidden Remote, The Playlist (additional critics), PopCulture.com, Reverse Shot, ScreenAnarchy, Slant (substituted individual lists for consensus list), Slashfilm, Wichita Eagle Added 12/31: artsBHAM, Cape Cod
Times, CinemaBlend (additional critics), Collider (additional critics), Criterion [The Daily], Criterion Cast, The Film Stage, First Showing, Flavorwire, The Globe and Mail, The Hollywood Reporter / Heat Vision, Lincoln Journal Star, Monkeys Fighting Robots, NOW
Magazine, Omaha World - Herald, Paste, People, ReelViews, Salt Lake City Weekly, San Antonio Current, Screen Daily, SF Weekly, These Violent Delights, Toledo Blade, Uncut, Under the Radar, Vancouver Observer, Vancouver Sun Added 12/29: The Arts Desk, Austin American - Statesman, Austin Chronicle, Awards Daily, Boston Globe, Boston Herald, CinemaBlend (additional critics), Cleveland Scene, Collider (additional critics), The Daily Beast, Deadline, Film Journal International, Houston Chronicle, Ioncinema, Las Vegas Review - Journal, New Orleans
Times - Picayune, New York Post, Paper, The Playlist, San Diego City Beat, San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Examiner, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Salt Lake Tribune, Seattle Weekly, Shepherd Express, The Stranger, Tallahassee Democrat, Toronto Star, Tucson Weekly, Tulsa World, Uproxx, The Virginian - Pilot, Washington City Paper, White City Cinema Added 12/27: Awards Campaign, Baltimore Beat, Buffalo News, Chicago Daily Herald, CinemaBlend, Collider, Film School Rejects, GameSpot, JoBlo, Metro UK, Newsweek, Observer, San Jose Mercury News, Seattle
Times, Sydney Morning Herald, Tampa Bay
Times, Thrillist, USA Today, Village Voice (Wolfe), Wired UK Added 12/22: Chicago Sun -
Times, Den of Geek [US], The Guardian, Mashable, Metro US, Sioux City Journal, Star Tribune, The Verge, Wired Added 12/21: BBC, Chicago
Reader, The Commercial Appeal, IGN, Las Vegas Weekly, TimeOut New York, Village Voice Added 12/20: A.V. Club, Crave, Esquire, The Independent, Spectrum Culture Added 12/19: The Atlantic, Birth.Movies.Death., CineVue, Newsday, NPR, WhatCulture Added 12/18: Arizona Republic, Yahoo! Added 12/17: Dazed, Flood
Magazine, New Zealand Herald, Salon, ScreenCrush, The Star - Ledger (NJ.com),
Time Out London, Total Film Added 12/15: BuzzFeed, Christian Science Monitor, Detroit News, Los Angeles
Times, Philadelphia Daily News, Vox Added 12/14: Associated Press, Chicago Tribune, Consequence of Sound, Little White Lies, Los Angeles Daily News, RogerEbert.com, TheWrap Added 12/13: Evening Standard, Variety Added 12/12: The Hollywood Reporter, Huffington Post, PopCrush Added 12/11: CBC, The Observer [UK], Wall Street Journal Added 12/8: The New Yorker, Rolling Stone, Slant Added 12/7: Culture Trip, IMDb, The Ringer, Slate,
Time, Us Weekly Added 12/6: Cahiers du Cinéma, New York
Times, Vogue, Vulture (Yoshida), Washington Post Added 12/5: Scorecard launched with 15 lists.
In 2015, New York
Times Magazine held a poll on Twitter asking
readers about the ethics of killing a baby Adolf Hitler.
Tim Grierson, Screen International; Ed Gonzalez, Slant; Pete Hammond, Deadline; April Wolfe, L.A. Weekly; Scott Marks, San Diego
Reader; Susan Granger, SSN Syndicate, Chris Nashawaty, Entertainment Weekly; Eliza Berman,
Time; Tomris Laffy, Freelance Writer; Gene Seymour, Newsday; Colin Covert, Minneapolis Star Tribune; Allyson Johnson, The Young Folks; Drew Taylor, Movie Fone; Allison Shoemaker, Consequence of Sound; The Daily
Times; Reuters; Nick Schager, Esquire; Carrie Rickey, The Philadelphia Inquirer; Erik Anderson, Awards Watch; Matt Patches, Thrillist; Kevin Laforest, Extra Beurre; Scott Mendelson, Forbes; Dana Buffa, KSDK St. Louis; Rahul Punja, Blasting News; Alissa Wilkinson, Vox; Ann Hornaday, Washington Post; Kyle Turner, Mass Appeal; Brian Tallerico, RogerEbert; David Ansen, Newsweek; Joe Stemme, Mark Johnson, Awards Circuit; Jazz Tangcay, Awards Daily; Claudia Puig, LAFCA; Ethan Anderton, Slash Film; Nick Clement, Freelance Writer; Ben Pearson, Slash Film; Jack Girous, Slash Film; Richard Lawson, Vanity Fair; Amy Nicholson, MTV; Oliver Jones, Observer; Laura Clifford, Reeling Reviews; Anne Thompson, IndieWire; Kye Buchanan, Vulture; Yahoo Movies; Matt Donato, We Got This Covered; Bilge Ebiri, Village Voice; Joey Magidson, Awards Circuit; Julie Kosin, Harper's Bazaar; Christopher Bumbray, Joblo; ScreenCrush; Andrew Shearer, Online Athens; Marlowe Stern, The Daily Beast; Jonathan Caouette, Filmmaker; Edgar Wright, Filmmaker; Ben Croll, The Wrap; Pop Crush; Nathaniel Rogers, The Film Experience; Kent Turner, Film Forward; What Culture; Steve Pond, The Wrap; Richard Roeper, Chicago Sun -
Times; Peter Debruge, Variety; Jordan Raup, The Film Stage; KGMI; Hunter Heilman, Niner
Times; Jeffrey Wells, Hollywood Elsewhere; Peter Travers, Rolling Stone; Kenji Fujishima, Paste; Larry Bartleet, NME; Matt Prigge, Metro US; Matt Hoffman, The Film School Rejects; Bill Goodykoontz, Arizona Central; Edward Douglas, The Weekend Warrior; Brian Truitt, USA Today; Jake Mulligan, DigBoston; Rafer Guzman, Newsday; Alex Bieze, Asbury Park Press; Matthew Jacobs, The Huffington Post; Clayton Davis, Awards Circuit; Glenn Whipp, Los Angeles
Times; Complex; Consequence of Sound; David Edelstein, Vulture; Angie Han, Mashable; Paste; Jason Guerrasio, Business Insider; Erik Childress, The Playlist; David Ehrenstein, L.A Weekly; Josh Brunsting, Criterion; Jon Frosch, The Hollywood Reporter; Edwin Arnaudin, Citizen -
Times; Steve Erickson, Village Voice; Joana Langfield, The Movie Minute; Graham Fuller, Culture Trip; Chuck Wilson, Village Voice; Dan Sallitt, Filmmaker; Hans Morgenstern, Indie Ethos; Robert Abele, The Wrap; Luke Y. Thompson, Nerdist; Nicolas Bell, IONCINEMA; Jacob Hall, Slash Film; Jared Mobarak, Freelancer; Robert Koehler, Film Comment; Jason Shawhan, Freelancer; Michael Atkinson, Village Voice; Todd Gilchrist, Freelancer; MaryAnn Johanson, The Flick Filosopher; Eric Henderson, Slant
Magazine; Roger Moore, Movie Nation; Juan Barquin, Miami New
Times; Saul Austerlitz, Five - Thirty - Eight;
In Whatever it Takes: Geoffrey Canada's Quest to Change Harlem and America, New York
Times Magazine editor Paul Tough takes
readers into the heart of the Children's Zone — and into the passion and logic of Geoffrey Canada.
As
readers may recall, Tough, author of Whatever It Takes: Geoffrey Canada's Quest to Change Harlem and America, introduced his notion of «grit» as a missing component in education in a 2011 New York
Times magazine cover story called, «What if the Secret to Success is Failure?»
Though our
magazine has been sent to 100,000
readers six
times a year, the Edutopia.org Web site now reaches about 300,000 users each month, allowing us to serve a much greater audience, more frequently, with more types of media.
Although today EPE — the publisher of Education Week — is recognized as the premier source of news, information, and analysis on American precollegiate education, it grew out of a bold experiment by 15 editors of leading university alumni
magazines to speak with one voice to their
readers as higher education sought to respond to the deep national concerns of that
time.
This
time it was caught by CAR
Magazine's
reader, Mr. Marc G.S. Chapman.
The SEMA Show Directory has been combined with the Show issue of SEMA News
magazine for the first
time, reaching
readers earlier to make Show planning easier and more productive.
Rachel's career highlights include helping her authors achieve prestigious romance book nominations and two selective awards, including the National
Readers Choice Award, several top reviews in Romantic
Times magazine and a Hallmark Channel original production of one of her books, Unleashing Mr. Darcy — a charming retelling of Pride and Prejudice ¬, with dogs!
Each
time, the new
reader accesses his or her books and
magazines using Profiles.
TIME Magazine has just released their 2012 Time 100 Poll inviting readers to» [c] ast your votes for the leaders, artists, innovators, icons and heroes that you think are the most influential people in the world.&ra
TIME Magazine has just released their 2012
Time 100 Poll inviting readers to» [c] ast your votes for the leaders, artists, innovators, icons and heroes that you think are the most influential people in the world.&ra
Time 100 Poll inviting
readers to» [c] ast your votes for the leaders, artists, innovators, icons and heroes that you think are the most influential people in the world.»
You can download the
reader at the site and start viewing your
magazines in no
time.
In a recent interview with James Patterson in
Time magazine, Patterson answered questions from
readers regarding his writing process, style and publishing.
She has been a finalist twice for the Anthony, three
times for Foreword
Magazine's Book of the Year, the Agatha, the Shamus, the Daphne, and has won the IPPY and the
Readers Choice Award multiple
times.
Kobo's firmware was built right into the Literati, ensuring that
readers would have instant access to the Kobo Bookstore with nearly two million titles, including New York
Times bestsellers, new releases, cookbooks, children's books,
magazines, newspapers, and more.
His articles have appeared in Harper's, The New York
Times Magazine, Esquire, Playboy,
Reader's Digest, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles
Times, Good Housekeeping, and Sports Illustrated, among other publications.
«Today for the first
time Issuu
readers can carry 15 million
magazines on their favorite Android device and discover content from hundreds of thousands of global publishers,» said Joe Hyrkin, CEO of Issuu.
Reader and industry response to the article was so big, we've decided to spotlight an additional three applications for the device
Time Magazine called the invention of the year, each one offering comics fans a unique experience on the iPhone (or iPod touch).
The digital literary
magazine Literary Orphans, which publishes flash fiction — in addition to reviews, interviews, short stories, and poetry — lists the estimated
time it will take for a
reader to read a piece.
She has written for The New York
Times, Parents
Magazine, The New York
Times Book Review, Ladies Home Journal, Town & Country, More,
Reader's Digest, Mademoiselle and other publications and has been an adjunct professor of journalism at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and an instructor of creative writing at the New School University.
«Today's
readers might never have the opportunity to discover great works like Ron Rosenbaum's «The Secrets of the Little Blue Box,» Marcelle Clements» «The Dog Is Us» or
TIME Magazine's legendary 1966 cover story «Is God Dead?
Melissa has contributed to The New York
Times Magazine, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The Washington Post, Good Housekeeping,
Readers Digest, Life, MS, Newsweek, The Wilson Quarterly, Parade, Redbook, Parenting, Huffington... (more)
Readers will have access to ten
magazines that include;
TIME, Fortune, Money, People, Bloomberg Businessweek, Entrepreneur, Foreign Policy, New York
Magazine, Newsweek and The Atlantic.
Our products include Booklist
magazine, published 22
times per year; its quarterly supplement Book Links, with content for teachers and school librarians; and The Booklist
Reader, a blog for librarians and general
readers that is updated several
times each day, Monday through Friday.
Design simplicity, efficient use, the choice of millions of users: * Multiple - line stacks, hundreds of thousands of novel / newspaper /
magazines free read (Note: All stacks are built by third parties) * depth optimization of novel to read txt * visual experience set, all the background color to support several real -
time visibility * Page mode * Smart layout, to create the most comfortable reading experience of paper flip effect * real * support for voice input, attack with half
times * strong local book file Find (supports wildcards to retrieve and import), a full range of book content search (support regular expression) * free copy like text, and can be sent to microblogging — Format: TXT, HTML, EPUB, UMD, OPDS Official Website: http://anyview.net official micro-Bo: http://t.sina.com.cn/3637250 official QQ group: 161 462 668
readers, e-books
Originally initiated by Liberty
magazine in the 1920s, the reading
time feature sorts articles for the
reader by how long the... [Read more...]
Originally initiated by Liberty
magazine in the 1920s, the reading
time feature sorts articles for the
reader by how long the article should take, which is perfect for the morning commute or for catching up on an article while waiting at a meeting or appointment.