Here's the notice for «Characterization of Hydroxymethylation Patterns in the Promoter of b - globin Clusters in Murine Fetal Livers»: Continue reading Use of data «without permission,»
bad authors list, and hidden funding sink mol bio paper
Not exact matches
Michael Ames,
author of «Small Business Management,»
lists a number of causes, including lack of experience,
bad location, and unexpected growth that catch an owner off - guard.
Fixture
list has not arrived, how well off do we look — or how
badly have others fared... does nt matter ill pull this one from my ass says the
author.
Nobody's perfect, and certainly not the
author: I've been guilty of every single
bad habit
listed above at some point or another.
Now in his third year, Chowell - Puente has been
listed as first
author on four technical reports, two peer - reviewed publications, and the book chapter «
Worst Case Scenarios and Epidemics,» released last month in Bioterrorism: Mathematical and Modeling Approaches in Homeland Security.
In days gone by, one could count on fellow scholars to lay out the books» argument, skewer it, then identify a laundry
list of factual errors that demonstrate the
author was careless or
worse.
On his
worst of
list, he accused Terry Moe,
author of Special Interest, a brilliant study of the teachers unions, of making «little sense.»
When an
author gets paid on less than half the
list price, that's
bad enough.
What I'm saying is that with hundreds of discussions with successful
authors, a pattern emerges, and it generally involves them having mastered doing away with the
bad habits I
list.
It's not that
bad now, but the wise POD
authors always
list through CreateSpace for Amazon these days in order to keep their titles from going out - of - stock, but I digress.
The
worst misunderstanding of too many
authors who depend on Macmillan is that they argue they get less money with a $ 9.99 book when, in Fact, Amazon pays the publisher based on the
LIST price.
I've had days where a single
bad review comes in on one of my books and then bam, I look and see a fellow Indie
author announcing they just hit the NYT Bestseller
list, and suddenly my whole writing day is wrecked.
Many self - published
authors seem to focus on cracking Amazon's various
list's, yet only 17 % of book purchases are made from all those assorted
lists (not a
bad number considering total sales, but still a small percentage).
An
author had posted a
list of «
bad bloggers» stating these people had snubbed the
author and that
authors should avoid those
listed.
On behalf of readers everywhere, this book publicist urges
authors to read this Reuters article (posted on MSNBC.com) before typing a single keystroke in 2008: «Perfect storm» of cliches make
bad English
list: University targets «surge» of words and phrases that deserve to be banned.
Some of them are 100 % not recommended, but others might actually be worth checking out or completely necessary, and hopefully over time you can develop your own
list of recommended services (and horror stories to help other
authors avoid
bad ones!).
Because nothing says
bad book marketing like a
list of old, outdated events on your
Author Central Page.
So why do Rottweilers get such
bad press when the
authors of «Top ten guard dogs» make their
lists?
Its to
bad many of the blogs
listed here have not been kept active by their
authors.
Private equity partner and Manchester managing partner Andrew Share
authored this piece that recaps a top 15
list of actual contract provisions and contract negotiations that highlight some
bad examples of what, no doubt, were well meaning intentions.