1
I Use This!
Activity Not Available

News

Analyzed about 1 year ago. based on code collected about 1 year ago.
Posted almost 10 years ago by yourgarbear-blog-blog
What is a logo?Is a logo a representation of an organization’s values, goals, strengths, heart, and solidarity on the cause of lubricating the annals of academic knowledge and the communication of it to the people of the third planet from the ... [More] sun?PeerLibrary used to be represented by the letter, “P,” but could that honestly describe an organization which seeks to change not merely academic literature’s presentation to the masses, but honestly the universe as a whole? In the mind’s eye of PeerLibrary (because we are busy ameliorating the wrongs of modern society), we are making EVERYTHING change.PeerLibrary was once described by the now apparent shallowness that is the letter, “P.” Insanity. We tried to represent a fundamentally brave, bold, and brilliant burst out of the box that academia has been hoping for since the advent of the intellectual superfreeway that is the interwebz, and now we see that we must move on. Additionally, the word pronounced as, “Pee,” is simply not representative of an organization that seeks to not waste the full power of academic literature nor the electronic superverse. PeerLibrary is not some yellow-green, warm, odorous entity wishing to be routinely expelled from users, but instead something engaging and enthralling that will not let the user let it go. Users will not turn away and slam the door on PeerLibrary because PeerLibrary will never bother them anyway. PeerLibrary will let them in and let them see something that they want to know and will not wish to let go.Why would participants in the social experiment that is PeerLibrary not wish to let it go? Simply put, they want to get the most out of academic literature. At the physical level, academic literature is just a list of words and figures that researchers combined to describe their research. In order for an individual to turn this into something useful for themselves, they would want to comprehend the background of the topic, the direction the researchers decided to take investigation and why, the setup and results of their experimentation, in addition to the author’s conclusion on the supposition investigated. Post-comprehension, the viewer may wish to replicate the experiment, or design their own experiment. In both of these phases of academic literature review, scholars may want to discuss their thoughts and interpretations of the material with others. This desire could stem from an enjoyment of the accompaniment of an arrangement of folks or merely from a perspective that deep understanding comes most effectively from a discussion rather than instruction.This is the power of PeerLibrary: to take the traditional library ideology of transferring knowledge from source-to-person, and expanding it to source-to-people, which is now technologically empowered.So, as you now see before you, our logo is thus a book, one page text, the other a web. Alas, representation. [Less]
Posted almost 10 years ago by yourgarbear-blog-blog
What is a logo?Is a logo a representation of an organization’s values, goals, strengths, heart, and solidarity on the cause of lubricating the annals of academic knowledge and the communication of it to the people of the third planet from the ... [More] sun?PeerLibrary used to be represented by the letter, “P,” but could that honestly describe an organization which seeks to change not merely academic literature’s presentation to the masses, but honestly the universe as a whole? In the mind’s eye of PeerLibrary (because we are busy ameliorating the wrongs of modern society), we are making EVERYTHING change.PeerLibrary was once described by the now apparent shallowness that is the letter, “P.” Insanity. We tried to represent a fundamentally brave, bold, and brilliant burst out of the box that academia has been hoping for since the advent of the intellectual superfreeway that is the interwebz, and now we see that we must move on. Additionally, the word pronounced as, “Pee,” is simply not representative of an organization that seeks to not waste the full power of academic literature nor the electronic superverse. PeerLibrary is not some yellow-green, warm, odorous entity wishing to be routinely expelled from users, but instead something engaging and enthralling that will not let the user let it go. Users will not turn away and slam the door on PeerLibrary because PeerLibrary will never bother them anyway. PeerLibrary will let them in and let them see something that they want to know and will not wish to let go.Why would participants in the social experiment that is PeerLibrary not wish to let it go? Simply put, they want to get the most out of academic literature. At the physical level, academic literature is just a list of words and figures that researchers combined to describe their research. In order for an individual to turn this into something useful for themselves, they would want to comprehend the background of the topic, the direction the researchers decided to take investigation and why, the setup and results of their experimentation, in addition to the author’s conclusion on the supposition investigated. Post-comprehension, the viewer may wish to replicate the experiment, or design their own experiment. In both of these phases of academic literature review, scholars may want to discuss their thoughts and interpretations of the material with others. This desire could stem from an enjoyment of the accompaniment of an arrangement of folks or merely from a perspective that deep understanding comes most effectively from a discussion rather than instruction.This is the power of PeerLibrary: to take the traditional library ideology of transferring knowledge from source-to-person, and expanding it to source-to-people, which is now technologically empowered.So, as you now see before you, our logo is thus a book, one page text, the other a web. Alas, representation. [Less]
Posted almost 10 years ago by yourgarbear-blog-blog
What is a logo?Is a logo a representation of an organization’s values, goals, strengths, heart, and solidarity on the cause of lubricating the annals of academic knowledge and the communication of it to the people of the third planet from the ... [More] sun?PeerLibrary used to be represented by the letter, “P,” but could that honestly describe an organization which seeks to change not merely academic literature’s presentation to the masses, but honestly the universe as a whole? In the mind’s eye of PeerLibrary (because we are busy ameliorating the wrongs of modern society), we are making EVERYTHING change.PeerLibrary was once described by the now apparent shallowness that is the letter, “P.” Insanity. We tried to represent a fundamentally brave, bold, and brilliant burst out of the box that academia has been hoping for since the advent of the intellectual superfreeway that is the interwebz, and now we see that we must move on. Additionally, the word pronounced as, “Pee,” is simply not representative of an organization that seeks to not waste the full power of academic literature nor the electronic superverse. PeerLibrary is not some yellow-green, warm, odorous entity wishing to be routinely expelled from users, but instead something engaging and enthralling that will not let the user let it go. Users will not turn away and slam the door on PeerLibrary because PeerLibrary will never bother them anyway. PeerLibrary will let them in and let them see something that they want to know and will not wish to let go.Why would participants in the social experiment that is PeerLibrary not wish to let it go? Simply put, they want to get the most out of academic literature. At the physical level, academic literature is just a list of words and figures that researchers combined to describe their research. In order for an individual to turn this into something useful for themselves, they would want to comprehend the background of the topic, the direction the researchers decided to take investigation and why, the setup and results of their experimentation, in addition to the author’s conclusion on the supposition investigated. Post-comprehension, the viewer may wish to replicate the experiment, or design their own experiment. In both of these phases of academic literature review, scholars may want to discuss their thoughts and interpretations of the material with others. This desire could stem from an enjoyment of the accompaniment of an arrangement of folks or merely from a perspective that deep understanding comes most effectively from a discussion rather than instruction.This is the power of PeerLibrary: to take the traditional library ideology of transferring knowledge from source-to-person, and expanding it to source-to-people, which is now technologically empowered.So, as you now see before you, our logo is thus a book, one page text, the other a web. Alas, representation. [Less]
Posted almost 10 years ago by yourgarbear-blog-blog
What is a logo?Is a logo a representation of an organization’s values, goals, strengths, heart, and solidarity on the cause of lubricating the annals of academic knowledge and the communication of it to the people of the third planet from the ... [More] sun?PeerLibrary used to be represented by the letter, “P,” but could that honestly describe an organization which seeks to change not merely academic literature’s presentation to the masses, but honestly the universe as a whole? In the mind’s eye of PeerLibrary (because we are busy ameliorating the wrongs of modern society), we are making EVERYTHING change.PeerLibrary was once described by the now apparent shallowness that is the letter, “P.” Insanity. We tried to represent a fundamentally brave, bold, and brilliant burst out of the box that academia has been hoping for since the advent of the intellectual superfreeway that is the interwebz, and now we see that we must move on. Additionally, the word pronounced as, “Pee,” is simply not representative of an organization that seeks to not waste the full power of academic literature nor the electronic superverse. PeerLibrary is not some yellow-green, warm, odorous entity wishing to be routinely expelled from users, but instead something engaging and enthralling that will not let the user let it go. Users will not turn away and slam the door on PeerLibrary because PeerLibrary will never bother them anyway. PeerLibrary will let them in and let them see something that they want to know and will not wish to let go.Why would participants in the social experiment that is PeerLibrary not wish to let it go? Simply put, they want to get the most out of academic literature. At the physical level, academic literature is just a list of words and figures that researchers combined to describe their research. In order for an individual to turn this into something useful for themselves, they would want to comprehend the background of the topic, the direction the researchers decided to take investigation and why, the setup and results of their experimentation, in addition to the author’s conclusion on the supposition investigated. Post-comprehension, the viewer may wish to replicate the experiment, or design their own experiment. In both of these phases of academic literature review, scholars may want to discuss their thoughts and interpretations of the material with others. This desire could stem from an enjoyment of the accompaniment of an arrangement of folks or merely from a perspective that deep understanding comes most effectively from a discussion rather than instruction.This is the power of PeerLibrary: to take the traditional library ideology of transferring knowledge from source-to-person, and expanding it to source-to-people, which is now technologically empowered.So, as you now see before you, our logo is thus a book, one page text, the other a web. Alas, representation. [Less]
Posted almost 10 years ago by yourgarbear-blog-blog
What is a logo?Is a logo a representation of an organization’s values, goals, strengths, heart, and solidarity on the cause of lubricating the annals of academic knowledge and the communication of it to the people of the third planet from the ... [More] sun?PeerLibrary used to be represented by the letter, “P,” but could that honestly describe an organization which seeks to change not merely academic literature’s presentation to the masses, but honestly the universe as a whole? In the mind’s eye of PeerLibrary (because we are busy ameliorating the wrongs of modern society), we are making EVERYTHING change.PeerLibrary was once described by the now apparent shallowness that is the letter, “P.” Insanity. We tried to represent a fundamentally brave, bold, and brilliant burst out of the box that academia has been hoping for since the advent of the intellectual superfreeway that is the interwebz, and now we see that we must move on. Additionally, the word pronounced as, “Pee,” is simply not representative of an organization that seeks to not waste the full power of academic literature nor the electronic superverse. PeerLibrary is not some yellow-green, warm, odorous entity wishing to be routinely expelled from users, but instead something engaging and enthralling that will not let the user let it go. Users will not turn away and slam the door on PeerLibrary because PeerLibrary will never bother them anyway. PeerLibrary will let them in and let them see something that they want to know and will not wish to let go.Why would participants in the social experiment that is PeerLibrary not wish to let it go? Simply put, they want to get the most out of academic literature. At the physical level, academic literature is just a list of words and figures that researchers combined to describe their research. In order for an individual to turn this into something useful for themselves, they would want to comprehend the background of the topic, the direction the researchers decided to take investigation and why, the setup and results of their experimentation, in addition to the author’s conclusion on the supposition investigated. Post-comprehension, the viewer may wish to replicate the experiment, or design their own experiment. In both of these phases of academic literature review, scholars may want to discuss their thoughts and interpretations of the material with others. This desire could stem from an enjoyment of the accompaniment of an arrangement of folks or merely from a perspective that deep understanding comes most effectively from a discussion rather than instruction.This is the power of PeerLibrary: to take the traditional library ideology of transferring knowledge from source-to-person, and expanding it to source-to-people, which is now technologically empowered.So, as you now see before you, our logo is thus a book, one page text, the other a web. Alas, representation. [Less]
Posted almost 10 years ago by yourgarbear
What is a logo?Is a logo a representation of an organization’s values, goals, strengths, heart, and solidarity on the cause of lubricating the annals of academic knowledge and the communication of it to the people of the third planet from the ... [More] sun?PeerLibrary used to be represented by the letter, “P,” but could that honestly describe an organization which seeks to change not merely academic literature’s presentation to the masses, but honestly the universe as a whole? In the mind’s eye of PeerLibrary (because we are busy ameliorating the wrongs of modern society), we are making EVERYTHING change.PeerLibrary was once described by the now apparent shallowness that is the letter, “P.” Insanity. We tried to represent a fundamentally brave, bold, and brilliant burst out of the box that academia has been hoping for since the advent of the intellectual superfreeway that is the interwebz, and now we see that we must move on. Additionally, the word pronounced as, “Pee,” is simply not representative of an organization that seeks to not waste the full power of academic literature nor the electronic superverse. PeerLibrary is not some yellow-green, warm, odorous entity wishing to be routinely expelled from users, but instead something engaging and enthralling that will not let the user let it go. Users will not turn away and slam the door on PeerLibrary because PeerLibrary will never bother them anyway. PeerLibrary will let them in and let them see something that they want to know and will not wish to let go.Why would participants in the social experiment that is PeerLibrary not wish to let it go? Simply put, they want to get the most out of academic literature. At the physical level, academic literature is just a list of words and figures that researchers combined to describe their research. In order for an individual to turn this into something useful for themselves, they would want to comprehend the background of the topic, the direction the researchers decided to take investigation and why, the setup and results of their experimentation, in addition to the author’s conclusion on the supposition investigated. Post-comprehension, the viewer may wish to replicate the experiment, or design their own experiment. In both of these phases of academic literature review, scholars may want to discuss their thoughts and interpretations of the material with others. This desire could stem from an enjoyment of the accompaniment of an arrangement of folks or merely from a perspective that deep understanding comes most effectively from a discussion rather than instruction.This is the power of PeerLibrary: to take the traditional library ideology of transferring knowledge from source-to-person, and expanding it to source-to-people, which is now technologically empowered.So, as you now see before you, our logo is thus a book, one page text, the other a web. Alas, representation. [Less]
Posted almost 10 years ago by yourgarbear
What is a logo?Is a logo a representation of an organization’s values, goals, strengths, heart, and solidarity on the cause of lubricating the annals of academic knowledge and the communication of it to the people of the third planet from the ... [More] sun?PeerLibrary used to be represented by the letter, “P,” but could that honestly describe an organization which seeks to change not merely academic literature’s presentation to the masses, but honestly the universe as a whole? In the mind’s eye of PeerLibrary (because we are busy ameliorating the wrongs of modern society), we are making EVERYTHING change.PeerLibrary was once described by the now apparent shallowness that is the letter, “P.” Insanity. We tried to represent a fundamentally brave, bold, and brilliant burst out of the box that academia has been hoping for since the advent of the intellectual superfreeway that is the interwebz, and now we see that we must move on. Additionally, the word pronounced as, “Pee,” is simply not representative of an organization that seeks to not waste the full power of academic literature nor the electronic superverse. PeerLibrary is not some yellow-green, warm, odorous entity wishing to be routinely expelled from users, but instead something engaging and enthralling that will not let the user let it go. Users will not turn away and slam the door on PeerLibrary because PeerLibrary will never bother them anyway. PeerLibrary will let them in and let them see something that they want to know and will not wish to let go.Why would participants in the social experiment that is PeerLibrary not wish to let it go? Simply put, they want to get the most out of academic literature. At the physical level, academic literature is just a list of words and figures that researchers combined to describe their research. In order for an individual to turn this into something useful for themselves, they would want to comprehend the background of the topic, the direction the researchers decided to take investigation and why, the setup and results of their experimentation, in addition to the author’s conclusion on the supposition investigated. Post-comprehension, the viewer may wish to replicate the experiment, or design their own experiment. In both of these phases of academic literature review, scholars may want to discuss their thoughts and interpretations of the material with others. This desire could stem from an enjoyment of the accompaniment of an arrangement of folks or merely from a perspective that deep understanding comes most effectively from a discussion rather than instruction.This is the power of PeerLibrary: to take the traditional library ideology of transferring knowledge from source-to-person, and expanding it to source-to-people, which is now technologically empowered.So, as you now see before you, our logo is thus a book, one page text, the other a web. Alas, representation. [Less]
Posted almost 10 years ago by yourgarbear
What is a logo?Is a logo a representation of an organization’s values, goals, strengths, heart, and solidarity on the cause of lubricating the annals of academic knowledge and the communication of it to the people of the third planet from the ... [More] sun?PeerLibrary used to be represented by the letter, “P,” but could that honestly describe an organization which seeks to change not merely academic literature’s presentation to the masses, but honestly the universe as a whole? In the mind’s eye of PeerLibrary (because we are busy ameliorating the wrongs of modern society), we are making EVERYTHING change.PeerLibrary was once described by the now apparent shallowness that is the letter, “P.” Insanity. We tried to represent a fundamentally brave, bold, and brilliant burst out of the box that academia has been hoping for since the advent of the intellectual superfreeway that is the interwebz, and now we see that we must move on. Additionally, the word pronounced as, “Pee,” is simply not representative of an organization that seeks to not waste the full power of academic literature nor the electronic superverse. PeerLibrary is not some yellow-green, warm, odorous entity wishing to be routinely expelled from users, but instead something engaging and enthralling that will not let the user let it go. Users will not turn away and slam the door on PeerLibrary because PeerLibrary will never bother them anyway. PeerLibrary will let them in and let them see something that they want to know and will not wish to let go.Why would participants in the social experiment that is PeerLibrary not wish to let it go? Simply put, they want to get the most out of academic literature. At the physical level, academic literature is just a list of words and figures that researchers combined to describe their research. In order for an individual to turn this into something useful for themselves, they would want to comprehend the background of the topic, the direction the researchers decided to take investigation and why, the setup and results of their experimentation, in addition to the author’s conclusion on the supposition investigated. Post-comprehension, the viewer may wish to replicate the experiment, or design their own experiment. In both of these phases of academic literature review, scholars may want to discuss their thoughts and interpretations of the material with others. This desire could stem from an enjoyment of the accompaniment of an arrangement of folks or merely from a perspective that deep understanding comes most effectively from a discussion rather than instruction.This is the power of PeerLibrary: to take the traditional library ideology of transferring knowledge from source-to-person, and expanding it to source-to-people, which is now technologically empowered.So, as you now see before you, our logo is thus a book, one page text, the other a web. Alas, representation. [Less]
Posted almost 10 years ago by yourgarbear
What is a logo?Is a logo a representation of an organization’s values, goals, strengths, heart, and solidarity on the cause of lubricating the annals of academic knowledge and the communication of it to the people of the third planet from the ... [More] sun?PeerLibrary used to be represented by the letter, “P,” but could that honestly describe an organization which seeks to change not merely academic literature’s presentation to the masses, but honestly the universe as a whole? In the mind’s eye of PeerLibrary (because we are busy ameliorating the wrongs of modern society), we are making EVERYTHING change.PeerLibrary was once described by the now apparent shallowness that is the letter, “P.” Insanity. We tried to represent a fundamentally brave, bold, and brilliant burst out of the box that academia has been hoping for since the advent of the intellectual superfreeway that is the interwebz, and now we see that we must move on. Additionally, the word pronounced as, “Pee,” is simply not representative of an organization that seeks to not waste the full power of academic literature nor the electronic superverse. PeerLibrary is not some yellow-green, warm, odorous entity wishing to be routinely expelled from users, but instead something engaging and enthralling that will not let the user let it go. Users will not turn away and slam the door on PeerLibrary because PeerLibrary will never bother them anyway. PeerLibrary will let them in and let them see something that they want to know and will not wish to let go.Why would participants in the social experiment that is PeerLibrary not wish to let it go? Simply put, they want to get the most out of academic literature. At the physical level, academic literature is just a list of words and figures that researchers combined to describe their research. In order for an individual to turn this into something useful for themselves, they would want to comprehend the background of the topic, the direction the researchers decided to take investigation and why, the setup and results of their experimentation, in addition to the author’s conclusion on the supposition investigated. Post-comprehension, the viewer may wish to replicate the experiment, or design their own experiment. In both of these phases of academic literature review, scholars may want to discuss their thoughts and interpretations of the material with others. This desire could stem from an enjoyment of the accompaniment of an arrangement of folks or merely from a perspective that deep understanding comes most effectively from a discussion rather than instruction.This is the power of PeerLibrary: to take the traditional library ideology of transferring knowledge from source-to-person, and expanding it to source-to-people, which is now technologically empowered.So, as you now see before you, our logo is thus a book, one page text, the other a web. Alas, representation. [Less]
Posted almost 10 years ago by yourgarbear-blog-blog
What is a logo?Is a logo a representation of an organization’s values, goals, strengths, heart, and solidarity on the cause of lubricating the annals of academic knowledge and the communication of it to the people of the third planet from the ... [More] sun?PeerLibrary used to be represented by the letter, “P,” but could that honestly describe an organization which seeks to change not merely academic literature’s presentation to the masses, but honestly the universe as a whole? In the mind’s eye of PeerLibrary (because we are busy ameliorating the wrongs of modern society), we are making EVERYTHING change.PeerLibrary was once described by the now apparent shallowness that is the letter, “P.” Insanity. We tried to represent a fundamentally brave, bold, and brilliant burst out of the box that academia has been hoping for since the advent of the intellectual superfreeway that is the interwebz, and now we see that we must move on. Additionally, the word pronounced as, “Pee,” is simply not representative of an organization that seeks to not waste the full power of academic literature nor the electronic superverse. PeerLibrary is not some yellow-green, warm, odorous entity wishing to be routinely expelled from users, but instead something engaging and enthralling that will not let the user let it go. Users will not turn away and slam the door on PeerLibrary because PeerLibrary will never bother them anyway. PeerLibrary will let them in and let them see something that they want to know and will not wish to let go.Why would participants in the social experiment that is PeerLibrary not wish to let it go? Simply put, they want to get the most out of academic literature. At the physical level, academic literature is just a list of words and figures that researchers combined to describe their research. In order for an individual to turn this into something useful for themselves, they would want to comprehend the background of the topic, the direction the researchers decided to take investigation and why, the setup and results of their experimentation, in addition to the author’s conclusion on the supposition investigated. Post-comprehension, the viewer may wish to replicate the experiment, or design their own experiment. In both of these phases of academic literature review, scholars may want to discuss their thoughts and interpretations of the material with others. This desire could stem from an enjoyment of the accompaniment of an arrangement of folks or merely from a perspective that deep understanding comes most effectively from a discussion rather than instruction.This is the power of PeerLibrary: to take the traditional library ideology of transferring knowledge from source-to-person, and expanding it to source-to-people, which is now technologically empowered.So, as you now see before you, our logo is thus a book, one page text, the other a web. Alas, representation. [Less]