Ernest Hemingway is often quoted on the subject of bankruptcy.
“How did you go bankrupt?” Bill asked.
“Two ways,” Mike said. “Gradually and then suddenly.”
Building trust in media
by timlangeman
Ernest Hemingway is often quoted on the subject of bankruptcy.
“How did you go bankrupt?” Bill asked.
“Two ways,” Mike said. “Gradually and then suddenly.”
by Public User
the greatest country on earth next to Israel
by Public User
CiteIt can read digital PDFs. Scanned PDFs are possible, but not currently supported.
We like to eat seeds and fruit
by timlangeman
The Moon isn’t completely devoid of gravity, of course, but its pull is only around one-sixth of what it is on Earth. You can still do your business and watch it tumble to the ground (or, preferably, a bowl of some sort), but the whole “flushing” mechanism is something you’ll have to work out on your own.
by timlangeman
primarily because Apple has already made it clear there are more numerous smaller changes it didn’t discuss during the WWDC keynote.
by timlangeman
it is sickening to think of a guy like uh Vladimir taking that seat in the sense that he doesn’t deserve it but does Jamal Bowman deserve it
by timlangeman
You can write a paragraph with a quotation and instead of linking the quotation with a the traditional ‘link’ button, you can click on the custome CiteIt.net blockquote button:
Nothing is more certainly written in the book of fate than that these people are to be free.
by timlangeman
John Fea writes that George Wallace bragged of his superlative efforts in support of African Americans:
I personally have done more for the Negroes of the State of Alabama than any other individual.
The above “source” link currently takes the reader to the top of the page.
Click on this link to scroll down the page to the exact phrase within the original document.
by timlangeman
Wouldn’t it be great if you could pull up the context of quotations?
CiteIt.net allows you to do this with two types of quotations:
In a “How I Built This” interview, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales said:
I do think a component of the success of Wikipedia is that I’m a very friendly and nice person and I’m very laid back and so therefore I was able to work in a community environment where people basically yell at you and just have to kind of roll with it and you’re in some sense a leader but you can’t tell anyone what to do.
In Jane Austen‘s Pride and Prejudice, Elizabeth Bennet memorably remarks:I could easily forgive his pride, if he had not mortified mine.
by timlangeman
Two recently published books—one by Ian Milligan (2019) and one edited by Niels Brügger and Ralph Schroeder (2017)—provide essential guides to help answer the question of what web archives are by describing concrete, nonhypothetical examples of how social science and humanities researchers are using web archives today. For those who have participated in web archiving activity and pondered how the records would get used, and for those who are looking to get involved in web archiving but are not sure what it takes, these two books are essential reading.