This link has been bookmarked by 42 people . It was first bookmarked on 19 Apr 2008, by didio juliano.
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EdurevueTechCrunch, 2008.04.18
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And now, you can get access to the online version for free through a new program called Britannica Webshare - provided that you are a “web publisher.
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22 Apr 08
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20 Apr 08
Vicki DavisEncyclopedia Britannica is now free for bloggers from an article on 4/18/08 -- yet another reason for our students to blog. (I have students blogging publicly under pseudonyms.)
This is fascinating, but also interesting to see how Britannica is playing catch up to Wikipedia in the market it once owned. I wonder, which would be more authoriative to you, a wikipedia quote updated daily, or Brittanica updated less often that doesn't display the authors of its content?digital_access blocked_blogs education ad4dcss edublogger edublog digitalcitizenship
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And now, you can get access to the online version for free through a new program called Britannica Webshare
- provided that you are a “web publisher.” The definition of a web publisher is rather squishy: “This program is intended for people who publish with some regularity on the Internet, be they bloggers, webmasters, or writers. We reserve the right to deny participation to anyone who in our judgment doesn’t qualify.” Basically, you sign up, tell them about your site URL and a description, and they review it and decide if you’ll get in. I wonder if Facebook, MySpace and Twitter users are eligible? They all certainly “publish with some regularity on the Internet.”
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19 Apr 08
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Geoffrey BilderInteresting speculation on what qualifies as a "blogger". Seems impossible to enforce with any consistency. "half-pregnant" indeed. Lessons to be learned.
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