Having been loudly singing the praises of Overleaf for years now, first as a PhD student and then as an ambassador and lecturer, I'm amazed that there are still a good proportion of LaTeX users who haven't heard of it. I was therefore eager to set up a booth at the Australian and NZ Industrial and Applied Mathematics conference, held in Australia's capital city, Canberra, from February 7-11 2016 to spread the word. This was especially the case since Overleaf had generously agreed to sponsor the Conference, specifically the production of the conference handbook which was compiled in Overleaf.
ブログPosts tagged “events”
- March 7, 2016
Overleaf at Australian and NZ Industrial and Applied Maths (ANZIAM) 2016
- Mary Anne · February 29, 2016
Successful training at Purdue
We’re happy to write that we recently concluded a successful 2-day training series at Purdue University – the Graduate School! It was a fun 2 days filled with 5 different training sessions – all well attended.
We were able to discuss the benefits of Overleaf, the new Overleaf/Purdue web portal, and lots of questions from the audience!
- Shelly · February 23, 2016
Overleaf Collaborates with Caltech to Support Scientific LaTeX Authoring for All Members of the Campus Community
Exciting news! Overleaf is now collaborating with Caltech to provide Pro accounts to all students, faculty and staff.
On Wednesday, January 27th, the Library’s Research Services department coordinated an Overleaf training as part of their instruction program for Caltech students, faculty and staff.
- Mary Anne · January 8, 2016
Ask Me Anything! Overleaf founder John Hammersley on Reddit AMA - Jan 14 2016! #AskJohnOverleaf
- John · November 24, 2015
Quack quack! Have you tried Rubber Duck Debugging?
Mark Wheelhouse, 2nd Year Coordinator at ICL’s Department of Computing came up with a great idea for helping his students: Rubber Duck Debugging.
Needless to say that once we heard about this we were keen to get involved, and everyone was delighted with the rather cute result.
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