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  • Posted by James on April 22, 2013

    This article was originally published on the ShareLaTeX blog and is reproduced here for archival purposes.

  • Posted on April 21, 2013

    The IEEE provides guidelines and templates for the preparation of papers and presentations for their conference proceedings.

    We've pre-loaded five standard uses of the IEEE style into writeLaTeX to help you get started.

    Advanced Demo Screenshot
  • Posted on April 14, 2013
    Mikhail Klassen photo

    Guest blog post by Mikhail Klassen

    When I started graduate school in 2009, I was looking for a good way to keep track of my research progress. I knew it was very important to keep a research notebook, but I didn't know what was the best way of doing this.

    In 2010, I started compiling regular notes in a special folder on my desktop. Before long I needed a system to organize them all. A system eventually came together, but it wasn't perfect. Worst of all, I couldn't share my system very easily with others. People saw my LaTeX research diary system, mumbled “That’s cool”, but only a few other geeks started using it.

    In 2012, I discovered WriteLaTeX, which changes everything.

    Klassen Research Diary Screenshot
  • Posted by James on April 5, 2013

    This article was originally published on the ShareLaTeX blog and is reproduced here for archival purposes.

  • Posted on April 2, 2013

    Following requests from a number of our users, we've put together a short page describing some neat ways you can use writeLaTeX as a teacher or lecturer with a class full of students.

    At the simplest level, you can create links to open your TeX resources (such as assignments or course notes) in writeLaTeX, but the possibilities don't stop there.

    Homework template screenshot

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