#9774 Nano Ninjas is an all-girls rookie FIRST Tech Challenge team with 15 passionate 7th and 8th graders. In support of the non-profit organization STEM4Girls, Overleaf was delighted to sponsor them with a free enterprise account for their team! They used the Overleaf account to create their engineering notebook, a way to record their team and robot's journey throughout the season. Here's how they got on...
Blog
- February 9, 2016
The Nano Ninjas building Robots – an all-girls FIRST Tech Challenge team #STEM4Girls
- Henry · February 9, 2016
Autocomplete of reference keys - Easier citing
This article was originally published on the ShareLaTeX blog and is reproduced here for archival purposes.
- Mary Anne · February 5, 2016
Free Overleaf Pro Accounts for members of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
We’re excited to announce that the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) is providing free Overleaf Pro accounts for all students, faculty, researchers and staff who would like to use a collaborative, online LaTeX editor for their projects!
- John · February 3, 2016
Overleaf's spell-checker now supports five additional languages: Italian, Portuguese (Brazil), Czech, Ukrainian and Polish
Following a recent update to our spell-checker to use a more comprehensive and more stable set of libraries, we're also delighted to have added five additional language options!
- Shelly · February 2, 2016
Collaborating without Word - an interview with Matteo De Felice, Climate Scientist at ENEA
"In Word it’s really easy to leave comments, make track changes, etc, but it doesn’t scale – if working with 10 people you end up with a massive chain of emails.
LaTeX is a more comprehensive tool, but it’s too hard for non-comp scientists – if you don’t know git, track changes is hard, etc. Overleaf provides a nice balance."
– Matteo De Felice
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