Based on our record, Academia.edu seems to be a lot more popular than LENS. While we know about 185 links to Academia.edu, we've tracked only 2 mentions of LENS. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
In terms of getting hold of these books and articles, this thread provides some useful (and legal) tips and some links provided in this thread, u/PhiloSpo also works to highlight open access works. Libraries are always an invaluable tool to recommend and can help you get hold of books, for me jstor.org with 100 articles a month on a free account, academia.edu has free papers have been very useful as a platform.... Source: 5 months ago
I've found a lot of free articles on patristics/saints at academia.edu over the years. Source: 6 months ago
PS: Dear MODs, if it's not appropriate for this sub, sorry to disturb, just delete this massage. (I got used to situation when subs delete my wish to share my ideas. Considering link to my reddit sub as something forbidden to share. For those who might think that my book is "schizophrenic nonsense" I disagree, as a trusted representatives of many scientific resources such as academia.edu, ssrn.com revised and... Source: 8 months ago
The problem here is that academia.edu is not perse a place where authors will upload their papers; it rather functions as a large academic PDF exchange. I have messaged the uploader a while back, but have not received a response. Source: 10 months ago
Available on the free tier at academia.edu. Source: 10 months ago
Examiner here, in biotech. Besides our internal equivalent of Patent Public Search, Google Patents is where I start. I also use lens.org and ip.com less frequently, and SciFinder when I need to search specific chemicals. STN is for searches prior to allowance when I want to confirm that there really, really isn't any art that teaches the thing I haven't found yet. Source: about 1 year ago
If the patent has been published, it's under "Supplemental Content" in Patent Center. You could also look up the patent on lens.org. Source: over 1 year ago
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