Reedsy is a British publishing services company.
History
The company was established in 2014 in Shoreditch, London, UK. The name was inspired by the reed-like sedge used to create papyrus. It was initially funded by Seedcamp and DC Thomson co-founded by Emmanuel Nataf, who became the CEO.
Reedsy received 7,000 applications for its marketplace in its first year. It won the 2015 BookTech Gold Award and the 2016 Quantum Publishing Innovation Award.
Services
The company operates a marketplace of freelancers providing publishing services, such as editing, illustrating, translating, marketing, and ghostwriting. Authors use the marketplace to identify freelancers to work with, comparing previous work and rates. Reedsy takes a 10% cut of revenue from both the buyer and seller .
Reedsy Studio (formerly Reedsy Book Editor) launched in 2016, was developed as an online tool for book planning, manuscript development and collaborative editing. Reedsy Studio has been criticised for its connectivity issues.
Reedsy Learning provides some free online courses on writing.
Sy.Med Development, Inc. (also referred to as SyMed) develops and licenses software that manages credentialing-related tasks for healthcare providers and payers. Sy.Med's software, OneApp Pro, uses a data management system that automates form completion for the credentialing process.
Andrew J. Duck (born October 31, 1962) is an American politician and a perennial candidate. He was most recently the Democratic candidate for the United States House of Representatives for Maryland's 6th congressional district in the 2010 general election. He was a candidate for the same seat in 2006, 2008, and 2010, winning the Democratic nomination in 2006 but losing in the 2008 Democratic primary to Jennifer Dougherty. On June 1, 2009, he announced his intention to run for the seat again in 2010. Duck defeated Casey Clark in the Democratic primary but lost the general election to incumbent Roscoe Bartlett.
Israeli started airstrikes on the Gaza Strip on December 27, 2008, at 11:30 local time, and announced a "unilateral ceasefire" on the evening of January 17, 2009, after three weeks of all-out military operations against [...] in the Gaza Strip.
The battle between Israel and [...] in Gaza is part of the conflict between the Arabs and Israel that lasted from December 27, 2008, to January 17, 2009. In Israel, it is known as Operation Cast Lead, and among Arabs, it is called the Gaza Massacre (). Since the first day of the battle ended with the highest number of Palestinian dead and wounded, because this incident was unprecedented since 1948, this day became known as Black Saturday among some Arabs.
The battle between Israel and [...] in Gaza started shortly after the end of the six-month agreement that was signed between Israel and [...] and 12 militant groups. According to that agreement, [...] and Israel had committed to refrain from launching armed operations against each other's territory. During these six months, Israel accused [...] of breaching the agreement for firing rockets towards its territory, and [...] accused Israel of breaching the agreement for continuing the economic and fuel blockade of Gaza.