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・ Guru Harkrishan Public School, Nanak Piao
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Guru Magazine
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・ Guru Maneyo Granth
・ Guru Meditation
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・ Guru Nanak Academy, Ratia
・ Guru Nanak and the Sacred Thread
・ Guru Nanak College, Chennai
・ Guru Nanak Darbar Gurdwara
・ Guru Nanak Dev (disambiguation)
・ Guru Nanak Dev Engineering College
・ Guru Nanak Dev Engineering College, Bidar
・ Guru Nanak Dev Engineering College, Ludhiana


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Guru Magazine : ウィキペディア英語版
Guru Magazine

Guru Magazine is an online crowd-sourced magazine supported by the Wellcome Trust.〔("Public Engagement Funded People Awards" ), Wellcome Trust. Retrieved 27 November 2012.〕 and published by Guru Magazine Ltd. It is a bi-monthly popular science magazine published in DRM-free ePub, Adobe PDF and kindle formats.〔Halfacree, G. ("Guru Magazine pushes a publishing revolution" ), ''thinq_'', 11 August 2011. Retrieved on 6 November 2011.〕〔Irvine, R. ''Best Free Digital Magazines'', ''Webuser Magazine'', 5 April 2012, 286: 56.〕 Guru Magazine is designed to be read on tablet devices, smartphones and eReaders〔Wilkinson, M. ("Trowbridge doctor's bid to make science fun" ), ''Wiltshire Times'', 12 August 2011. Retrieved on 6 November 2011.〕 to reduce publishing costs .〔 and for environmental reasons.〔Riggen-Ransom, M. ("Guru Magazine sets the poetry of science to digital motion" ), ''Pop!Tech'', 19 August 2011. Retrieved on 6 November 2011.〕
The magazine was launched on 1 June 2011, and explores science topics and their relevance to everyday life.〔Good, B. ("Launch of Guru, a new science magazine" ), ''Association of British Science Writers'', 31 May 2011. Retrieved on 6 November 2011.〕 The magazine is distributed for free on the magazine’s website.〔 Dubbed a ‘science lifestyle’ periodical,〔〔 it was founded by Dr Stuart Farrimond, communications professional Ben Veal and graphic designer Sarah Joy in Trowbridge, UK.〔〔
The magazine features crowd-sourced, original writing from scientists, journalists and students from around the world. Regular contributors are termed ‘Gurus’ and include South African broadcaster Daryl Illbury, Canadian personal trainer Matt Linsdell and Detroit-based Dr Kim Lacey.〔
== History ==

Founder Dr Stuart Farrimond trained as a medical doctor before being diagnosed with a malignant brain tumour in 2008.〔Parkes, B. ("Doc on bike prior to brain op" ), ''Wiltshire Times'', 10 April 2008. Retrieved on 6 November 2011.〕 Following surgery he developed epilepsy and was unable to continue in the medical profession 〔Dubrovnik, E. ("Elvis + Interview with Dr Stu Farrimond + Hair vs Fur (podcast)" ), ''Reality Check (podcast)'', 17 October 2011. Retrieved on 6 November 2011.〕 He started a career in lecturing and science communication 〔〔Cowan, K. ("Science lifestyle project gets worldwide attention" ), ''Creative Bloom'', 23 August 2011. Retrieved on 6 November 2011.〕 and described his medical background as the inspiration to communicate ‘tricky concepts’.〔Jones, A. ("Dr Stu's Guru!" ), ''Trowbridge Magazine'', 1 September 2011, pg 12. Retrieved 6 November 2011.〕 The magazine was launched following the apparent high readership of Dr Farrimond’s science blog "Dr Stu’s Blog".〔〔 Stuart Farrimond described the magazine’s launch as an effort to "bridge the gap between popular science writing and lifestyle magazine journalism"〔 and to give opportunities for new writers to get their work published.〔Purcell, A. ("Interview with a Guru" ), ''I, Science'', 21 July 2011. Retrieved on 6 November 2011〕
Since the magazine's launch, two of Guru Magazine’s contributors, Stuart Farrimond and James Lloyd were finalists in the (Wellcome Trust Science Writing Prize 2011 ) (in association with the ‘Guardian’ and the ‘Observer’)〔Cowan, K. ("National Science awards recognition for two guru magazine writers" ), ''Creative Bloom'', 19 October 2011. Retrieved on 6 November 2011.〕 and Stuart Farrimond was shortlisted for 'Individual contribution to Technology' Award in The SPARKies 2012〔Maher Roberts, D. ("SPARKies 2012: Full List of Finalists" ), ''Bath Digital'', 5 March 2012. Retrieved on 19 April 2012.〕 and 2013〔James, K. ("SPARKIES shortlist focus: individual contribution to tech" ), ''Bath Digital'', 10 March 2013. Retrieved on 8 April 2013.〕 for his efforts in developing Guru Magazine to bring science to the masses.
In September 2012, it was announced that Guru Magazine was awarded £12,000 for the funding of an interactive mobile application, allowing readers to access magazine content via Apple's Newsstand application and Google Play.〔McAthy, R. ("Digital science mag Guru receives mobile app funding" ), ''Journalism.co.uk'', 28 September 2012. Retrieved on 27 November 2012.〕 The mobile app, offering an automatic free subscription facility, was released on 28 March 2013.〔Curry, S. ("Science: now available in easy-to-swallow tablet form" ), ''Guardian.co.uk'', 28 March 2013. Retrieved on 8 April 2013.〕

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