Yes, there was something in the pipeline to print, nicely (re)typeset books around the time covid stuck and the plan got sidelines. Will see if there is a possibility again.
We are using worpdress.com for the hosting, so that more focus is on curating the content with minimum maintenance required (it is mostly me, with little help from colleagues every now and then).
You can download the entire collection via our Internet Archive collection. You can use the export option from advanced search and keep mir-titles as the collection, then use wget or curl to download all of them.
The blog and the archive page are not in sync, we try to publish one book a day on the blog. The archive collection has more (recent) titles than the blog.
If whatsapp is restricted in India people will be on the streets. But as you said, this might be first of many bans on Telegram. In the end they will make it a hassle to use it reliably.
Your comment reminds me of a quote by the Dutch artist M.C. Escher, that has helped in my lows
> How slowly one advances in a boat that does not float along with the stream in a specific direction! How much easier it is when one can connect with the work of great predecessors whose value is not doubted by anyone. A personal experiment, a construction whose foundations one must dig himself and whose walls one must erect himself, runs a real risk of becoming a humble hovel. But perhaps one prefers to live there rather than in a palace that has been built by others. (Escher on Escher – Exploring the Infinite)
Many of the ed-tech products that are introduced in the classroom are solutions looking for a problem. Not many have much understanding of the context of teaching and learning processes. And yet, as history of ed-tech tells us, gung-ho business optimism will sell these to managers/administrators as THE solution. The most important stakeholders in the process the teachers an students, who are end-users of the said product/technology, are left out in this decision chain.
> I can't tell you how many times an idea, that was crystal clear in my mind, fell apart the moment I started writing and I realize there were major contradictions I needed to resolve.
perhaps because writing is a third order exercise.
first order being in thinking in one's mind, one has to talk with oneself. second order is talking to someone else we are directing thoughts towards that person, but in writing we have to imagine the reader and then write.
We are using worpdress.com for the hosting, so that more focus is on curating the content with minimum maintenance required (it is mostly me, with little help from colleagues every now and then).