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Given that CrowdStrike itself didn't experience an outage, but rather, its faulty update caused global disruptions, a more accurate title would be: 2024 CrowdStrike faulty update incident. This title clarifies that the issue was caused by a faulty update from CrowdStrike, which, in turn, led to widespread outages across various sectors globally. Sources like SiliconANGLE provide detailed coverage on this incident, noting the disruptions caused by the faulty Falcon update and its widespread impact. → Deutscher, Maria (July 19, 2024). "Faulty CrowdStrike Update Causes One of the Largest-Ever IT Outages". SiliconANGLE. Palo Alto: SiliconANGLE Media Inc. Retrieved July 20, 2024. Free access icon.



    1. Via HathiTrust (Michigan). Free access icon



    1. Via Google Books (UC Davis). Free access icon
    1. Internet Archive (University of Toronto Library). Free access icon
"Ipomoea Jalapa (L.) Pursh" first appeared as a synonym in Curtis's Botanical Magazineplate 1572 → published by Samuel Curtis, Walworth. August 1, 1813. This, however, according to the most recently formulated American code of nomenclature, does not constitute "publication" of the name in a technical sense.
  • Nuttall, Thomas; Cox, T. (1830). "An Account of the Jalap Plant as An Ipomœa". The American Journal of the Medical Sciences (appended to a paper on the subject by Dr. R. Cox). 5: 305. ISSN 1538-2990 (Online)
    The name "Ipomoea jalapa" as used by Nuttall and Cox is considered illegitimate (nomen illegitimum = illegitimate name) because the valid publication of the name was made by Pursh in 1813, and any subsequent usage that did not follow proper nomenclatural protocols is not accepted. This ensures that botanical names remain consistent and traceable to their original valid descriptions.


    1. HathiTrust (Cornell University). Free access icon
    2. Internet Archive (Missouri Botanical Garden). Free access icon



    1. Via Internet Archive (Harvard). Free access icon
    2. Google Books (Austrian National Library). Free access icon


    1. Via HathiTrust (Harvard University). Free access icon
    2. Via Internet Archive (University of Michigan). Free access icon
    3. Google Books (Complutense University of Madrid). Free access icon
    4. Google Books. (Bavarian State Library). Free access icon
Note: Philippe Gabriel Pelletan (1792–1879) was the son of Philippe-Jean Pelletan (1747–1829).



  1. Karl Theodor Hartweg (1812–1871)
  2. Robert Graham (1786–1845)
    1. Via Internet Archive (Missouri Botanical Garden). Free access icon


  • Don, George (1798–1856) (1840). A General System of Gardening and Botany. Founded Upon Miller’s Gardener’s Dictionary, and Arranged According to the Natural System. Issued also during the same years under other titles, including: A General History – Dichlamydeous Plants, Comprising Complete Descriptions of the Different Orders; Together With the Characters of the Genera and Species, and an Enumeration of the Cultivated Varieties; Their Places of Growth, Time of Flowering, Mode of Culture, and Uses in Medicine and Domestic Economy; The Scientific Names Accentuated, Their Etymologies Explained, and the Classes and Orders Illustrated by Engravings, and Preceded by Introductions to the Linnæan and Natural Systems, and a Glossary of the Terms Used: The Whole Arranged According to the Natural System (4 vols.). Printed for Charles James Gage Rivington and Francis Rivington (Rivington Publishers), et. al.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) Retrieved July 2, 2024. OCLC 6825168 (all editions).
    1. Vol. 4. 1838. p. 271: "Ja'lapa" – via Internet Archive (North Carolina State University Libraries). Free access icon

    1. Via Google Books (Radcliffe Science Library). Free access icon
    2. Via Google Books (Ohio State University). Free access icon



https://pubs.lib.uiowa.edu/annals-of-iowa/article/13220/galley/121686/download/

  • (subscription required)
  • English,, Carleton (March 10, 2023). "Big Bank Stocks Look Like Buys After Selloff" (print ed.). Vol. 103, no. 11. p. 12.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)


  • {{cite book |last1=Lebanon |first1=Guy |last2=Bruckstein |first2=Alfred M.



  1. Online: AllMusic Album ID: mw0000098545 (AllMusic). RhythmOne. Retrieved April 3, 2021.
  2. Hardbound: Print: Woodstra, Chris; John; Erlewine, Sgtephen Thomas, eds. (2008). Old School Rap and Hip-Hop (limited preview). All Music Guide Required Listening Series: No. 2. Backbeat Books. pp. 39–40. Retrieved September 25, 2023 – via Google Books.; ISBN 978-0-8793-0916-9, 0-8793-0916-4; OCLC 154751936 (all editions).




    • Billboard (May 8, 1993). Vol. 105, no. 19. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved September 25, 2023 – via World Radio History (worldradiohistory.com); David E. Frackelton Gleason (born 1946), ClevelandFree access icon{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
      1. Nelson, Havelock. "The Rap Column" – "Guru Dazzles With New Jazzmatazz" (PDF) (Nelson interviews Guru). p. 21. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)



      1. "Tony Bennett and 'When My Love is Gone'". p. 131.
      2. "Fifty-Eighth Street, While I Remember". p. 134.




    1. Via Google Books. (limited preview).
    2. Via Google Books. (limited preview).
    3. Via Internet Archive. (ARChive of Contemporary Music).




      1. Blog. Free access icon.
      2. Permalink. Vol. 134 (Late ed.). p. 1 & B18 (digital image 42) (col. 1) – via TimesMachine.


      (permalink – via TimesMachine.)


        1. 40 years, 10 months and 10 days


      • New York Times (The); Fox, Margalit (February 2, 2011). "Brian Rust, 88; Compiled Extensive Guides to Recorded Jazz" (print). (Late ed.; East Coast). ProQuest 848657905 (US Newsstream database).
        "The elder Mr. Rust, according to family oral tradition, declined a friend's suggestion that he name Victor's twin sister Decca. Often described as the father of contemporary discography, Mr. Rust embarked in the 1940s on a rigorous, deeply personal project that continued long afterward as he haunted archives and hunted down artists to reconstitute long-vanished recording sessions on paper. For decades, Jazz Records — known to jazz mavens simply as "J.R." — has been the de facto standard reference work in the field, furnishing meticulous information on session dates, personnel and much else for tens of thousands of recordings."
        Blog editions:
        1. "Brian Rust, Father of Modern Discography, Dies at 88". Free access icon. January 25, 2011. Retrieved February 2, 2011. ProQuest 2217511827 (US Newsstream database).
        2. "Brian Rust, Father of Modern Discography, Dies at 88". February 2, 2011. ProQuest 2217289081 (US Newsstream database).
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        1. Via Internet Archive.
        2. Via Google Books (limited preview).



        1. Via Google Books (limited preview).





        1. Martin, David Stone. Cover illustration.
        2. Morgenstern, Dan. "The Saxophone in Jazz, an Outline History".



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