Wikimedia Commons - Content

Content

  • November 30, 2006, 1 million media files.
  • October 9, 2007, 2 million media files.
  • July 16, 2008, 3 million media files.
  • March 4, 2009, 4 million media files.
  • September 2, 2009, 5 million media files.
  • January 27, 2010, 1 million registered users and 8 million pages.
  • January 31, 2010, 6 million media files
  • July 17, 2010, 7 million media files
  • January 1, 2011, 8 million media files
  • February 23, 2011, 9 million media files
  • April 15, 2011, 10 million media files
  • September 21, 2011, 11 million media files
  • January 13, 2012, 12 million media files
  • June 4, 2012, 13 million media files
  • September 23, 2012, 14 million media files

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Famous quotes containing the word content:

    A person of mature years and ripe development, who is expecting nothing from literature but the corroboration and renewal of past ideas, may find satisfaction in a lucidity so complete as to occasion no imaginative excitement, but young and ambitious students are not content with it. They seek the excitement because they are capable of the growth that it accompanies.
    Charles Horton Cooley (1864–1929)

    In America the taint of sectarianism lies broad upon the land. Not content with acknowledging the supremacy as the Diety, and with erecting temples in his honor, where all can bow down with reverence, the pride and vanity of human reason enter into and pollute our worship, and the houses that should be of God and for God, alone, where he is to be honored with submissive faith, are too often merely schools of metaphysical and useless distinctions. The nation is sectarian, rather than Christian.
    James Fenimore Cooper (1789–1851)

    Quintilian [educational writer in Rome about A.D. 100] hoped that teachers would be sensitive to individual differences of temperament and ability. . . . Beating, he thought, was usually unnecessary. A teacher who had made the effort to understand his pupil’s individual needs and character could probably dispense with it: “I will content myself with saying that children are helpless and easily victimized, and that therefore no one should be given unlimited power over them.”
    C. John Sommerville (20th century)