Synowl Equity owns and manages Synowl Content Studio, Synowl Web Magazine (hereby known as Synowl Webzine, or simply Webzine), and Synowl Study Guides (hereby known as Synowledge).

Synowl Content Studio is a provider of Custom Branded and White Label Text Content, along with Research Services and Technical Writing Services. Synowl also writes and publishes Commissioned and Syndicated Content, as well as offers Copywriting services and Affiliate Marketing services for Lead Generation. It also publishes dedicated reviews of books, PC games, and literature.

Synowledge

This section is a repository of summary notes that cover different subjects that their respective authors are well-versed in, and can offer tutoring services or consultation services in the topics that they have covered.

In Synowledge, each topic is presented in bulleted form, which is teh best presentation format for summarized notes. These summary notes are written in-house by the educational arm of Synowl Equity, which is Synowledge. These notes are tailored to students, teachers, and anyone who has an interest in the covered subjects. They are not meant to replace any course textbook or recommended curricula reads. These notes are, at the minimum, meant to serve as revision notes, and for Synowl, these notes serve as a solid substratum for complex advanced subjects and topic that are published in the website. This minimizes the need for repetitive re-definition of terms or re-explanation of concepts or mode of operations of devices, or mode of actions of drugs. As more subjects are published, this series will continue growing.
In this Education Series, one topic – or set of related topics – is covered in a single webpage. This makes it easy for students to do their revisions, or for anyone to familiarize himself or herself with the basics of the covered topic. Likewise, the webpage can have embedded hyperlinks to other pages that define or elaborate on a given concept.
For students or anyone who needs assistance, be it be academic or professional help, feel free to contact us using the Contact Form provided, or make visit the Order section and make (or request) assistance or support.

Continuous addition of notes will build an online repository of notes. To better organize this repository, a table of contents will be added to each series of shortnotes that qualifies as a subject, and hyperlinked topics will open as webpages. This table of contents will not follow the conventional format of curricula-based school textbooks, as most of the topics will be written to be as self-contained as possible.

An online glossary of commonly used abbreviation and notation has been added as a standalone webpage.
There will be a dedicated resource page for program code elements that are used in this website in notes and practical projects. Likewise, notes will be related to practical projects. For instance, summary/lecture notes on neuromorphism and glassmorphism will be used to design webpage elements. Moreover, simple web apps built when describing programming procedures will be placed in a dedicated and accessible resource store.

Non-Marketing Reviews

This unit reviews and critically analyzes books, films, novellas, software, films, franchised literature, and computer games. Precedence is given to book reviews (over other types of literature reviews). There are 3 key invariables that are considered during these reviews, and they are the content (which is the primary constant), style of presentation of content, and the validity and authenticity of the reviewed content.

For works of fiction, the principle of realism or naturalism is used to model or benchmark the content, as well as evaluate how well the actions of its characters approximate real-world actions. This reduces the need to prioritize scenes in fictional acts, while simultaneously shifting focus to human agency and conscious will to make decisions and act on those decisions. Likewise, priority is given to illusionistic realism. Even so, some of these variables and benchmarks do not apply to speculative fiction, including its subgenres such as fantasy literature, retrofuturism, and supernatural fiction.

Most of the computer games reviewed here are the games played by the individual reviewer and deemed meritorious for an in-depth review. Examples of such games include the Half-Life series, the Metro series, the Wolfenstein series, and the Crysis series of first-person shooter (FPS) games. At times, game franchises such as the Metro franchise, which has novels in addition to its 3 games – Metro 2033, Metro: Last Light, and Metro Exodus – can be reviewed as either a franchise, written fiction (i.e novel review), or individual game review.

The review of non-fiction books prioritizes the authenticity of the content, theme cohesion, chronology of events, and objectivity of the arguments made by the author.

Among the film content reviewed are the contents of selected feature films, indie films, documentaries, docudramas, and fiction films.

There are also feature reviews of software products, including operating systems and user programs. These reviews are not meant to be marketing pieces nor are they written in a marketing tone. The focus of each software review is to highlight the features of the program, its programming principle, how it works, what it is meant to do, and potential bugs, as well as other potential uses it has beyond what the creator intended.

All reviews are written with an inclination towards academic-grade objectivity. As expected, objectivity is maintained throughout the review so that inferences and insights gained from the work being reviewed can be logically presented and defended. This also allows for contextualization of the critique.

Please note that the review will NOT be salesy, and a professional tone and objective critique will be discernible throughout the review.