ODesk – Online Staffing and Management Business

November 13, 2008 by Nick  
Filed under Audio Books for Older Children

According to Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal ODesk Corp. has created a global marketplace where more than 125,000 freelance technical professionals from around the world have demand for their skills.

The Menlo Park-based startup is an online staffing and management business that helps companies hire, manage and pay an international pool of technical personnel at competitive rates.

“Think of us as an eBay for people, if you will,” said Gary Swart, chief executive officer of oDesk Corp.

ODesk is capitalizing on globalization trends, home-sourcing abilities and the access to talent, a challenge that companies face daily.

The startup presents small- to medium-sized companies with a global talent pool of technical professionals looking for an opportunity to work remotely on jobs that might not be available where they live.

Companies are trying to do more for less, might not need a full-time employee and can’t find temporary talent locally, Swart said. Companies aren’t charged for posting jobs. Professionals, however, are charged for posting their skills.

“These companies are saying, ‘If I could have a flexible bench — marketing, support or development resources — and I can take advantage of global arbitrage, maybe there’s a win there’,” Swart said.

The platform is attracting about 200 new companies seeking talent and 600 new job-hunting professionals a day, Swart said. On Oct. 24 the number of freelancers stood at about 123,000. On Nov. 4, the number had increased to more than 127,000.

ODesk raised $6 million in a 2005 A round from Globespan Capital Partners and Sigma Partners. A spring 2006 B round fetched $8 million, which was led by Benchmark Capital with Globespan and Sigma participating. This summer DAG Ventures led a $15 million C round with all three previous investors participating.

The company is growing at a rate of three times year over year, Swart said, and expects to do about $40 million in services in 2008, taking in $4 million in revenue.

Earthquake Tomorrow

November 13, 2008 by Nick  
Filed under Audio Books for Older Children

According to The Redlands Daily Facts Millions will ‘Shakeout’ tomorrow in Southern California – Don’t worry, it’s only a drill
 On Thursday, millions of people around Southern California will drop, cover and hold on for two minutes as part of the largest earthquake drill in history.At 10 a.m. around 500,000 people from San Bernardino County will participate, and more than 5 million people are registered in Southern California for the Great California ShakeOut through schools, businesses, government agencies or faith-based organizations to participate in the event.The Great California ShakeOut was organized by the Earthquake Country Alliance, a group of earthquake professionals, civic leaders, businesses and emergency managers.The ShakeOut drill’s intent is to practice for a 7.8 magnitude earthquake. The most recent large earthquake was the July 29 Chino Hills earthquake, which registered a 5.4 on the Richter Scale and was centered in Chino Hills.

According to the U.S. Geological Survey, California has a 99.7 percent chance of having a 6.7 or higher earthquake in the next 30 years. The southern San Andreas has a 59 percent chance in the next 30 years to generate at least one magnitude 6.7 quake or larger for the entire California region. The fault runs along the base of the San Bernardino Mountains, through the Cajon Pass and up along the coast.

The Crucible – Audiobooks Version -II

November 10, 2008 by Nick  
Filed under Toys and Educational Audio Books

The Crucible II Audiobook

I have given you my soul; leave me my name!

Drawing on research on the witch trials he had conducted while an undergraduate, Miller composed The Crucible in the early 1950s.

Miller wrote the play during the brief ascendancy of Senator Joseph McCarthy, a demagogue whose vitriolic anti-Communism proved the spark needed to propel the United States into a dramatic and fractious anti-Communist fervor during these first tense years of the Cold War with the Soviet Union. Led by McCarthy, special congressional committees conducted highly controversial investigations intended to root out Communist sympathizers in the United States. As with the alleged witches of Salem, suspected Communists were encouraged to confess and to identify other Red sympathizers as means of escaping punishment. The policy resulted in a whirlwind of accusations. As people began to realize that they might be condemned as Communists regardless of their innocence, many “cooperated,” attempting to save themselves through false confessions, creating the image that the United States was overrun with Communists and perpetuating the hysteria. The liberal entertainment industry, in which Miller worked, was one of the chief targets of these “witch hunts,” as their opponents termed them. Some cooperated; others, like Miller, refused to give in to questioning. Those who were revealed, falsely or legitimately, as Communists, and those who refused to incriminate their friends, saw their careers suffer, as they were blacklisted from potential jobs for many years afterward.
 
At the time of its first performance, in January of 1953, critics and cast alike perceived The Crucible as a direct attack on McCarthyism (the policy of sniffing out Communists). Its comparatively short run, compared with those of Miller’s other works, was blamed on anti-Communist fervor. When Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were accused of spying for the Soviets and executed, the cast and audience of Miller’s play observed a moment of silence. Still, there are difficulties with interpreting The Crucible as a strict allegorical treatment of 1950s McCarthyism. For one thing, there were, as far as one can tell, no actual witches or devil-worshipers in Salem. However, there were certainly Communists in 1950s America, and many of those who were lionized as victims of McCarthyism at the time, such as the Rosenbergs and Alger Hiss (a former State Department official), were later found to have been in the pay of the Soviet Union. Miller’s Communist friends, then, were often less innocent than the victims of the Salem witch trials, like the stalwart Rebecca Nurse or the tragic John Proctor.
 
If Miller took unknowing liberties with the facts of his own era, he also played fast and loose with the historical record. The general outline of events in The Crucible corresponds to what happened in Salem of 1692, but Miller’s characters are often composites. Furthermore, his central plot device—the affair between Abigail Williams and John Proctor—has no grounding in fact (Proctor was over sixty at the time of the trials, while Abigail was only eleven). Thus, Miller’s decision to set sexual jealousy at the root of the hysteria constitutes a dramatic contrivance.
 
In an odd way, then, The Crucible is best read outside its historical context—not as a perfect allegory for anti-Communism, or as a faithful account of the Salem trials, but as a powerful and timeless depiction of how intolerance and hysteria can intersect and tear a community apart. In John Proctor, Miller gives the reader a marvelous tragic hero for any time—a flawed figure who finds his moral center just as everything is falling to pieces around him
Read entire article here.
Or listen to The Crucible Audiobook.

The Crucible – Audio Book – Part 1

November 9, 2008 by Nick  
Filed under Toys and Educational Audio Books

The Crucible I Audiobook

She thinks to dance with me on my wife’s grave! 

 Early in the year 1692, in the small Massachusetts village of Salem, a collection of girls fell ill, falling victim to hallucinations and seizures.

 In extremely religious Puritan New England, frightening or surprising occurrences were often attributed to the devil or his cohorts. The unfathomable sickness spurred fears of witchcraft, and it was not long before the girls, and then many other residents of Salem, began to accuse other villagers of consorting with devils and casting spells. Old grudges and jealousies spilled out into the open, fueling the atmosphere of hysteria. The Massachusetts government and judicial system, heavily influenced by religion, rolled into action. Within a few weeks, dozens of people were in jail on charges of witchcraft. By the time the fever had run its course, in late August 1692, nineteen people (and two dogs) had been convicted and hanged for witchcraft.

More than two centuries later, Arthur Miller was born in New York City on October 17, 1915. His career as a playwright began while he was a student at the University of Michigan. Several of his early works won prizes, and during his senior year, the Federal Theatre Project in Detroit performed one of his works. He produced his first great success, All My Sons, in 1947. Two years later, in 1949, Miller wrote Death of a Salesman, which won the Pulitzer Prize and transformed Miller into a national sensation. Many critics described Death of a Salesman as the first great American tragedy, and Miller gained an associated eminence as a man who understood the deep essence of the United States.

Read entire article here.
Or listen to The Crucible Audiobook.