Education & Career Success Guide: ghost
Showing posts with label ghost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ghost. Show all posts

Have You Heard? 10 Companies Where Everyone Works From Home

04:53
Have You Heard? 10 Companies Where Everyone Works From Home


These companies are offering their employees more flexibility than ever


A growing number of millennials want to work remotely, and fortunately for them, 170 companies in the U.S. operate 100 percent virtually these days. That number is up from 26 in 2014 according to FlexJobs, an online platform specializing in remote and flexible employment.

FlexJobs reports that the ability to work remotely, even part time, helps employees achieve a better work-life balance, and it therefore improves their overall health and wellness. It can also help workers save up to $4,000 a year with reduced spending on gas, parking, public transportation and dry-cleaning. Perhaps that's why, according to Gallup's State of the American Workplace survey, more than one-third of the respondents said they would change jobs in order to be able to work remotely some of the time.

And telecommuting doesn't only benefit the workers; companies can reap rewards from it too. Offering remote opportunities allows companies to work with top talent, regardless of location. And because those employees are likely to be happier in their jobs, it also leads to greater productivity, better performance and higher employee-retention rates. Likewise, it of course saves companies money in office expenses like equipment, amenities and more — plus rent and utilities if they choose to forgo an office altogether.

Technology is fueling the growth of fully virtual companies — tools such as SlackZoomDropbox and Quip, a document-sharing and editing platform, make it easier than ever to communicate with employees based anywhere and track their performance and workflow more accurately. Plus, according to Forbes, millennials, who are already very used to being connected online, are projected to be the majority of the U.S. workforce by 2020.

So, what companies are already fully remote?

1. Toptal

Toptal scouts the best freelance engineers and designers from anywhere in the world and vets their qualifications using a mix of proprietary software and online interviews. The company has grown to more than 400 core employees working in 60 different countries.

2. Automattic

Automattic is the team behind WordPress.com, WooCommerce, Jetpack, Simplenote, Longreads, VaultPress, Akismet, Gravatar, Polldaddy, Cloudup and more. It's a totally distributed company with 704 automatticians in 62 countries speaking 80 different languages. It makes sense that they're so expansive, given how necessary these sites are globally.

3. AnswerConnect

AnswerConnect is a live call-answering service. Whether companies need call-handling services after hours or all the time, AnswerConnect has a plan to fit any situation because it doesn't have a call center; rather, its employees all do their work from the comfort of their own homes.

4. InVision

InVision is a digital product design platform powering the world’s best user experiences. The company works with everything from Twitter to Vice to Netflix, so its success from work-from-home employees is obvious.

5. 10up

This web design and development consulting service describes its 120-plus-person team as "one big happy family" that just so happens to be distributed worldwide and stays connected with Slack, Google Hangout, and text.
6. Buffer

Buffer is a fully distributed team of more than 80 employees working in several different countries (see this employee time zones map!). The company's social media management tools are used by over 60,000 paying customers around the world.

7. Ghost

Ghost is a blogging platform behind the publishing efforts of organizations like NASA, Square and Graze. It's open source, free and customizable — and created almost entirely by volunteers from the nonprofit Ghost Foundation, which runs and organizes Ghost. The team of developers and other staff work online from all corners of the internet.

8. Hubstaff

This time-tracking tool is used by over 8,000 remote teams to track time and help with automatic payroll processing and attendance scheduling. The company was founded in 2012 by two entrepreneurs who wanted a better way to manage remote freelancers, so it makes sense that it's built by a totally remote team too.

9. Doist

Doist is the team behind Todoist, a popular productivity app that helps millions of people manage their tasks and projects. The company has been around since 2007, and its team members are spread across 20 different countries.

10. Knack

Knack is a cloud-based database tool with over 3,000 customers (like Harvard University and Tesla) that makes it easy for anyone to manage, share and utilize their data. Most use Knack for creating things like inventory managers and customer portals. The team behind it calls the internet its headquarters, but they still get together twice a year at retreats.
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The ghost walls in Lathiya : UP

01:43
The ghost walls in Lathiya : UP

They were walls that existed hundreds of years ago - of buildings to house royalty and even deities. Today they are reduced to "ghost walls".

In Lathiya, Uttar Pradesh, the existence of a bustling temple complex has been traced by archaeologists just by unearthing these invisible walls.

It was a tall stone pillar perched atop a huge mound that first attracted the attention of British archaeologist Alexander Cunningham to the site in Lathiya, a small village in Ghazipur district, around 150 years ago.



Only in 2009-10 did a team of the Archaeological Survey of India land at the site, and painstakingly unearthed the evidence of an early Gupta period - about 320-550 AD - temple complex.

The buildings no longer exist. The bricks and stones that made up the walls were over the years taken away by nearby villagers for their own house construction and even by the British for use in a railway line.

"Many of the bricks of the ancient temples had also been taken away for laying the East India Railway line in 1862. The line passes about a km away.

"An aerial view of the different colours of the soil - on the foundation and that lying around it - gives a complete picture of the plan of the structure that once existed.  Ghost walls is an archaeological term.

 During excavations, many artefacts from the Gupta era were also discovered, including pottery, bone, shell, ivory objects and coins.


The stone pillar, 22 feet high, is of special interest. It is surmounted by the figure of two garudas, sitting back to back, and resting on lotus petals. The pillar with the garudas is similar to the Ashoka pillar of the Mauryan dynasty (321 to 185 BC) with its four lions sitting back to back. Sarnath, where the Ashoka pillar is located, is around 100 km from Lathiya.


In Bhitari, another site in the same district, an inscribed Gupta pillar stands near a temple. Near the pillar is a stone block with an image of garuda. "The garuda once stood on top of the pillar but had toppled over.


"The garuda was the state symbol of the Guptas and was an embodiment of the power of the state. The garuda was the royal insignia of the Gupta dynasty.

Even the four temples, discovered through ghost walls, at Lathiya are of typical Gupta period design.

The temples comprise a square garbhagriha, or sanctum sanctorum, and a verandah in front. The temples had a flat roof. Such temples were also found in Sanchi.

The stone pillar at Lathiya was a dhwajasthambh or a religious pillar erected in front of one of the temples.

The temples could have been Vaishnavaite, dedicated to Vishnu.

The temples faced the west and not the east. "This was so that the rays of the setting sun would light up the temple and also when devotees entered the temple they would be facing eastwards.

After the temple walls were vandalised over the years, the local villagers began worshipping the pillar as a symbol dedicated to a Devi or goddess.

A house complex was also discovered near the temples - albeit only through the ghost walls. "People attached to the temples would have probably been staying there.

Among the many antiquities discovered at the site is a terracotta human figure, typical of the Gupta period. Many broken pottery shards were also found, including many with spouts with the figure of the varaha, or boar. "These were ritualistic pottery.


There was also evidence that the temple performed sacrifice, adding that animal bones were found in a pit.

The archaeologists found evidence of an earlier Chalcolithic (1800 - 1000 BC) period beneath the Gupta remains.
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