-Glassdoor.com€®, a career and workplace community bringing greater transparency to company cultures and compensation, today released its first annual Employees’ Choice Awards€¹, listing the top 50 “Best Places to Work” based on surveys€² collected from employees at more than 11,000 companies operating in the United States. General Mills had the highest rating from its employees, followed closely by Bain & Company, Netflix, Adobe, and Northwestern Mutual, which round out the top five companies on Glassdoor’s inaugural list.
On top of it all, some critics are still jaded over incidents that surfaced earlier this year in relation to Wikipedia and Jimmy wales. Former Novell scientist and Wikipedia donor Jeff Merkey issued a statement earlier this year essentially accusing Wales of extortion—he claims Wales offered him "special protection" for his Wikipedia entry "in exchange for a substantial donation and other financial support of the Wikimedia Foundation projects."
--Ron Hovsepian, Novell CEO
Comments
Ian
2009-01-04 02:19:28
Are you suggesting that Novell should look for special protection on Wikipedia? You don't think that's bad? Moreover, are you suggesting that Wikipedia entries actually translate into anything tangible in the real world?
Roy Schestowitz
2009-01-04 02:37:56
Ian
2009-01-04 03:03:15
Roy Schestowitz
2009-01-04 03:42:36
Jose_X
2009-01-04 05:20:13
I've found very good summaries of material on wikipedia when googling. Sometimes I just wikipedia instead of google.
Not everything on it is hot of course, but wikipedia is very useful. Anyone thinking otherwise is free never to use it.
If information discovery (an additional source that sometimes has the information just right) doesn't translate to anything in the real world where you live, I'll keep that in mind when traveling. [so where do you live, again?]
Jose_X
2009-01-04 05:21:40
Ian
2009-01-04 15:11:27
I too use wikipedia before using a search engine at times. It was late last night and I didn't exactly get my point across well. What I really meant was that people shouldn't solely base an opinion of any subject on a wikipedia article. Sorry for the confusion.
Roy Schestowitz
2009-01-04 15:29:42
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_on_Foreign_Relations
twitter
2009-01-04 17:31:37
Roy Schestowitz
2009-01-04 17:35:54
David Gerard
2009-01-04 22:15:48
No-one gets to buy an article being any particular way. There are thousands of noisy and largely incorruptible editors watching closely.
That said, any given article could be FUDster-spun rubbish at any given moment. Much like the analyst-led technical press. So check those references on anything that surprises you.
Roy Schestowitz
2009-01-04 22:19:09
David Gerard
2009-01-04 22:22:38