Search Shmoop – Learning Guides by Experts and Educators

October 13th, 2009 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

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Shmoop will make you a better lover (of literature, history, life). See many sides to the argument. Find your writing groove. Understand how lit and history are relevant today. We want to show your brain a good time.

Our mission: To make learning and writing more fun and relevant for students in the digital age.

To paraphrase Robert Frost, we know that we still have miles to go before we sleep.

Who Writes Shmoop?

We’re educators and experts. We’re from Ph.D. and Masters programs at Stanford, Harvard, UC Berkeley (and other top universities). The vast majority of our writers have taught at the high school or college levels.

What Can I Do on Shmoop?

You can check out our quick Tour de Shmoop

Shmoop Guarantees Better Grades*

(*not an actual guarantee)

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Mix and Mingle with Shmoop

We’re growing and changing so quickly, it feels like middle school all over again. Thankfully, our voice isn’t cracking this time around. We like hearing from you and keeping you posted as we grow.

Spooky Halloween Reads on Shmoop

‘Tis the season of the ultimate heart-thumping adrenaline rush. Ghost stories, haunted houses, Children of the Corn. We’ve got the literary epinephrine that will make this a most memorable Halloween.

Shmoop Biography

Edgar Allan Poe
This Halloween, take the time to meet the madness behind the method: the drugs, the alcohol, the womanizing, and the mental instability behind one of the greatest scary-story tellers of all time. On a much creepier note, Poe also had Jerry Lee Lewis beat by about a century when he married his 13-year old cousin, Virgina, at the age of 27.

Shmoop Literature

Dracula
The classic tale of Count Dracula is so tattooed on our culture (see: Sesame Street) that we sometimes forget to, you know, actually read the thing. We even forget that the tale draws on folklore about a wealthy count whose greed symbolically sucked the life force out of the peasant class. Horror story and social commentary all in one? Delicious.

Frankenstein
You know that pale green, square-headed, blood-drooling, zombie-like monster you always see at Halloween? Well, his name isn t Frankenstein. Victor Frankenstein is actually the brilliant Swiss scientist who creates the creepy creature. But when you read the book, ask yourself: who is the real monster?

The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
The classic tale of a well-respected man who, upon drinking a strange brew in the evening, turns into a different person and goes crazy all night.

The Turn of the Screw
If you’re a fan of The Shining, The Omen, Children of the Corn, The Sixth Sense, or The Others, you’ll be glad to know that this story gave rise to the Creepy Children genre. Published in 1989, it tells about a nanny who may be the victim of a haunting. Or, she might be a deranged murderer. OR, the kids might just be two royal pains in the ass. You decide.

The Tell-Tale Heart

Edgar Allen Poe could spin a scary story like nobody’s business. This tale is a psychological masterpiece about the meticulous process of killing an old man.

The Red Room

The Gothic counterpart to Cream’s “The White Room,” only with more ghosts and fewer lava lamps.

The Picture of Dorian Gray
If you think the photo albums tucked away in your attic are incriminating, get a load of this guy. Dorian Gray sells his soul to Satan so that over time, his portrait ages while he remains young and beautiful and oh-so very wicked. In a very Voldemort-ey turn of events, however, he discovers that if you put your life force into an object, you might want to keep an eye on it.

Shmoop Poetry


“The Raven”

The classic tale of a lonely man whose imagination runs wild when a raven flies into his house. (Quoth the reader: Shut the door!!)

“Rime of the Ancient Mariner”
Speaking of birds that will scare the crap out of you, the “Rime of the Ancient Mariner” is a complicated poem about a sailor that endures the wrath of the sea by shooting his ship’s good-luck albatross. Time to re-think that B.B. gun.

“My Last Duchess”
Buckle up for a wild ride as this unnamed Duke shows you the portrait of his former Duchess, who got the axe – probably literally – for “smiling” too much. And you thought modern art was scary.

“Porphyria’s Lover”
Here’s another one for the ladies. This poem is about a man who strangles his lover with her own hair and then spends the night admiring her corpse. The fact that it is written in the first person gives it that extra something, so be sure to read it to your friends.

Shmoop Bestsellers

Twilight
The first in the hit series of about high school, first love, and vampirism? Upon arriving at a new school, Bella Swan meets the mysterious Edward Cullen, who’s gorgeous, freakishly strong, and happens to be a vampire. A forbidden (and logistically-problematic) relationship ensues. Think Romeo and Juliet, except one of them’s already dead and drinks blood.

New Moon
In Book Two of the Twilight series, Edward mysteriously dumps Bella, leaving us to agonize over the will-he’s and won’t-she’s of what could be called teen love (if it weren’t for the fact that Edward is a century years old).

Source: Shmoop.com

The search engine for special deals – Offeretti

October 13th, 2009 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Shopping, Verticals | No Comments »

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Offeretti is a search engine for offers, coupons, promotions, special deals, discounts and bargains from local retail businesses. Using the best in search technology and social networking, Offeretti enables customers to explore, discover and share offers with friends and family.

Offeretti’s mission is to help customers find the right offers at the right time. To help us achieve this mission, we have brought together experts from diverse fields such as web search, analytics, geo-targeting and retail marketing.

The name “Offeretti” is a combination of the words “offer” and “confetti” to reflect the multitude of offers that can be found.

The logo is a visual representation of the numerous offers that can be found anywhere in the world.
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Nowadays when you search for something, all you have to do is go online and start searching. With the help of search engines, it is a lot more easier for us to locate something especially great deals. Yes I am a big fan of that and I found a Search Engine for Special Deals when I was browsing the web. Check it out and get the best deals you can get.

Source: Offeretti.com

987788190lThanks for the tip!

I’m just a simple girl who lives life to the fullest and enjoying God’s blessings..I am easy to get along with.

I am soon to get married to the love of my life forest.

I am very happy with my life right now,it is more meaningful,so wonderful to live together with your behalf and it’s worth life to live in this world.

Bling! Check out this financial search portal Wikinvest!

October 13th, 2009 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Newcomers, Verticals | No Comments »

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At Wikinvest we’re regular, everyday investors who are sick of the level of information on the major finance portals. An investment is more than the sum of its ratios. So, we set out to create an investment website that explains the deeper story behind a company, giving investors the context they need to understand what they are betting on when they purchase a particular stock or invest in a specific sector.

Just as Wikipedia revolutionized the encyclopedia by attracting a worldwide community of individual subject-matter experts who have created an online reference that at times rivals the accuracy of encyclopedia Britannica while dwarfing it in scope, we need your help to create the world’s largest investment research portal.

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Here are a few underlying principles that have shaped our vision for how Wikinvest hopes to simplify investing:

Invest in ideas, not just ticker symbols.

Most investing websites force people to think in the language of ticker symbols. Wikinvest lets you start with concepts, which can be things like themes, ideas, trends, products, and industries. At Wikinvest, investors can type a company name, but they can also start with an idea like the rising price of oil, the crisis in subprime lending, the impact of internet advertising, the success of the iPhone, and the rise of ecommerce – not XOM, C, GOOG, AAPL, and AMZN. And so on.

Wikinvest has created an intuitive way to browse investing content by concept articles, which then explain which companies are impacted and why.

For example:

* Did you know Uranium prices are up 1000% in last 3 years? The Uranium article explains who mines, refines and uses this precious commodity.
* Think America’s too fat? The Obesity article describes what companies make obesity drugs, diet plans, and exercise equipment.
* Feeling naughty? You can even learn how to invest in vices like alcohol, tobacco, and gambling.

Explanations, not just financial data and statistics.

One frustration we have with traditional finance portals is that most of them throw up data and statistics on the page, but little of it is meaningful and it’s hard for most people to figure out what’s important and what it means about a company. Wikinvest articles boil down the important nuggets about a company or concept instead of inundating you with the smorgasbord of P/E ratios, earnings estimates, dividend yield, and run of the mill balance sheet data that you usually find.

One great example of this philosophy in action is our WikiChart. Typical stock charts plot a line that moves up and down – but most people want to know why the stock price is moving. So we built WikiCharts that allow people to annotate and explain what’s happening. Investors have already created over a thousand annotations explaining the stock price movements of hundreds of companies — so don’t be shy, jump in on the action and add an annotation!

So why a wiki?

An investing wiki fixes the depressing level of discourse on investing discussions boards, where the content sometimes amounts to little more than name-calling with poor grammar. On discussion boards, posts rapidly fall off the bottom of the page and there is little incentive to post meaningful content. A wiki is different. Good content is retained, bad content (including spam) is removed, and the level of discourse is much higher as a result – complete paragraphs, narrative structure, and meaningful content.

Speaking of spam, that’s one of the ways a wiki is more powerful than a discussion board. When spammers post to discusion boards, there’s no way for the community to delete the spam. But the openess and transparenc of a Wiki’s is its greatest strength — anyone can remove something that’s inaccurate on our site.

Six Degrees of Exxon Mobil: Everything is interrelated.

Trends impact companies, companies compete and collaborate with other companies, products drive trends, news and events impact almost everything. Wikis are a great tool that highlight those relationships because articles are linked to each other, creating an immersive experience where you can seamlessly jump from one article to the next.

Sometimes in the office, we play Six Degrees of Exxon Mobil — a little game we made up in which we try to guess the shortest way to link any company to Exxon Mobil. The other day we were talking about Coca-cola: From Coca Cola (KO), click through to Corn Prices, which is connected to Ethanol, which is connected to Oil Prices, which is connected to Exxon Mobil (XOM).

So how does Wikinvest make money?

We have ads on the site, which helps keep Wikinvest free and independent. Wikinvest grew out of our personal frustration about the investing resources out there today. We opened Wikinvest to the public in July 2007, and since then we’ve been focused on building the site and trying to make investing more intuitive and more democratic for our users. We are 100% committed to keeping the site free and open to everyone, always.

Source: Wikinvest.com

wikinvest-bling

The Future of Search is already here.

October 13th, 2009 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Innovations | No Comments »

A quick look at CreativeSear.ch

October 13th, 2009 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Global | No Comments »

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Creative Search

www.creativesear.ch

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