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The CEO of Denver-based internet start-up FullContact API said in a market that is competitive for top talent, he wants to keep his employees happy and refreshed.
ľW(wng)j(chung)˾FullContact APIĿð-ʱʾڸҠ͂피˲ŵĸЈԼĆTMɄ
The flip-flop wearing founder offers his employees $7,500 for what he calls paid, paid vacation, however there are rules.
@λAֺϵĹ˾(chung)ʼÿλTṩ7500ԪڡMнݼ١P(gun)Ҏ(gu)
One, you actually have to take a vacation to get the money, Lorang said. Two, you have to disconnect from work, so that means no calls, no emails, no tweets, no work of any kind.
fȥȼٲõ@PXДc(lin)ϵ@ζԒ]l(f)κʽĹ
Even Lorang admitted he has trouble following his rules.
ʳJԼ@ЩҎ(gu)Ҳy
I suck at it, he said.
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A picture of the CEO and his fiancee Sarah at Egypts great pyramids captured Lorang checking his email.
ʺδ_ڰĔzһƬڲ鿴]
Not surprisingly, employees said they loved having the company pick up the tabfor their vacations.
˾T֧ȼMTȻе_
Its a real break for your brain, said Robbie Jack, a FullContact API employee. You come back refreshed and reinvigorated and more excited about the stuff you were working on when you left.
ԓ˾T_-ܿf@Xr\M֮ǰĹ^
If the idea of having a boss pick up the tab for a dream vacation is tantalizing, good news: Lorang is hiring.
ϰXTȼٵdzT˵Ԓô߀ЂϢƸ
Were probably going to hire about 12 folks in the next six months, he said.
fδ(ni)҂ҪƸ12T
Vocabulary: pick up the tab: ГM
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A great way to get to know someone better is to say something that makes them laugh.
Ҫõ˽eһkfЩl(f)Ц¡
Sharing a few good giggles and chuckles makes people more willing to tell others something personal about themselves, without even necessarily being aware that they are doing so, suggests new research.
о@ʾһЩЦ˸VeԼ˽@ĕrҲR@һc
Alan Gray of University College London discovered the tidbit in a new study recently published in the journal Human Nature.
ӢشWWԺ(University College London)İ(Alan Gray)оаl(f)F(xin)@һȤĬF(xin)@оɹl(f)ˡԡ(Human Nature)s־ϡ
According to Gray, the act of verbally opening up to someone is a crucial building block that helps to form new relationships and intensify social bonds.
JZ˳_Оǎ˂P(gun)ϵc֮g(lin)ϵҪҪ
Such self-disclosure can be of a highly sensitive nature like sharing ones religious convictions or personal fears or a superficial tidbit such as ones favorite type of food.
ұ¶^̾и߶ԡñȷڽߺֻ֮һڱȤ۵ʳ
To investigate the role and influence of laughter in this disclosure process, Gray and his colleagues gathered 112 students from Oxford University in England, into groups of four.
{(dio)Цұ¶^аݵĽɫͮa(chn).ӰͬӢţW(Oxford University)ټ112W֞ĽM
The students did not know one another. The groups watched a 10-minute video together, without chatting to one another.
W˴˶JRÿMһһ10犵ҕlgoՄ
The videos differed in the amount of laughter they invoked, and the amount of positive feelings or emotions they elicited.
ҕlą^(q)e˰l(f)Цlʺ͂_eOwеЧвͬ
One featured a stand-up comedy routine by Michael McIntyre, another a straightforward golf instruction video, and the third a pleasant nature excerpt from the Jungles episode of the BBCs Planet Earth series.
һҕl~ˠ̫(Michael McIntyre)ĆϲһǺ̵ĸߠ̌WƬǏġBBCǵϵС(BBCs Planet Earth series)֡(Jungles)һ﹝(ji)xһ䐂ȻƬΡ
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