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Once Tickets on Monday, 12/23/2013, 7:00 PM in Fairfield, New York For Sale

Price: $25
Type: Tickets & Traveling, For Sale - Private.

Once Tickets
Bernard B. Jacobs Theater
New York, NY
Monday, 12/23/xxxx, 7:00 PM
Add code SPECIAL at the checkout for Huge Savings on any Tickets from this site.
View Once Tickets at Bernard B. Jacobs Theater:
http://nofeeconcerttickets.com/ResultsTicket.aspx?evtid=xxxx236&event=Once Having observed people helping one another in friendly, social, and trusting communal ways on the Internet via the WELL, MindVox and Usenet, and feeling isolated as a relative newcomer to San Francisco, Craigslist founder Craig Newmark decided to create something similar for local events.[3][4] In early xxxx, he began an email distribution list to friends. Most of the early postings were submitted by Newmark and were notices of social events of interest to software and Internet developers living and working in the San Francisco Bay Area. Having observed people helping one another in friendly, social, and trusting communal ways on the Internet via the WELL, MindVox and Usenet, and feeling isolated as a relative newcomer to San Francisco, Craigslist founder Craig Newmark decided to create something similar for local events.[3][4] In early xxxx, he began an email distribution list to friends. Most of the early postings were submitted by Newmark and were notices of social events of interest to software and Internet developers living and working in the San Francisco Bay Area.Soon, word of mouth led to rapid growth. The number of subscribers and postings grew rapidly. There was no moderation and Newmark was surprised when people started using the mailing list for non-event postings.[citation needed] People trying to get technical positions filled found that the list was a good way to reach people with the skills they were looking for. This led to the addition of a category for "jobs". User demand for more categories caused the list of categories to grow. The initial technology encountered some limits, so by June xxxx majordomo had been installed and the mailing list "Craigslist" resumed operations. Community members started asking for a web interface. Craig registered "craigslist.org", and the website went live in xxxx.By early xxxx, Newmark still thought his career was as a software engineer ("hardcore java programmer") and that Craigslist was a cool hobby that was getting him invited to the best parties for geeks and nerds.[citation needed] In the fall of xxxx, the name "List Foundation" was introduced and Craigslist started transitioning to the use of this name. In April xxxx, when Newmark learned of other organizations called "List Foundation", the use of this name was dropped. Craigslist incorporated as a private for-profit company in xxxx.[3] Around the time of these events, Newmark realized that the site was growing so fast that he could stop working as a software engineer and work full-time running Craigslist. By April xxxx, there were nine employees working out of Newmark's apartment in San Francisco.[5]In January xxxx, current CEO Jim Buckmaster joined the company as lead programmer and CTO. Buckmaster contributed the site's multi-city architecture, search engine, discussion forums, flagging system, self-posting process, homepage design, personalscategories, and best-of-Craigslist feature. He was promoted to CEO in November xxxx.[6]The web site expanded into nine more U.S. cities in xxxx, four in xxxx and xxxx each, and 14 in xxxx. On August 1, xxxx, Craigslist began charging $25 to post job openings on the New York and Los Angeles pages. On the same day, a new section called "Gigs" was added, where low-cost and unpaid jobs and internships can be posted free. The site serves over 20 billion page views per month, putting it in 37th place overall among web sites worldwide and 10th place overall among web sites in the United States (per Alexa.com on March 24, xxxx), with over 49.4 million unique monthly visitors in the United States alone (per Compete.com on January 8, xxxx). With over 80 million new classified advertisements each month, Craigslist is the leading classifieds service in any medium. The site receives over 2 million new job listings each month, making it one of the top job boards in the world.[9][10] The 23 largest U.S. cities listed on the Craigslist home page collectively receive more than 300,000 postings per day just in the "for sale" and "housing" sections as of October xxxx.[11] The classified advertisements range from traditional buy/sell ads and community announcements to In December xxxx, at the UBS Global Media Conference in New York, Craigslist CEO Jim Buckmaster told Wall Street analysts that Craigslist has little interest in maximizing profit, instead it prefers to help users find cars, apartments, jobs, and dates.[13][14]Craigslist's main source of revenue is paid job ads in select cities?$75 per ad for the San Francisco Bay Area; $25 per ad for New York City, Los Angeles, San Diego, Boston, Seattle, Washington, D.C., Chicago, Philadelphia, Orange County (California) and Portland, Oregon?and paid broker apartment listings in New York City ($10 per ad).The company does not formally disclose financial or ownership information. Analysts and commentators have reported varying figures for its annual revenue, ranging from $10 million in xxxx, $20 million in xxxx, and $25 million in xxxx to possibly $150 million in xxxx.[15][16][17]On August 13, xxxx, Newmark announced on his blog that auction giant eBay had purchased a 25% stake in the company from a former employee.[18] Some fans of Craigslist expressed concern that this development would affect the site's longtime non-commercial nature, but it remains to be seen what ramifications the change will actually have. As of April xxxx, there have been no substantive changes to the usefulness or non-advertising nature of the site?no banner ads, charges for a few services provided to businesses.The company is believed to be owned principally by Newmark, Buckmaster, and eBay (the three board members). eBay owns approximately 25%, and Newmark is believed to own the largest stake.[7][17][19]In April xxxx, eBay announced it was suing Craigslist to "safeguard its four-year financial investment". eBay claimed in January xxxx, Craigslist executives took actions that "unfairly diluted eBay's economic interest by more than 10%".[20] In response, Craigslist filed a counter-suit against eBay in May xxxx "to remedy the substantial and ongoing harm to fair competition" that Craigslist claims is constituted by eBay's actions as Craigslist shareholders