Monday, October 8, 2007

Hard Life And Whether Answer

Hard Life And Whether Answer
In Google Adsense


By. Old dox’a


Life like a period of this time very difficult, ad for seen from social and economic facet. No wonder many human beings which plunge in good badness world like stealing, killing, come up with corruption. State which the was government officer of applying like brighters very cannot be prided upon more than anything else to all corruptorses which only can eat small people money. On the other side there is education program to move forward life of nation and free people from situated behind of science but on the otherhand all there are some one making nationses become stupid progressively with a purpose to so that was easy to lied. Really do not understand will the meaning of life.

Try dream a moment concerning people go forward either in information area specially internet. As well as supposing that every house there is facility of internet. It is not impossible this nation will be able to income of adsense google (if can yield money). Mount prosperity of society will progressively mount along at the height of science which in owning.

Ad for this month I is a more regular of think if only can get production and money of Google adsense, I will advise to all other people and friends around so that follow in program affiliate this. If that expectation there is hence will see new zest of life to experience. Though in course of life do not forever walk smoothly.

If all this proven can yield moneys. Let us wake up with and free to live by poorness shackle with Google adsense.




To be continue in next article…
(Jakarta, Senin 08 Oktober 2007, 15.29 sore)

Jogjamaiblog banner

My Banner....

Expectation will live the goodness

Expectation will live the goodness

(Adsense pass blogger)

By. Old dox’a

This is a experience of person about someone can find something else in this life. A spirit of possible newly there is no something compared to hotly live by the infinite.

Early beginning of not intentionally look for vacancy in internet, story of wishing additional searching of overtime outside office hours, who knows can add sack;bag content. Searching to and from there no, coincidence open one of the blog, from there I read and comprehend content of advertisement word meaning, and how to install advertisement.

Day after day, month to month start from making email in Google (gmail) enlist to my Google adsense study from forum which in internet.

To be continue in next article…

(Jakarta, Senin 08 Oktober 2007, 12.12 siang)

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Wireless with VOIP in 5 Easy Steps

How to go Wireless with VOIP in 5 Easy Steps

Voip Internet telephony Make Free Phone calls over the internet with voip

1. Choose your Service Provider

First, you will need to decide what type of VoIP service you will require. VoIP comes in plans for Residential Users, Small Business Offices; Medium sized businesses, Business-to-Business service providers and International VoIP. The best way to begin is by choosing your needs, and then compare different plans. A good idea is to make a list of all of your requirements in a VoIP plan. This will help you determine which plan is right for you. Some service providers will meet the needs of a small business under their residential plans, while others will have services designed specifically for the small home business. Residential service providers typically include a phone adapter for use with the VoIP service. The Phone adapter allows you to use your house phones with VoIP.

2. Purchase Needed VoIP Equipment

Many service providers will provide you with various equipment that you need such as phone adapters and software. If you need any additional items, you can contact your provider and see if they have them available. You must have high speed Internet before you can use VoIP. There are a limited amount of providers that will run on dial up, but don't trust it. You need a High Speed Internet connection to run all of your applications and to provide high quality audio and video capabilities.

3. Choose Your Phone Number

With VoIP you have the option of selecting your phone number. In some cases, you can keep your current phone number. Many service providers do provide the option of selecting your own area code. Some companies even have the choice of selecting area codes worldwide.

4. Pick Your Features

Voip features includes Voicemail, Caller ID, Three way calling, Call Block and a host of others. One of the benefits of using VoIP is that you can set up your phone features through the Internet, as well as monitor them.

5. Enjoy the Flexibility of VoIP

Last but not least, once you have your VoIP services ready to go, VoIP will allow you greater choices, enhanced services, and discount rates. You will enjoy being able to talk for unlimited minutes worldwide. When you compare service plans and providers, be sure to choose the one that best fits your needs.

How to Optimization Your AdSense ? (mengoptimalkan AdSense)

How to Optimization Your AdSense ?

1. Blend Adsense code but make it visible. The ad do not look like banners but it's easy to see, and click.

2. Display your ad units where repeat users will notice them. Placing your ad unit above or below the first post can be more effective

3. When build a new website, you must think about adsense when designing your website. If you want to maximize your earnings you can't just make a fancy design and plop the Adsense code in as an afterthought. By planning ahead you can insure maximum placement effectiveness.

4. Place a leaderboard immediately after the last post
This provides users who make it to the end of a thread with a ‘next step’ when the content ends. If you place it after the footer, maybe they will move to the next thread before they even see the ad!

5. Match Adsense's font includes the size and color. Also think about placement as you build the site.

Thursday, August 9, 2007

15 Mistakes On Violate Google Adsense & Don’t Do Its :

15 Mistakes On Violate Google Adsense & Don’t Do Its :

1. Never click your own adsense ads or get them clicked for whatever reason. You know this one very well. This is a surefire way to close you Adsense account. Never tell your office associates or friends to click on them. Keep a check if your family or children are busy increasing your income by clicking your ads and indirectly trying to stop your income. Dont even think of offering incentives for clicks, using automated clicking tools, or other deceptive software. Adsense is very smart to detect fraudulent clicks. Check the ads which appear on your pages by the Google Preview tool if required.

2. Never change the Adsense code. There are enough means of adsense optimization & customizations available to change the colour, background or border to suit your needs. Do whatever you want to do outside the code, never fiddle within the ad or the search code. They know it when you do. The search code has more limitations to colour and placement, but you should adhere to the rules. The code may stop working and violates the TOS.

3. Do not place more than 3 ad unit and 1 ad links or 2 adsense search boxes on any web page. Anyway, ads will not appear in those units even if you place more ad units. But this is the limit they set, so it is better to stick to it.

4. Do not run competitive contextual text ad or search services on the same site which offer Google Adsense competition in their field. Never try to create link structures resembling the adsense ads. Never use other competitive search tools on the same pages which have Adsense powered Google search. They do allow affiliate or limited-text links. Update: Google has allowed you to run contextual advertising like Yahoo ads, Chitika etc provided the ads do not resemble Adsense ads.

5. Do not disclose confidential information about your account like the CTR, CPM and income derived via individual ad units or any other confidential information they may reveal to you. However, you may reveal the total money you make as per recent updates to the TOS.

6. Label headings as “sponsored links” or “advertisements” only. Other labels are not allowed. I have seen many sites label ads with other titles. Dont make your site a target in a few seconds gaze.

7. Never launch a New Page for clicked ads by default. Adsense ads should open on the same page. You may be using a base target tag to open all links in a new window or frame by default. Correct it now as they do not want new pages opening from clicked ads.

8. One Account suffices for Multiple websites. You do not need to create 5 accounts for 5 different websites. One account will do. If you live in the fear that if one account is closed down for violation of TOS, believe me they will close all accounts when they find out. You can keep track of clicks by using channels with real time statistics. They will automatically detect the new site and display relevant ads.

9. Place ads only on Content Pages. Advertisers pay only for content based ads. Content drives relevant ads. Although you might manage some clicks from error, login, registration, “thank you” or welcome pages, parking pages or pop ups, it will get you out of the program.

10. Do not mask ad elements. Alteration of colours and border is a facility to blend or contrast ads as per your site requirements. I have seen many sites where the url part is of the same colour as the background. While blending the ad with your site is a good idea, hiding relevant components of the ads is not allowed. Also do not block the visibility of ads by overlapping images, pop ups, tables etc.

11. Do not send your ads by email. Html formatted emails look good and allow placement of these javascript ads. But it is not allowed as per TOS. You do not want impressions registering on their logs from any email even once. They are watching!

12. Keep track of your content. So Adsense is not allowed on several non content pages. But it is also not allowed on several content pages too. Do not add it on web pages with MP3, Video, News Groups, and Image Results. Also exclude any pornographic, hate-related, violent, or illegal content.

13. Do not alter the results after ad clicks or searches
- Ensure you are not in any way altering the site which the user reaches to after clicking the ads. Do not frame, minimize, remove, redirect or otherwise inhibit the full and complete display of any Advertiser Page or Search Results Page after the user clicks on any Ad or Search results.

14. Avoid excessive advertising and keyword stuffing - Although the definition of ‘excessive’ is a gray area and is subject to discretion, yet Google adsense with correct placement, focused content and high traffic will get you much more income than other programs, so excessive advertising is not required. Keyword stuffing does target better focused ads, but overdoing it is not required.

15. Ensure you Language is Supported - Adsense supports “Chinese (simplified), Japanese, Danish, Korean, Dutch, Norwegian, English, Polish, Finnish, Portuguese, French, Russian, German, Spanish, Hungarian, Swedish, Italian and Turkish”. In addition, AdSense for search is available in Czech, Slovak, and Traditional Chinese. If your web pages language is not supported, do not use the code on such pages.

Update:
16. Maximum 2 referral button per product per page - With the launch of the google adsense referral program, you are allowed to put only 2 referral buttons for adsense referral, adwords referral, Google pack and Firefox with google toolbar referral.

17. Do not specify Google ads as your alternate ads. - Several services like Chitika eminimalls allow you to place alternate urls, when a targeted paying ad cannot be displayed. This involved creating an simple html page and putting the ad to be displayed instead. Even Adsense allows an alternate url feature instead of displaying public service ads. But never use Adsense ads as alternate urls.

18. Do not confuse with adjacent images - It was a common policy to increase CTR by placing same number of images as the number of text ads, which falsely gave the impression that the text ads represented an explanation to these images. Inserting a small space or a line between the images and ads is not allowed. Make sure that the ads and images are not arranged in a way that could easily mislead or confuse your visitors.

Get Effective Blog Socialization :

Get Effective Blog Socialization :

Retain the visitor to keep looking your content with socialization.In selling something, you cannot always count on the product quality only. but you must advertising it to get customer by socialization. with socialization you can make your product known, and you can maintain the customer to retain buy your product. it's same in the blogging. you can not only count on the content post to get traffic, but you must do socialization.

How to do socialization in blogging?
1. Visit other blogs, and comment their post.
2. Join Forums And Contribute.
3. Ask for Exchange Links With Other Blogs.
4. Give a visitor a change to act in your blog. Like vote or pool
5. Read the visitor comment, and answer it.

Saturday, July 21, 2007

How Google Keep Track

THE END USER

A Voice for the consumer

How Google Keep Track

By Victoria Shannon

Paris

When Google announced a change in its privacy policy last week, it got some gushing headlines like, “Google adopt tougher privacy safeguards”.

But upon closer examination, it seems the change was not to protect your privacy on the Web as much as it was simply to give you a little more information about how Google maintains your personal data.

Google’s adjustment was that in stead of retaining user search data for “as long as it is useful” now the company will keep the information for at least 18 month and no longer than 24 month.

In some cases, that will shorten the time Google holds on to such data, which can, in theory, be used to identify individual users and their personal interests.

But the guidelines also mean that search data will sometimes be kept for a longer period than now, according to Peter Fleischer, privacy counsel for Google in Europe. That makes it a clearer policy, but not necessarily a “tougher safe-quard”.

For most of us, keeping personal information private on the Web is a defensive tool: When we are anonymous in our travels on the Web, we can better protect our bank accounts, our children and even our political proclivities in place where just having some in dangerous.

But for other people, privacy is the opposite of security – the more disclosure of personal data, the more trails of information that law enforcement agencies and governments can follow to find those who are stealing credit card numbers, circulating child pornography or organizing terrorist activities.

A third interest group is the world of Internet companies, retail companies and advertisers, all of which could profit commercially from the correct interpretation or sale of the collected data.

Google’s privacy policies are the company’s best efforts to address all of these concerns as well as its own business interests, Fleischer said.

“Privacy decisions are not made in a vacuum,” he said in interview. “It is really balance of a number of factors. If it were just a matter of privacy, we could consider a shorter time period.”

That, in fact, is one of the concerns of privacy advocates – that 24 months is too long for a private company to hold on the potentially incriminating data.

But that length of time was already set as the out site limit by the European Commission when it adopted its Data Retention Directive last year; Fleischer said the U.S. Department of Justice was also proposing a two-year windows for data retention by Internet and telephone companies. Google and other Internet companies are just getting in line.

Still, Fleischer also said the vast majority of data requests from security agencies to Google were for only the past six months or less of collected information. If that is universally true, perhaps European

There are ways you can stop Google

From collecting some of this

data to begin with.

governments that want to err on the side of individual privacy will adopt data-retention laws that default to that minimum, which is permissible under the directive, rather than the 24-month maximum allowed.

But don’t get your hopes up that such moves would give Google and its search brethren a new standard to follow. Fleischer made clear that Google did not intend for its brand-new two-year rule to be starting point on the way to an ever-shrinking data-retention period.

For ordinary Internet users, the most useful information out of last week’s discussion was the fact that, under certain circumstances, you can stop Google from collecting some of this data to begin with.

This trick works only when you are logged in to a Google service, like Gmail of Google Talk. Other wise, you have no way to control Google’s data collection; its logs are automatically generated every time someone does a search.

Here are the steps I took from my Gmail account to stop the company from saving my searches while I am logged into a Google service: Sign in to Gmail; click setting; click account; click Google account setting; click search history; sign in again; click search history; click select all; click pause; click save setting.

May be there are already easier ways. But if Google want to be “open and transparent,” as executive insist that it does, I’m sure the company will make this and other privacy measure even simpler for individuals in future.

Title (article) : THE END USER: A Voice for the consumer

How Google Keep Track

By Victoria Shannon

- E-mail comment to tech@iht.com

From : International Herald Tribune, Thursday, March 22, 2007 (page 21)

Internet address: www.iht.com

E-mail: iht@iht.com

Google’s New Ad Pitch: Pay When Buyers Act

Google’s New Ad Pitch: Pay When Buyers Act

By Miguel Helft

San Francisco: Google is experimenting with a new proposition for advertiser: if you don’t get result, you don’t pay.

The company said Tuesday that it would expand testing of a system that allows advertisers to pay only when an ad spurs a consumer to take an action, whether purchasing a product, subscribing to a newsletter or signing up to receive a quote from a mortgage broker or car dealer.

The vast majority of advertisers now pay Google when user click on ads that are displayed alongside its search results or on other Web sites, while some are billed based on how many people view the ads.

“Where optimistic that it will be something that will be very compelling, for advertisers,” said Susan Wojcicki, the vice president of product management of Google. Wojcicki said the system would also give participating Web publishers a wider choice of ad types for their sites.

Under the “cost per action” system, advertisers decide what they are willing to pay for a specific action, like a purchase or a software download. Armed with that information, Web site publishers then choose whether to run a specific ad or group of ads on their sites.

Many advertiser find cost-per-action appealing, as it greatly reduces their risk, since they are not charged for ads that are ineffective.

Ad rates based on click might give way

to rates based on purchases

or other action.

The model has long been used online by “affiliate marketing” companies like ValueClick, which have created networks of hundreds of thousands of Web sites that display small ads for e-commerce sites. The publishers are paid when they refer a user who makes a purchase.

But many other companies are using cost-per-action ads in different ways. They include the search-engine start-up Snap, which display cost-per-action ads next to search results, and Turn, a network that matches advertisers and publishers interested in cost–per-action ads.

“We think it is a model that all the large players in search will be embracing over time,” said Tom McGovern, the chief executive of Snap.

For the time being Google is not putting cost-per-action ads next to search results, limiting them to publishers’ Web sites and essentially creating its own affiliate marketing network. Industry insiders said Google entry into the market was likely to accelerate its growth.

“This is a big market at an early stage,” said Ellen Siminoff, the chief executive of efficient Frontier, a search marketing firm.

Cost-per-action ads have another advantage: they virtually eliminate the problem of click fraud, a scam in which people or computers generate click on ads for the sole purpose of getting a payment.

While the appeal of the cost-per-action model to advertisers is clear, some analysts say publishers may be more reluctant to embrace it, at least for now.

“For publishers, it increases the complexity of their business,” said Mark Mahaney, an analyst with Citigroup. Publishers have limited space for ads and need to maximize the revenue they generate.

A cost-per-click models is risky, since it provides no guarantees that a publisher will receive any payment for a given ad. Mahaney said Google could make the system more effective and appealing if it figured out an automated way to project how much revenue each ad is likely to generate.

Advertising.com, a unit of AOL, uses such a system to determine the right placement for cost-per-action ads on publishers’ sites.

For now, the affiliate marketing unit, the industry’s largest, had sales of $112 million in 2006, while Google’s revenue topped $10 billion.

Google’s test is limited to about 75 advertisers and 75 publishers.

A test last summer had about 30 advertisers and 30 publishers.

Title (article) : Google’s New Ad Pitch: Pay When Buyers Act

By Miguel Helft

From : International Herald Tribune, Thursday, March 22, 2007 (page 20)

Internet address: www.iht.com

E-mail: iht@iht.com

New Google Search Will Find Text and Images

New Google Search Will Find Text and Images

By Miguel Helft

MOUNTAIN VIEW, California: Google has changed its approach to internet searches by combining result from its established Web search service with offerings that help users find videos, images, maps and other content.

The new service, universal search, was introduced Wednesday and will gradually become evident to users. It underscores the continual efforts by major search engines like Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and Ask.com to improve offerings to attract users.

Until now, a Google search for “I have a dream” would have returned links to the text of the 1963 speech by the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. and to other historical and informational Web sites about him. But those looking for video clips or photographs of King’s speech would have had better luck by entering a query in Google’s specialized services for video or image searches.

The same query on Google’s main service will now return a single list of results that will blend text, videos, images, and even excerpts from books. The list will appear in the order that a Google formula deems to be most relevant.

“It is a much more powerful way to find out about this time period in history”, said Marissa Mayer, vice president for search products and user experience at Google.

The notion of combining results from various categories of Web content is not new. All major search engines have taken step in that direction.

For example, a search of a city’s restaurants will pull up restaurant listings from local search services alongside results from the wider Web, like links to guidebooks or magazine and newspaper articles about dining out in that city. In same cases, search engines will display links to news articles or movie listings in a special box, if the results are relevant to a particular query.

“We try to answer your question in one shot by bringing a lot of things together”, said Eckart Walther, vice president for product at Yahoo.

In December, Ask.com began an experimental service, ask X, that shows results in multipanel display that makes it easy to expand or narrow queries and search for videos or audio.

But Google’s service is the first that fully blends results into a single list that uses the company’s ranking algorithms to order them appropriately. The service will also allow users to play clips from Google Video and the company’s YouTube site directly on the search results page.

“They are changing the ground rules for search in a way that everyone has been talking about, but no one has done,” Said Danny Sullivan, editor of SearchEnginesLand, a Web side dedicated to Internet search.

“For the end user, I don’t know if it is that much of a difference today. We just haven’t seen how the blending of results work.”

The new service was a result of years of work by many engineers and search experts and involved significant new investments in manufacture, Google executives said. And it represents only the first step toward integrating online content into a single search service.

“You are going to see us refine it,” said Sergey Brin, Google’s co-founder and president for technology.

The inclusion of images and video in Google’s main search service is very likely to open the door for graphical and video ads to appear alongside Google’s search results, said Mayer, the Google vice president for search products. But she declined to say when that might happen. Google now inserts only text ads alongside search results.

Google also unveiled other changes to its user interface that allow users to find some of its service, like Gmail, more easily.

And the company said it would soon start an automatic translation service that would allow Arabic speakers, for example, to search for San Francisco hotels in their language. The service would translate the query into English; search Google’s English-language index in the Web, where listings about San Francisco hotel are most likely to appear; and translate the results back into Arabic.

Yahoo said it had been offering a similar service in Europe for nearly two years.

Title (article) : New Google Search Will Find Text and Images

By Miguel Helft

From : International Herald Tribune, Friday, May 18, 2007 (page 11)

Internet address: www.iht.com

E-mail: iht@iht.com

Blogging and Thinking about the Big Issues

MANAGING GLOBALIZATION

Daniel Altman

Blogging and Thinking about the Big Issues

On Thursday, the Managing Globalization blog celebrates its first anniversary. Its started small but has grown into one of iht.com’s most-visited destinations, thanks in part to prominent quests like Jeffrey Sachs, Mary Robinson and Pascal Lamy. And looking back at some of last year’s posts and comments, there are plenty of portents for the future.

Most of the issues I dealt with a year ago still very current. To wit, If you’ve been waiting for an agreement in the World Trade Organization’s latest round of trade liberalization talks, delivery of an Airbus A380 Super jumbo, $40 barrels of oil or the free float of the Chinese Yuan on international currency markets, then you’re still waiting.

In the blog’s very first week, I wrote about the globalization of carmaking, Venezuela’s oil politics and U.S. economic negotiations with China. Next week’s posts could touch one the same topics without seeming out of date.

Yet much also changed during the blog’s first year. The importance-or at least the lip service-given to environmental concerns by companies and governments intensified so much that iht.com began a new blog on the business of green. The European Union started a comprehensive climate-change strategy, and now it is pushing developing countries to cut emissions as well.

In parallel with high oil prices and the emphasis on conservation, several countries tightened their grip on energy resources. Russia used every trick in the book to grab back the oil and gas concessions sold off after the Iron Curtain fell, and Venezuela and Bolivia nationalized their energy projects.

In finance, the booming private equity industry flexed its muscles with high-profile acquisitions like Chrysler, and then China flexed its muscles by buying part of Blackstone Group, the private equity firm. And just this month, the German government took the first steps in a major economy toward the regulation of hedge funds.

Through it all, readers shared their insights, feelings and even expertise. At times, the discussions were animated. Garry Henscheid, who is an American living in Japan, and David Hillary, who left his narrative New Zealand for China, clashed on topics from tax policy to constitutional law. Daug McVitie, an aerospace consultant, hgave a lesson on aircraft manufacturing; Michael Smitka, an economic professor, explained DaimlerChrysler’s mistake; and Ioannis Michaletos, a strategic analyst and former naval officer, answered a post on China’s growing tanker fleet with a master class on business cycles in the shipping industry.

While commenters butted heads and shared their knowledge, was anyone in high place reading?

Apparently so, as an Stephen Adams, a spokesman for Peter Mandelson, the European Union’s commissioners for trade, took issues with the headline “Mandelson: Repent, repent!” He had read it as “Mandelson, repent, repent!” After a short offline discussion of punctuation, Adams contributed a substantive response to the blog.

The blog’s wide readerships came through in the comments, too. I’ll never call Vietnam China’s little brother again, even in jest, after Phan Ho The Nam wrote in about his country’s “distinct character”.

When an editor suggested finding out why so few women left comments by taking the subject on in a post, female “lurkers” immediately made their presence know with varying degrees of indignation. “why indeed are we, as women, only within the widely under-represented?” wrote Laure Kellens, from France. “Is it perhaps because we are to busy managing our profesional lives while also tending to the needs of our children and families, and therefore have little times to leisurely peruse-and even less to comment on-the blog?”

Discussion of China drew in expatriates and locals alike, especially for a question –and-answer session with Zhang Rongde, a Migran worker who discusses his live in my new book. When the blog played host to professors Sachs, Jagdish Bhagwati and Joseph Stiglitz from Columbia University, readers from Africa, South America, Asia, Europe and the United States all asked how their countries could improve their citizens’ livelihoods.

Looking forward, our readers have also hinted at some predictions for our globalizing world. They see China exerting more muscle aboard by monopolizing supply chains, cornering energy sources and gaining influence over politicians. They see cross-border mergers posing an ever-large challenge to nationalist priorities. And they see the most success in poverty reduction coming from locally tailored, entrepreneurial solutions.

All of their insights can be helpful as we try to manage the on going process of globalizations. As we think about the big issues, we see more of how to plan our own economic future: how much we’ll spend on the product we use, what new skills we’ll need, what careers our children might choose.

So in closing, I offer my thanks to all the blog’s commenters, on behalf of everyone who has learned from them-my self included.

Title (article) : Blogging and Thinking about the Big Issues

Managing Globalization : Daniel Altman

- E-mail: daltman@iht.com

- iht.com/biz

Read Daniel Altman’s past columns and join the discussion on the managing globalization blog.

From : International Herald Tribune, Wednesday, May 30, 2007 (page 12)

Internet address: www.iht.com

E-mail: iht@iht.com

Technorati Top Searches
 

AddMe - Search Engine Optimization