Monday, August 27, 2007

Tips for Adsense beginners to get incomes

I have two years experience in working with adsense. Beginning with adsense is so hard at the first time. You can’t hope to build a website having adsense placed on it and begin to wait for money coming. You have to work hard to get good income using adsense. There are some advices for adsense beginners and for anyone who is working with adsense looking for something to increase earning.

  • Increase keyword density : try to include to your contents as many keywords as possible

  • Use high paying keywords : you can find some high value keywords here

  • Target your content on a single topic: it makes your contents better and deeper

  • Submit your site to search engines : this is important, remember to do it,see how here or See if your site is indexed by Google here

  • Link exchanges can be used: this works well sometimes

  • Submit to directories : a way like link exchanges

  • Use rss feeds : it reminds your visitors the exist of your site

  • Maintain adsense channels : try to add each adsense code to a channel for easy stats and tracking clicks

  • Use metatags: find more abou metatags here

  • Write content everyday : now you know why I recommend you just need to have one blog

  • Never click on your own ads or trick your visitors to click on your ads : you are making adsense to ban your own account when you do that

  • Make a comment on other sites with your links(useful comment not just links) and increase the appearance of your blog or site to attract visitors
  • Thursday, August 23, 2007

    What is Web 2.0

    Design Patterns and Business Models for the Next Generation of Software

    When surfing the internet, I often see the term Web 2.0 and I didn’t pay any attention to it. But I see this term too much that I have to study to know what Web 2.0 is. This is brief information about Web 2.0. I hope it’s helpful for who want to know what it is.

    The phrase Web 2.0 refers to a perceived second-generation of web-based communities and hosted services — such as social-networking sites, wikis and folksonomies — which aim to facilitate collaboration and sharing between users. It became popular following the first O'Reilly Media Web 2.0 conference in 2004.

    In the opening talk of the first Web 2.0 conference, Tim O'Reilly and John Battelle summarized what they saw as key principles of Web 2.0 applications:

  • the web as a platform

  • data as the driving force

  • network effects created by an architecture of participation

  • innovation in assembly of systems and sites composed by pulling together features from distributed, independent developers (a kind of "open source" development)

  • lightweight business models enabled by content and service syndication

  • the end of the software-adoption cycle (the so-called perpetual beta)

  • software above the level of a single device, leveraging the power of the "Long Tail"

  • ease of picking-up by early adopters

  • O'Reilly gave as examples: eBay, craigslist, Wikipedia, del.icio.us, Skype, dodgeball and Adsense.

    O'Reilly formulated their sense of Web 2.0 by example:

    Web 1.0 Web 2.0
    DoubleClick --> Google AdSense
    Ofoto --> Flickr
    Akamai --> BitTorrent
    mp3.com --> Napster
    Britannica Online --> Wikipedia
    personal websites --> blogging
    evite --> upcoming.org and EVDB
    domain name speculation --> search engine optimization
    page views --> cost per click
    screen scraping --> web services
    publishing --> participation
    content management systems --> wikis
    directories (taxonomy) --> tagging ("folksonomy")
    stickiness --> syndication

    While interested parties continue to debate the definition of a Web 2.0 application, a Web 2.0 website may exhibit some basic common characteristics. These might include:

  • "Network as platform" — delivering (and allowing users to use) applications entirely through a browser. See also Web operating system.

  • Users owning the data on a site and exercising control over that data.

  • An architecture of participation that encourages users to add value to the application as they use it. This stands in sharp contrast to hierarchical access-control in applications, in which systems categorize users into roles with varying degrees of functionality.

  • A rich, interactive, user-friendly interface based on Ajax or similar frameworks.

  • Some social-networking aspects.

  • For more information about Web 2.0 you can see the What Is Web 2.0 by Tim O'Reilly.

    Learning PHP and MySQL easily with EasyPHP

    I began learning PHP two weeks ago. I love PHP because it’s a good programming language I have to use in my university and it’s free. To run a PHP program you need a PHP interpreter, a web server, the one I use is Apache. And if you work with database you can use MySQL. All of them are free.

    At the first week learning PHP, I found it difficult to configure the PHP interpreter, the Apache server and the MySQL too. It makes me crazy. Configuring three of them to make them work well together is a big problem, specially, with beginners. There are many tutorials on the internet instruct you how to configure them, but I found them difficult to understand.


    Now everything is ok. I found a program that integrates three programs to one. That’s EasyPHP. EasyPHP is a free software you can download at EasyPHP.Org. It does everything for you. You don’t need to configure anything if you don’t want. Just install them and enjoy your PHP world. It also gives you the administration section where you can do many things to manage your databases visually without using console.

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