My adsense earning is not gaining. What should I do to get it on tracks? I know my blog have a very little of visitors, but the content of adsense it targeted. I see the blog with just black n white and it keeps earning even the content is not updated for months.
I tried many strategy to earns, the positioning... check. The content... check. Using adword... check.
The visitor... check. Repeated visitor... check. Most of these method is proven yield, where am I wrong? Any one?
Labels: adsense
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What would happen when the giant company is reducing cost? What will happen to vendor who is supplying the goods to them? Is transportation industries safe? Am I affected with this scenario? Where is the money go? Is this cause by you?
All this question is electrifying my mind to think more creative. But who care all the creativeness when there is no yield to boost up. Everybody is loosing their money power.
Labels: chip maker, electronics
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Just like your physical girth, which expands when you pile on the calories, the hard drive can get "fat". You wanted the drive svelte by taking it to the digital gym,
please run maintenance check on it regularly.
Regular check-ups of your hard disk will ensure that the information stored on your machine is in mint condition and that it has not been corrupted by viruses.
Do it when you planned not to use your laptop/desktop for sometime. You can make a different
Labels: maintenance
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Today I'm quite shock when I'm about to logon to
GMail account I see the background with images. I think Google got hacked. Actually it was updated with a skin. So theme up your GMail now.
Labels: email, gmail
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Blogging about blogs, remind me a blog that my friend start to develop early this month. As per him, his objective is to get
connect with the readers. His planning is to held a competition, gives free gift, design some themes and many more. Checkout this
blog if you're planning not to miss any function that he is planning
http://spread.adswiz.usI feel quiet envy because he never promote mine. Sooner or later he'll do, I think...
Labels: backlinks
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After all these years, I never realized that traffic is important to in the blogging arena. I have a mission when I'm blogging. I'm blogging to makes money. Almost a year I blogs to earn my first cheque from Google Adsense. This is because I have a very very low traffic at my blog.
Until now, my blogs have a very little visit from the readers, less than 20/day. If I have a visit average about 20 unique visitors, takes about 13months to get $100 how bout i double, triple or quadple my visitor to 40 unique visitors. It should takes about 6 month to achieve my second pay out.
But stop it right there. Traffic won't help much, it just like an opportunity to get clicks. So, I start thinking to get opportunity of clicks. I ask some review from my friend about my blogs.
BackLink Me Project is kind of link building to inter-exchange traffics and score in ranks. So far, I see nothing happen yet, possible
BackLink Me Project still have no ranks in Google. Anyone of the reader have a good and free link building to help me gain more traffic here?
Labels: adsense, linking
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CDMA networks support over 270 million subscribers worldwide, while GSM tallies up their score at over 1 billion. As CDMA phones become R-UIM enabled and roaming contracts between networks improve, integration of the standards might eventually make differences all but transparent to the consumer.
In cellular service there are two main competing network technologies: Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) and Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA). Cellular carriers including Sprint PCS, Cingular Wireless, Verizon and T-Mobile use one or the other. Understanding the difference between GSM and CDMA will allow you to choose a carrier that uses the preferable network technology for your needs.
The GSM Association is an international organization founded in 1987, dedicated to providing, developing, and overseeing the worldwide wireless standard of GSM. CDMA, a proprietary standard designed by Qualcomm in the United States, has been the dominant network standard for North America and parts of Asia. However, GSM networks continue to make inroads in the United States, as CDMA networks make progress in other parts of the world. There are camps on both sides that firmly believe either GSM or CDMA architecture is superior to the other. That said, to the non-invested consumer who simply wants bottom line information to make a choice, the following considerations may be helpful.
Coverage: The most important factor is getting service in the areas you will be using your phone. Upon viewing competitors' coverage maps you may discover that only GSM or CDMA carriers offer cellular service in your area. If so, there is no decision to be made, but most people will find that they do have a choice.
Data Transfer Speed: With the advent of cellular phones doing double and triple duty as streaming video devices, podcast receivers and email devices, speed is important to those who use the phone for more than making calls. CDMA has been traditionally faster than GSM, though both technologies continue to rapidly leapfrog along this path. Both boast "3G" standards, or 3rd generation technologies.
GSM's answer is EDGE (Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Evolution), which boasts data rates of up to 384 kbps with real world speeds reported closer to 70-140 kbps. With added technologies still in the works that include UMTS (Universal Mobile Telephone Standard) and HSDPA (High Speed Downlink Packet Access), speeds reportedly increase to about 275—380 kbps. This technology is also known as W-CDMA, but is incompatible with CDMA networks. An EDGE-ready phone is required.
EVDO, also known as CDMA2000, is CDMA's answer to the need for speed with a downstream rate of about 2 megabits per second, though some reports suggest real world speeds are closer to 300-700 kilobits per second (kbps). This is comparable to basic DSL. As of fall 2005, EVDO is in the process of being deployed. It is not available everywhere and requires a phone that is CDMA2000 ready.
In the case of EVDO, theoretical high traffic can degrade speed and performance, while the EDGE network is more susceptible to interference. Both require being within close range of a cell to get the best speeds, while performance decreases with distance.
Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) cards: In the United States only GSM phones use SIM cards. The removable SIM card allows phones to be instantly activated, interchanged, swapped out and upgraded, all without carrier intervention. The SIM itself is tied to the network, rather than the actual phone. Phones that are card-enabled can be used with any GSM carrier.
The CDMA equivalent, a R-UIM card, is only available in parts of Asia but remains on the horizon for the U.S. market. CDMA carriers in the U.S. require proprietary handsets that are linked to one carrier only and are not card-enabled. To upgrade a CDMA phone, the carrier must deactivate the old phone then activate the new one. The old phone becomes useless.
Roaming: For the most part, both networks have fairly concentrated coverage in major cities and along major highways. GSM carriers, however, have roaming contracts with other GSM carriers, allowing wider coverage of more rural areas, generally speaking, often without roaming charges to the customer. CDMA networks may not cover rural areas as well as GSM carriers, and though they may contract with GSM cells for roaming in more rural areas, the charge to the customer will generally be significantly higher.
International Roaming: If you need to make calls to other countries, a GSM carrier can offer international roaming, as GSM networks dominate the world market. If you travel to other countries you can even use your GSM cell phone abroad, providing it is a quad-band phone (850/900/1800/1900 MHz). By purchasing a SIM card with minutes and a local number in the country you are visiting, you can make calls against the card to save yourself international roaming charges from your carrier back home. CDMA phones that are not card-enabled do not have this capability, however there are several countries that use CDMA networks. Check with your CDMA provider for your specific requirements.
Labels: atnt, cdma, celcom, cingular, digi, gsm, maxis, orange, umobile, vodafone
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