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Saturday, March 27, 2010

Google adsense tips & techniques

I need to give the clear information about Google Adsense Methods and it's usefulness for the beginners. Most of the beginners are searching via Google Online Jobs about the Google Adsense and Google Adwords. So I give some tips to them to get more some more information about Google Adsense through us. Also We will not be responsible for any kind of positive and negative thinks done by you in your Google Adsense and all other activity which is related with Google. Please always read the Google AdSense terms and conditions again and again before use it in your website. Because it will be affecting your website earnings when you are not following their terms and conditions after join with Google Adsense. This is not for the webmasters because it is useful for the beginners.




What is the real meaning of Google AdSense? Google Adsense is the advertising program(or) ad publishing program and it works through PPC Program. Which is called as Pay per Click Program. If you have website then your can join with this program to get more online money thorugh your website traffic. This is the best online money making program to register with your website and you can get more information about Google Adsense here.


What is Pay per Click Program? PPC is nothing but internet advertising model used on search engines, advertising networks, and content sites, such as blogs, in which advertisers pay their host only when their ad is clicked. Websites its utilize the PPC ads will display an advertisement when a keyword query matches an advertiser's keyword list, or when a content site displays with relevant content. Such advertisements also called as Sponsored Links or Sponsored Ads.


Pay Per Click Programs short form is PPC. PPC is having mroe ideas about online money making with your website. When you added the ad units like Content ad or link ad in your website. If you have the ads in your website then the visitors can view the ads and the visitors can click the ads if necessary or if they wants to get some information from the clicks.




What is Page Impression? A Page View(PV) or Page Impression is a request to load a single page of an internet site. A Page Impression is generated everytime a user views a page displaying Google Ads. They will count one page impression regardless of the number of ads displayed on that page. If a person has been viewing a page three ad units and it is viewed thrice, the person will generate three page impressions and nine ad unit impressions.




What is CTR? CTR is Click through Rate (the percentage of people that clicked ads) and it is a way of measuring the success of an internet online advertising compaign. A CTR is obtained by dividing the number of users who clicked on an ad on a web page by the number of times the ad was delivered. The Page impressions and the percentage of ads click by the visitors to be calculated by CTR. For example if a banner ad was delivered 100 times (impression delivered) and one person clicked one it (clicks recorded), then the resulting CTR would be 1 per cent. CTR is mostly defined as number of clicks divided by number of impressions and generally not in terms of the number of persons who clicked divided by the number of impressions.

A Quick Glossary to Hosting Industry Jargon

Hosting often uses its own language, or languages, comprised of acronyms, proprietary names and terms that have been granted new meanings. For some it's a first language. For others it's an entirely new language. This abridged glossary is designed to assist in "translating" the more common hosting terms into more common language.

Apache
Application Infrastructure
Bandwidth
CGI
Cgi-bin
The Cloud
Cloud Bursting
Cloud Computing
DDoS
Device
Firewall
FTP
Grid Computing HTML
HTTP
IDS
IIS
IP
J2EE
LAMP
Load Balancing
Managed Backup
Name Server
NOC
On-demand Software
Packet Switching Platform as a Service
RAID
SAN
Scalability
Service Commerce Platforms
Service Level Agreement (SLA)
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS)
SQL
SSL
VPN
Web Hosting
XML



Apache
One of the world's most popular Web server programs, Apache was built by a group of open-source programmers and is often used because of its outstanding performance, strong security features and the fact that it is free.
Application Infrastructure
The software components that your custom application relies on for its functionality. Examples include web servers, application servers and database servers.
Bandwidth
The amount of data that can be transmitted at a given moment to a server. The higher your bandwidth, the larger amount of traffic your site can handle at one time.
CGI
Short for Common Gateway Interface, a small script that processes data taken from the user (such as from a form application).
Cgi-bin
The directory on a web server where CGI scripts are stored.
The Cloud
A pool of highly available servers and computing services, made available for general use by web and other network-based applications.
Cloud Bursting
Using cloud resources as a pressure valve when an increased amount of computer resources are required for a burst in traffic, or short-term demand spikes in activity or load.
Cloud Computing
The sharing of compute resources (dedicated, time-shared, or dynamically shared servers) and related infrastructure components (load balancers, firewalls, network storage, developer tools, monitors and management tools) to facilitate the deployment and operation of web and network based applications. Cloud computing environments provide developers and their customers direct on-demand access to large-scale and scalable computing capabilities, all at a fraction of the cost of dedicated options such as managed data centers, colocation facilities, or private data centers. Cloud resources are typically accessed via the public Internet.
DDoS
Short for Distributed Denial of Service Attack, the most common form of attack on network devices. It overwhelms a network by monopolizing its bandwidth by flooding it with information from multiple hosts, thereby preventing legitimate network traffic.
Device
Refers to the individual hardware components that make up a unique hosted configuration. This includes servers, firewalls and load balancers.
Firewall
A piece of security software or hardware designed to protect web servers. They are typically used to protect sites from hacker attacks/unauthorized access.
FTP
Short for File Transfer Protocol, a method of allowing remote users and web servers to exchange files.
Grid Computing
An architecture for server networking, whereby processing cycles of all computers in a grid network can be allocated to a particular application. This differs from other architectures in that the integration is accomplished at the hardware level, thereby making the grid appear as a single large resource, rather than a pool of shared autonomous resources.
HTML
Short for HyperText Markup Language, the language by which web servers and client browsers communicate. All server-side functions (such as database processing), although they may be performed in another language, must eventually be output back to the user in HTML.
HTTP
Stands for HyperText Transfer Protocol, the protocol by which HTML files move across the Internet. HTTP requires a client browser and an HTTP server (typically a web server).
IDS
Short for Intrusion Detection System, it recognizes all types of hostile network traffic and computer usage that can't be detected by a conventional firewall.
IIS
Short for Internet Information Server, Microsoft's server software for Windows NT/2000.
IP
Short for Internet Protocol, which designates the format of "data packets" that are used to exchange information over the Internet.
J2EE
Short for Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition, J2EE is a programming platform for developing and running distributed multi-tier architecture applications, based largely on modular components running on an application server.
LAMP
An acronym for a set of free software programs commonly used together to run dynamic Web sites:
Linux, the operating system;
Apache, the web server;
MySQL, the database management system (or database server);
Perl, PHP, and/or Python, scripting languages.
Load Balancing
Distributing data across a network of servers in order to ensure that a single web server does not get overloaded with work, thereby affecting performance.
Managed Backup
Refers to the copying of data for the purpose of having an additional copy of an original source, specifically storing data on separate tape media not located on the server. If the original data is damaged or lost, the data may be copied back from that source.
Name Server
A server responsible for translating domain names and IP addresses.
NOC
Short for Network Operations Center, a hosting company's "home base," so to speak. The NOC is usually where most administration, technical support and physical server storage takes place.
On-demand Software
Software applications provided through networks (such as the Internet) or as network-based services. On-demand software delivery, for local installation and use, is sometimes referred to as software on-demand.
Packet Switching
The method by which most data is exchanged throughout the Internet. Most data is broken down into smaller "packets" prior to transfer, and then reassembled at the destination.
Platform as a Service
A SaaS variation, delivering integrated development environments as a turn key service.
RAID
Short for Redundant Array of Independent Disks, a method of data protection/backup. Data is stored over a number of servers so that information will still be accessible if a piece of hardware/software crashes.
SAN
Short for Storage Area Network, a network designed to attach computer storage devices such as disk array controllers and tape libraries to servers. In a storage network, a server issues a request for specific blocks, or data segments, from specific disk drives. This method is known as block storage. The device acts in a similar fashion to an internal drive, accessing the specified block, and sending the response across the network.
Scalability
The ability to adapt to rapid changes in demand, by dynamically adding or removing cloud resources based upon performance metrics and load thresholds. In more advanced environments, these resource allocations and de-allocations are fully automated and near instantaneous, allowing for smooth operation of services.
Service Commerce Platforms
A hybrid of SaaS and managed service solutions, creating a cloud computing service offer as a full-service hub. These service platforms are typically embedded, or integrated, with other service offerings to provide a complete application. In some cases, service commerce platforms are fully self-contained, and targeted at vertical markets or trade groups as outsourced IT environments.
Service Level Agreement (SLA)
A formal written agreement made between two parties: the service provider and the service recipient. The SLA itself defines the basis of understanding between the two parties for delivery of the service itself. The document can be quite complex, and sometimes underpins a formal contract. Generally, an SLA should contain clauses that define a specified level of service, support options, incentive awards for service levels exceeded and/or penalty provisions for services not provided.
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS)
Provisioning of software and applications over the public internet, or private networks, on a shared basis. SaaS applications typically provide equivalent functionality to dedicated single-purchase applications, however, they are delivered and used on a month-by-month service contract or subscription basis. Some components may be required to operate locally.
SQL
Short for Standard Query Language. A standard protocol used to request information from databases. Servers that can handle SQL are known as SQL servers.
SSL
Short for Secure Sockets Layer, a protocol developed by Netscape to handle and protect confidential/sensitive information required for e-commerce transactions (like credit card numbers). SSL addresses usually begin with 'https'.
VPN
Short for Virtual Private Network, a private communications network usually used within a company, or by several different companies, to communicate over a public network.
Web Hosting
Web hosting is a service that allows users to post web pages to the Internet. A web host, or hosting service provider (HSP), is a business that provides the technologies and services needed for websites to be viewed on the web.
XML
Short for Extensible Markup Language. XML is a language allowing developers to create their own markup tags. All XML tags are defined by the programmer, and can be interpreted differently in different applications. For example, the "" tag in HTML means Italics, but could mean anything in XML, depending on the function the developer assigns to it.


Glossary provided by theWhir.com.


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