This time next year, we'll be millioners !!!!!!

srijeda, 30.01.2008.

alien005.sosblog.com

I got a new one blog, I dont know for what but I have a new blog. pozz
http://alien005.sosblog.com

- 20:03 - Komentari (2) - Isprintaj - #

petak, 25.01.2008.

Plešivica

I have a new blog, about my village from where I am, Plešivica.
http://plesivica.blogspot.com

- 14:21 - Komentari (3) - Isprintaj - #

ponedjeljak, 21.01.2008.

http://alien005.wordpress.com/

I have one more blog on Wordpres, one more in my colection.
http://alien005.wordpress.com/

- 13:15 - Komentari (1) - Isprintaj - #

nedjelja, 13.01.2008.

http://thistimenextyearwellbemillioners.blogspot.com/

Look on thsi blog it is my new blog
http://thistimenextyearwellbemillioners.blogspot.com

- 23:00 - Komentari (2) - Isprintaj - #

subota, 12.01.2008.

The People of Britain, America and Europe are Led by Children


Image and video hosting by TinyPic


I found an interesting article from a man living in the United Kingdom. This author talks about some of the annoyances occuring in his country because the world has become so bureaucratic. Americans are faced with similar, albeit regional problems. In the title of his article, he views our leaders as "children" and certainly that is how many bureaucrats act. But they are very sinister "children" as I've tried to point out by attaching an appropriate picture to this article. I know that many bureaucrats are childlike and idiotic, but I, personally, prefer to call them corporate aliens.

Read Article


Taken from: http://corp-alien.blogspot.com/

- 21:22 - Komentari (1) - Isprintaj - #

The "Click It Or Ticket" Road to Fascism


Image and video hosting by TinyPic


Seventy years ago in Nazi Germany an extremely popular Hitler used the law and emotional propaganda to get his people to let him make important decisions for them. Click it or ticket laws are similar attempts by modern governments to force us to surrender our right to make free choices. Read Article.


Taken from:http://corp-alien.blogspot.com/

- 21:01 - Komentari (2) - Isprintaj - #

petak, 11.01.2008.

10 Ways to Increase Comment Numbers on Your Blog

1. Invite Comments - I notice that when I specifically invite comments that people leave them in higher numbers than when I don’t. To some degree this confuses me as most of my readers know that they can leave comments on any post - but I guess inviting a comment triggers a response to some extent. Also keep in mind that new readers that are unfamiliar with blogging don’t always know about comments or how to use them - invitations to participate in well laid out and easy to use comments systems are good for helping them participate.

2. Ask Questions - Including specific questions in posts definitely helps get higher numbers of comments. I find that when I include questions in my headings that it is a particularly effective way of getting a response from readers as you set a question in their mind from the first moments of your post.

3. Be Open Ended - If you say everything there is to say on a topic you’re less likely to get others adding their opinions because you’ll have covered what they might have added. While you don’t want to purposely leave too many things unsaid there is an art to writing open ended posts that leaves room for your readers to be experts also.

4. Interact with comments left - If you’re not willing to use your own comments section why would your readers? If someone leaves a comment interact with them. This gets harder as your blog grows but it’s particularly important in the early days of your blog as it shows your readers that their comments are valued, it creates a culture of interactivity and gives the impression to other readers that your comments section is an active place that you as the blogger value. As the activity in your comments section grows you may find you need to be slightly less active in it as readers will start to take over on answering questions and creating community - however don’t completely ignore your comment threads.

5. Set Boundaries - I noticed that shortly after I set the rules for my comments section (with a comments policy) that my comment numbers jumped up a little. I’m not sure if it was just a coincidence or whether readers responded to knowing what was and wasn’t acceptable. It’s just a theory but I think a well managed and moderated comments section that is free of spam and that deals with well with people stepping out of line is an attractive thing to readers. I personally don’t mind people expressing different opinions to one another in comments but when I sense things are getting a little out of hand and too personal I often step in to attempt to bring some order to the situation (I rarely delete non spam comments). I find that people have responded to this and that comment threads generally stay constructive as a result.

6. Be humble - I find that readers respond very well to posts that show your own weaknesses, failings and the gaps in your own knowledge rather than those posts where you come across as knowing everything there is to know on a topic. People are attracted to humility and are more likely to respond to it than a post written in a tone of someone who might harshly respond to their comments.

7. Be gracious - Related to humility is grace. There are times where you as the blogger will get something wrong in your posts. It might be spelling or grammar, it could be the crux of your argument or some other aspect of your blogging. When a someone leaves a comment that shows your failing it’s very easy to respond harshly in a defensive manner. We’ve all seen the flaming that can ensue. While it’s not easy - a graceful approach to comments where you admit where you are wrong and others is right can bring out the lurkers and make them feel a little safer in leaving comments.

8. Be controversial? - I put a question mark after this one because it doesn’t always work (and I personally avoid it as much as I can these days) - but there’s nothing like controversy to get people commenting on your blog. Of course with controversy comes other consequences - one of which is the risk of putting off less vocal members of your readership.

9. ‘Reward’ Comments - There are many ways of acknowledging and ‘rewarding’ good comments that range from simply including a ‘good comment’ remark through to highlighting them in other posts that you write. Drawing attention to your readers who use comments well affirms them but also draws attention of other readers to good use of your comments section.

10. Make it Easy to Comment - I leave a lot of comments on a lot of blogs each week - but there is one situation where I rarely leave a comment - even if the post deserves it - blogs that require me to login before making a comment. Maybe I’m lazy (actually there’s no maybe about it) or maybe there’s something inside me that worries about giving out my personal details - but when I see a comments section that requires registration I almost always (95% or more of the time) leave the blog without leaving the comment that I want to make. While I totally understand the temptation to require registration for comments (combatting spam in most cases) something inside me resists participating in such comments sections. Registration is a hurdle you put in front of your readers that some will be willing to leap but that others will balk at (the same is often said about other comments section requirements that go beyond the basics). Keep your comments section as simple and as easy to use as possible.

So - what do you think? How have you increased the levels of comments on your blog (had to ask)?

Taken from:
http://www.problogger.net/

- 03:17 - Komentari (1) - Isprintaj - #

četvrtak, 10.01.2008.

Who clicks on ads? And what might this mean?

Advertising is the bread and butter of the web, yet most of my friends claim that they never click on ads, typically using a peacock tone that signals their pride in being ad-averse. The geekier amongst them go out of their way to run Mozilla scripts to scrape ads away, bemoaning the presence of consumer culture. Yet, companies increasingly rely on ad revenue to turn a profit and, while clicking on ads ?may? be declining, it certainly hasn't gone away. This raises a critical question: Who are the people that click on ads?

A few years back, I asked this question to someone who worked in the world of web ads and I received a snarky (and condescending) answer: middle America. Over the years, I've read all sorts of speculations about search engine ads suggesting that people click on ads:

* Because they don't know that they're ads.
* Because they are perceived to be of greater quality than the actual search results (for example, in searches for travel).
* When they're searching for something that they want to purchase (intent to buy = desire to get to merchants quickly).
* When they're bored.
* When they think that they might win something or get something for free.

Over the summer, Dave Morgan (AOL Global Advertising Strategy) blogged about a study that they did to investigate who clicks on ads:

What did we learn? A lot. We learned that most people do not click on ads, and those that do are by no means representative of Web users at large.

Ninety-nine percent of Web users do not click on ads on a monthly basis. Of the 1% that do, most only click once a month. Less than two tenths of one percent click more often. That tiny percentage makes up the vast majority of banner ad clicks.

Who are these "heavy clickers"? They are predominantly female, indexing at a rate almost double the male population. They are older. They are predominantly Midwesterners, with some concentrations in Mid-Atlantic States and in New England. What kinds of content do they like to view when they are on the Web? Not surprisingly, they look at sweepstakes far more than any other kind of content. Yes, these are the same people that tend to open direct mail and love to talk to telemarketers.

Social media services like social network sites are not designed around the audience that Morgan suggests is the core of clickers, yet these too rely on advertising. I have a sneaking suspicion that a tiny percentage of MySpace/Facebook/etc. users make up the bulk of the revenue of these sites, just as with the sites that Morgan addresses. I cannot find any research on who clicks on social network site ads (does anyone know of any???), but based on what I've seen qualitatively, my hypothesis would be that heavy ad clickers are:

* More representative of lower income households than the average user.
* Less educated than the average user (or from less-educated environments in the case of minors).
* More likely to live outside of the major metro regions.
* More likely to be using SNSs to meet new people than the average user (who is more likely to be using SNSs to maintain connections).

In other words, much to my chagrin, I suspect that heavy ad clickers in social network sites and other social media are more likely to trend lower in both economic and social capital than the average user. Unfortunately, I don't have the data to test these hypotheses at all. (Does anyone? Are there any studies on class dynamics and ad clicking?)

Of course, while the ad world is obsessed with clicks because they can measure those, ad receptivity is more than just clicks. While people dream of adding clicks to TV, TV ads have been tremendously successful without the clicking option. Brand recognition, for example, is an acceptable outcome from the POV of many marketers. But the web lets us measure clicks so advertisers tend to care about clicks.

I am not an advertiser and I'm not invested in making better ads. Instead, by raising this topic, I'm curious whether or not web marketing is capitalizing on a niche group and, if so, what the societal implications of this might be? If my hypothesis were true, what would it mean if marketing is profiting primarily off of those who are economically and socially struggling? How do we feel about this philosophically, ethically, and professionally? Would we feel proud of living off of a business model that targets the poor?

Of course, my hypothesis may be wrong. Advertisers have historically flocked to the sites that draw richer, more educated, more urban populations. (As has media coverage.) They have to be doing this for a reason, right? Websites have historically tried to demonstrate that their users are such "ideal" consumers. Yet, I can't help but wonder if these "ideal" consumers are really the people who buy most of the goods being advertised. (I've always been fascinated by how poorer American families tend to have immense amounts of stuff while rich American families pride themselves on minimizing quantity and maximizing quality of material goods.)

I should note that consumer culture has historically capitalized on poorer populations, long before the web. Studies of consumer culture have shown how American identity has been constructed through consumption over the last century and how, not surprisingly, those who have a stronger need/desire to prove their American identity buy into the consumer culture.

While studies of consumer culture go back decades, I'm having a hard time surfacing what is known about the culture of web advertising. Who is being targeted? Who is responding? Why are they responding? What are the implications?

You might be wondering why am I raising such a web-centric issue on the Shift6 blog. Mobile advertising is primarily growing out of the web culture. It may not be about clicks, but the idea of user responses builds on that. As advertising becomes central to every interactive technology in our lives, I think it's important to step back and question who is being targeted, how, and with what consequence. Thus, as we are thinking about what it might mean to live in a world where mobile phone advertising is accepted, we must also concern ourselves with the implications of this.

(Note: it's easy to read this from an anti-capitalist POV, but this should instead be read from the POV of a conscientious capitalist.)


Taken from : http://www.zephoria.org/

- 01:37 - Komentari (1) - Isprintaj - #

About Wikia Search

Wikia is working to develop and popularize a freely licensed (open source) search engine. It is great.

search.wikia.com

- 00:42 - Komentari (0) - Isprintaj - #

srijeda, 09.01.2008.

please if you are on my page......

Please if you are on my page leave a comment, that is all people, see ya.

- 23:29 - Komentari (0) - Isprintaj - #

nedjelja, 06.01.2008.

Super stranica za skidanje mjuze pogledajte isplati se!!!!!
Great page, if you need music.

http://freemp3load.blogspot.com/

- 15:19 - Komentari (6) - Isprintaj - #

subota, 05.01.2008.

25 reasons why men have 2 dogs and not 2 wives

1. The later you are, the more excited your dogs are to see you.
2. Dogs will forgive you for playing with other dogs.
3. If a dog is gorgeous, other dogs don't hate it.
4. Dogs don't notice if you call them by another dog's name.
5. Dogs like it if you leave a lot of things on the floor.
6. A dog's parents never visit.
7. Dogs do not hate their bodies.
8. Dogs agree that you have to raise your voice to get your point cross.
9. Dogs like to do their snooping outside rather than in your wallet or desk.
10. Dogs seldom outlive you.
11. Dogs can't talk.
12. You never have to wait for a dog; they're ready to go 24 hours a day.
13. Dogs find you amusing when you're drunk.
14. Dogs like to go hunting and fishing.
15. Another man will seldom steal your dog.
16. A dog will not wake you up in the middle of the night to ask, "If I died, would you get another dog?"
17. If a dog has babies, you can put an ad in the paper and give them away.
18. A dog will let you put a studded collar on it without calling you a pervert.
19. A dog won't hold out on you to get a new car.
20. If a dog smells another dog on you, they don't get mad. They just think it's interesting.
21. On a car trip, your dog never insists on running the heater.
22. Dogs don't let magazine articles guide their lives.
23. When your dog gets old, you can have it put to sleep.
24. Dogs like to ride in the back of a pick-up truck.
And, last but not least:
2 5 . If a dog leaves, it won't take half of your stuff !!

- 12:50 - Komentari (0) - Isprintaj - #

Happy Everything

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

Jedna od boljih slika koje sam vidio!!!!!

- 12:40 - Komentari (0) - Isprintaj - #

<< Prethodni mjesec | Sljedeći mjesec >>

< siječanj, 2008 >
P U S Č P S N
  1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31      

alien005.blog.hr

alien005.blog.hr




  • Banner Exchange - 100% Free Webmaster Banner Exchange services. Join now and boost your business profitability. The banner exchange is a great way to get traffic to your site. Getting more traffic was never easier. Join our banner exchange community and start geting traffic instantly.

    Link Market - Free Link Exchange, Link Swap and Link Trade Directory
    Have you ever tried to exchange links, swap links, or trade links? Was it hard? Use link market instead; - it is easy to use, free and very smart. It will save you hours of work.








Links

Previous Posts: