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Tonight on GeekNights, we complain about Internet advertising. In the news, arson science has some important breakthroughs, and humans have evolved more recently than we previously thought.
Scott's Thing - Fast Hands
Rym's Thing - UCB Skit
Comments
I wonder if the Innocence Project will pick up on this idea. If anyone can effectively publicize this, it is Barry Sheck. :P
In the beginning I was pissed off at people who ran Ad-Block software as I felt they were "cheating" me out of impressions. After a while I noticed something.
a) ad-blockers will not click on ads
b) every impression that does not lead to a click lowers my CTR percentage
c) the higher my CTR percentage the better advertising I receive
So, I quickly figured out that ad-blockers are good for my site!
Now, If I had CPM ads rather than CPC ads I might think differently but, CPM ads are very hard to get these days.
On my blog I run:
1) Google AdSense - image ad above the fold and two text ads at the bottom of each article.
2) Affiliate Networks - Noble Knight Games and Fun Again Games. There are some quick links in the sidebar but otherwise these links are targeted to the specific game when I do a game review article. i.e. if I have a review for "Arkham Horror" I will have a fun again link at the end of the review so people can find and buy the game.
3) Amazon - The Amazon links are also affiliate in nature and they are (mostly) hand picked on a per item basis. The Pokemon articles have a generic search string attached to them but as I get the time, I go through my old entries and target the amazon links. Like the game links above, if the article does not have to do with a product sold by amazon I do not include the link.
4) Blogkits - This is a new network I am trying out. Mostly because I am lazy and have not tried chasing down more affiliate partnerships. They show random affiliate network ads. The sidebar item is graphic and the one at the end of my articles is a quick text link.
5) AdGridwork - This is the rebirth of Link Exchange. I don't put much faith in it and if it turns to shit I'll dump it.
I try to design my blog so the advertising is not in your face.
If anyone has ad blocking software I would like to know if any of the above "advertising" is not blocked.
I do not make a lot of money off of the advertising, not by a long shot! It took me over a year to make my first $100 from AdSense! Google does not pay until you reach $100.
Eventually I will drop most of the advertising from my blog. I'm slowly moving towards targeted affiliate network links as they pay the best. I've seen some from shopping sites that pay as high as 75%!!! I've also seen some strange ones such as a credit card that paid a percentage... I'm not sure how that works out unless their was a balance transfer involved...
That's my 2 cents.
Synopsis: If you are not going to ever click on ads, block them, it hurts no one and actually helps everyone!
Rym, listen to Scott. You don't need a passport to get into Canada. There is a proposal to require a passport in the near future, but most northern state congressmen are fighting hard to make sure this never happens. Currently, there is no such requirement.
As for border monitoring.... you may think the rural areas are wide open. Trust me, you would be amazed at the level of electronic surveillance there is. In my area, you could walk across the most remote part of the border... and you would be detected. Scores of smugglers who thought that they were safe can attest to this fact. And the technology is just going to improve. I suspect that you are mixing the manpower issue with the surveillance issue. You'll be detected - the question is whether or not they have the manpower to intercept you.
As to your contention that the portions of Upper Canada lie south of New York City... I suggest you look at a map. Leamington, which is pretty much as far south as you can get, sits at 42 degrees north. (42min 10sec to be exact) New York City sits at N40min 47sec. That's south of Leamington.
To correct the final error, no part of Upper Canada lies farther south than the southern border of Michigan.
However... I assumed you were talking about New York City since referring to New York State was just waaaay too obvious. Did anyone really think that the big empty space on the map was a hole in the universe?
Beginning last year (December 31, 2005), all U.S. citizens traveling by air or sea to or from the Caribbean, Central America or South America were required to have passports. Canadians will be barred from entering the United States after Dec. 31, 2006 if they do not have a valid passport. Additionally, US citizens arriving in the US from Canada or Mexico via air or sea will be required to present valid passports at this time.
Enforcement for US citizens over land crossings is to be phased in before the end of 2007.
Even waaay back before this whole "terrorism" scare, the US side of the border was always generally annoying. The Canadians would let me in without so much as a "who are you," while the US guards would grill me for several minutes while they ran my ID and took pictures of my car.
The most common answer was "Texas." Kids didn't seem to realize that Mexico is down there, since most maps in children's classrooms show the US and only the US.
(The answer is Michigan. ^_~)
Many portions of the border, though, do remain unguarded. One high school teacher of mine was flustered one day in 1998 because he'd been up all night helping police catch the drug ring that was using a back portion of his 20-acre property to drive semi trucks loaded with marijuana into the states. There were also back roads without customs stations that my friends and I would use to come back from drinking trips (because the Canadian drinking age is 18).
Seriously, though, identify these people who argue that it's a moral responsibility to look at/click on ads on the Internet. I've already paid my ISP, thank you very much, and I did not solicit any of the other advertising. I want to laugh at and burn effigies of whomever was trying to defend ads.
I remember the Money Tree crap, and i even made $36 in 1999 (or 1998?) surfing with one of those desktop monitors. Ah, the golden brass nickel days of Internet usage....
Now... here is why you were originally correct. A commonwealth is, technically speaking, a type of state. Not all states, however, are commonwealths. Therefore, there are indeed 48 contiguous states. Just didn't want you to throw federalism out with the bathwater, though.
http://www.magazineusa.com/lv2/politics/i_commonwealth.asp
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commonwealth_(United_States)
http://ask.yahoo.com/20001117.html
http://geography.about.com/library/faq/blqzuscommonwealth.htm
http://www.osv.org/learning/DocumentViewer.php?DocID=2041
http://www.kidscommonwealth.virginia.gov/FAQs/VaFAQ.asp
http://www.kdla.ky.gov/resources/kycommonwealth.htm
Some choice quotations:
Oh God, is Rym trying to give the feds greater powers than they currently have? Is the world turning on its head? Help me!