Emoticons are so 2003, according to a report released by Nielsen//NetRatings.
Ad-Based Sites and Content Networks
Content Networks are the primary source of revenue for most Ad-Based sites. Measuring to optimize revenue from these sources is an interesting set of problems – but even more interesting are cases where a site blends revenue from multiple sources. Most common among these are sites that sell banner ads directly as well as Content-Network placements.
Extending The Range Of Wireless Networks
Although a wireless transmitter is limited in its range, wireless extension points can be installed to boost its signal and make the range of the network much larger.
Australian TV Networks Cripple Media Center
Turns out Australia is one of the only countries in the world where DVR providers, like Windows Media Center, cannot show Electronic Programming Guides to users.
Smart Social Networks – Defined and Compared
As I’ve seen more and more social networks launch, there definitely seemed to be an evolution happening.
Red Hat Takes Mugshot Of Social Networks
A website built by Linux vendor Red Hat offers an open project focused on building a live social experience around entertainment.
Web Social Networks’ Popularity Still Rising
Social networking sites are bigger than ever, according to new data from Nielsen//NetRatings. The ten largest sites, taken together, grew 47 percent in the past year, and they now reach 45 percent of active Internet users.
Defining Paid Search Networks
Reading any of the major search engines’ explanations of their paid search networks and where they will display ads is at minimum misleading.
AIT Weaves Tales Of Click-Fraud Networks
Web-hosting company AIT CEO Clarence Briggs can’t tell you much about the company’s taking over the lead for Click Defense in a class action lawsuit against Google. “It’s a bunch of legal stuff,” he says. What he can do is take you on a journey of retailers that sell click fraud software, of affiliate networks set up to dupe advertisers with automated clicks, and computer geeks with mob-like tendencies.
Always-On Networks Created with a Wireless Router
If you’re using a wireless network with Windows’ built-in Internet Connection Sharing, you’re probably quite happy with it — but there’s a problem.