Ads By Google

Thursday, August 6, 2009

ho

Wondering how you calculate how much Google Adsense give you money per click? There is a simple formula for this:

Revenue = Traffic * CTR * CPC

Probably understand what traffic.

So CTR is Click Through rate, and this shows how your visitors are clicking on ads. It really depends on what your site is optimized AdSense.

CPC is cost per click. Different words have different incomes. Some may be about $ 0.01, some are over $ 10.

But how to find words that are - highly paid for your site? Well, the answer to this question depends a little of who you are and what you are willing to do to get those keywords. But the good news is that you really can not find such words if you need them.

Here is your example of these words:

S / No.

Keywords

CPC ($)

1. Purchase Structured Settlements 53.48
2. Mesothelioma Lawyers San Diego 51.47
3. Secured Loan Calculator 51.35
4. Structured Settlement Investments 50.45
5. Endowment Selling 50.35
6. Mesothelioma Patients 50.23
7. Mesothelioma attorney san diego 50.07
8. Austin Texas dwi lawyers 50.03
9. New York Mesothelioma Lawyers 50.01
10. Phoenix dui lawyers 50.01
11. Secured Loans 50.01
12. Insurance Auto 50.00
13. Phoenix dui attorney 50.00
14. car free insurance online quote 50.00
15. students debt consolidation loans 49.96
16. Pennsylvania mesothelioma lawyers 49.87
17. data recovery Denver 49.71
18. adverse credit remortgages 49.56
19. bad credit remortgages 49.47
20. data recover y service los angeles 49.37
21. Consolidating Students Loan 49.30
22. Students Loan Consolidation Rates 49.17
23. Boston dui lawyers 49.02
24. memphis car insurance 48.86
25. conference calling companies 48.64
26. dui attornes los angeles 48.60
27. georgia car accident lawyers 48.36
28. san diego dui defense 48.32
29. Phoenix arizona dui lawyers 48.28
30. Los angeles dwi attorneys 48.20
31. Student Consolidation Loans 48.15
32. free quote for car insurance 48.11
33. irs tax lawyers 48.08
34. nj auto insurance 48.08
35. dui san diego 48.01
36. Los Angeles Criminal Defense Attorney 48.00
37. Consolidating Private Student Loans 47.96
38. Personal Injury Lawyer Chicago 47.83
39. Personal Injury Attorney Pennsylvania 47.82
40. Auto Insurance 47.81

How to win more with Google AdSense

Wondering how you calculate how much Google Adsense give you money per click? There is a simple formula for this:

Revenue = Traffic * CTR * CPC

Probably understand what traffic.

So CTR is Click Through rate, and this shows how your visitors are clicking on ads. It really depends on what your site is optimized AdSense.

CPC is cost per click. Different words have different incomes. Some may be about $ 0.01, some are over $ 10.

But how to find words that are - highly paid for your site? Well, the answer to this question depends a little of who you are and what you are willing to do to get those keywords. But the good news is that you really can not find such words if you need them.

Here is your example of these words:

S / No.

Keywords

CPC ($)

1. Purchase Structured Settlements 53.48
2. Mesothelioma Lawyers San Diego 51.47
3. Secured Loan Calculator 51.35
4. Structured Settlement Investments 50.45
5. Endowment Selling 50.35
6. Mesothelioma Patients 50.23
7. Mesothelioma attorney san diego 50.07
8. Austin Texas dwi lawyers 50.03
9. New York Mesothelioma Lawyers 50.01
10. Phoenix dui lawyers 50.01
11. Secured Loans 50.01
12. Insurance Auto 50.00
13. Phoenix dui attorney 50.00
14. car free insurance online quote 50.00
15. students debt consolidation loans 49.96
16. Pennsylvania mesothelioma lawyers 49.87
17. data recovery Denver 49.71
18. adverse credit remortgages 49.56
19. bad credit remortgages 49.47
20. data recover y service los angeles 49.37
21. Consolidating Students Loan 49.30
22. Students Loan Consolidation Rates 49.17
23. Boston dui lawyers 49.02
24. memphis car insurance 48.86
25. conference calling companies 48.64
26. dui attornes los angeles 48.60
27. georgia car accident lawyers 48.36
28. san diego dui defense 48.32
29. Phoenix arizona dui lawyers 48.28
30. Los angeles dwi attorneys 48.20
31. Student Consolidation Loans 48.15
32. free quote for car insurance 48.11
33. irs tax lawyers 48.08
34. nj auto insurance 48.08
35. dui san diego 48.01
36. Los Angeles Criminal Defense Attorney 48.00
37. Consolidating Private Student Loans 47.96
38. Personal Injury Lawyer Chicago 47.83
39. Personal Injury Attorney Pennsylvania 47.82
40. Auto Insurance 47.81

How to win more with Google AdSense

Wondering how you calculate how much Google Adsense give you money per click? There is a simple formula for this:

Revenue = Traffic * CTR * CPC

Probably understand what traffic.

So CTR is Click Through rate, and this shows how your visitors are clicking on ads. It really depends on what your site is optimized AdSense.

CPC is cost per click. Different words have different incomes. Some may be about $ 0.01, some are over $ 10.

But how to find words that are - highly paid for your site? Well, the answer to this question depends a little of who you are and what you are willing to do to get those keywords. But the good news is that you really can not find such words if you need them.

Here is your example of these words:

S / No.

Keywords

CPC ($)

1. Purchase Structured Settlements 53.48
2. Mesothelioma Lawyers San Diego 51.47
3. Secured Loan Calculator 51.35
4. Structured Settlement Investments 50.45
5. Endowment Selling 50.35
6. Mesothelioma Patients 50.23
7. Mesothelioma attorney san diego 50.07
8. Austin Texas dwi lawyers 50.03
9. New York Mesothelioma Lawyers 50.01
10. Phoenix dui lawyers 50.01
11. Secured Loans 50.01
12. Insurance Auto 50.00
13. Phoenix dui attorney 50.00
14. car free insurance online quote 50.00
15. students debt consolidation loans 49.96
16. Pennsylvania mesothelioma lawyers 49.87
17. data recovery Denver 49.71
18. adverse credit remortgages 49.56
19. bad credit remortgages 49.47
20. data recover y service los angeles 49.37
21. Consolidating Students Loan 49.30
22. Students Loan Consolidation Rates 49.17
23. Boston dui lawyers 49.02
24. memphis car insurance 48.86
25. conference calling companies 48.64
26. dui attornes los angeles 48.60
27. georgia car accident lawyers 48.36
28. san diego dui defense 48.32
29. Phoenix arizona dui lawyers 48.28
30. Los angeles dwi attorneys 48.20
31. Student Consolidation Loans 48.15
32. free quote for car insurance 48.11
33. irs tax lawyers 48.08
34. nj auto insurance 48.08
35. dui san diego 48.01
36. Los Angeles Criminal Defense Attorney 48.00
37. Consolidating Private Student Loans 47.96
38. Personal Injury Lawyer Chicago 47.83
39. Personal Injury Attorney Pennsylvania 47.82
40. Auto Insurance 47.81

How To Save $1 Billion And 800 Lives In Canada

The economic burden of alcohol abuse costs each Canadian $463 per year. In fact, the direct health care costs for alcohol abuse in Canada exceed those of cancer. Released by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), the Avoidable Cost of Alcohol Abuse in Canada 2002 report estimates that, even under very conservative assumptions, implementing six reviewed interventions would result in cost savings of about $1 billion per year and a savings of about 800 lives, close to 26,000 years of life lost to premature death and more than 88,000 acute care hospital days in Canada per year. This pioneering study is Canada's first systematic estimate of the avoidable costs of alcohol abuse, and the first study of its kind worldwide.

To calculate the avoidable burden and avoidable costs of alcohol abuse in Canada for 2002, CAMH Senior Scientist Dr. Jurgen Rehm and his team estimated the potential economic impact of increasing alcohol taxation, lowering the blood alcohol concentration (BAC) legal limit from 0.08 per cent to 0.05 percent, zero tolerance BAC for all drivers under age 21, increasing the legal minimum drinking age from 19 to 21 years of age, a Safer Bars intervention, and brief interventions (routine screening with concise advice for problematic alcohol users by primary care physicians or other health professionals).

The data revealed that:
  • Implementing all six interventions would decrease productivity losses by more than $561 million or 58 per cent of the total avoidable cost due to alcohol, decrease health care costs (saving almost $230 million or 24 per cent), and lower criminality costs by almost $178 million or 18 per cent.

  • The most effective intervention to reduce avoidable costs in health care, criminality and productivity losses was the brief interventions (saving almost $602 million per year, 62 per cent of total savings), followed by increasing alcohol taxes (saving more than $211 million per year, 22 per cent of total savings).

  • The most effective intervention for preventing drinking and driving incidents in Canada was lowering the BAC level, which would result in a 19 per cent reduction.

  • The Safer Bars program was the most effective measure to avoid homicide and other violent crimes (more than 3 per cent reductions were estimated).

  • Brief interventions were the most effective measure to avoid other alcohol-attributable criminal activities (e.g., property crime), resulting in an almost 3 per cent reduction in these types of crimes.
"It's clear that the largest impact would come from interventions affecting the level of drinking in general such as brief interventions and increasing alcohol taxation," says Dr. Rehm. "However, the greatest overall cost avoidance would be achieved when multiple rather than single effective and cost-effective alcohol interventions are implemented as part of a comprehensive alcohol policy."

The scientists also estimated the potential impact of privatizing alcohol sales in those provinces that sell alcohol through a government monopoly. The analysis showed that substantial increases in direct and indirect costs would occur if Canadian provinces were to privatize alcohol sales. Productivity losses would increase by more than $468 million (7 per cent), health care costs would increase by more than $258 million (8 per cent), and costs related to criminality would increase by about $102 million (3 per cent).

While studies that investigate the cost of illness are a valuable indicator of the overall economic burden due to substance abuse in Canada, they do not offer potential solutions to reduce the burden. As Dr. Rehm explains, "this study shows the benefits potentially available to the community as a whole by directing public resources to specific policies, strategies and programs. It also helps identify information gaps, target problems, and identify potential solutions."

----------------------------
Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
----------------------------

The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) is Canada's largest mental health and addiction teaching hospital, as well as one of the world's leading research centres in the area of addiction and mental health. CAMH combines clinical care, research, education, policy development and health promotion to transform the lives of people affected by mental health and addiction issues.

CAMH is fully affiliated with the University of Toronto, and is a Pan American Health Organization/World Health Organization Collaborating Centre.

Source: Michael Torres
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

How To Stop Winter From Weathering Your Skin

All winter flakes are not made of snow. Cold weather wreaks havoc on our skin, sometimes making it dry and flaky. Skin dries out if it's deprived of water and this dryness often causes itchiness, resulting in a condition commonly referred to as "winter itch."

"Most of us experience dry and itchy skin from time to time, but you should seek medical attention if discomfort becomes severe," says Dr. Anjali Dahiya, a dermatologist at the Iris Cantor Women's Health Center at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center. "The best thing you can do to relieve the itch is to moisturize your skin because, unfortunately, you can't do anything about the weather."

"Remember, dry skin is due to lack of water. Apply moisturizers immediately after bathing or showering, while your skin is still wet to trap water in the skin," notes Dr. Dahiya.

She suggests the following tips to turn your skin from alligator into suede:

-- Moisturize daily. Cream moisturizers are better than lotions for normal to dry skin. If you have sensitive skin, choose a moisturizer without fragrance or lanolin.

-- Cleanse your skin, but don't overdo it. Too much cleansing removes skin's natural moisturizers. It is enough to wash your face, hands, feet, and between the folds of your skin once a day. While you can rinse your trunk, arms, and legs daily; it is not necessary to use soap or cleanser on these areas every day.

-- Limit the use of hot water and soap. If you have "winter itch," take short lukewarm showers or baths with a non-irritating, non-detergent-based cleanser. Immediately afterward, apply a mineral oil or petroleum jelly type moisturizer. Gently pat skin dry.

-- Humidify. Humidifiers can be beneficial. However, be sure to clean the unit according to the manufacturer's instructions to reduce mold and fungi.

-- Protect yourself from the wind. Cover your face and use a petroleum-based balm for your lips.

-- Avoid extreme cold. Cold temperatures can cause skin disorders or frostbite in some people. See a doctor immediately if you develop color changes in your hands or feet accompanied by pain or ulceration. If you develop extreme pain followed by loss of sensation in a finger or toe, you may have frostbite.

-- Protect your skin from the sun. Winter sun can be as dangerous to the skin. Even in the winter months you should use a sunscreen with a sun-protection factor of 15 or greater, if you will be outdoors for prolonged periods. Overexposure to the sun's rays can lead to premature aging of the skin and skin cancer.

-- See your dermatologist. If you have persistent dry skin, scaling, itching, skin growths that concern you, or other rashes, see your dermatologist -- not only in winter but throughout the year.

NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital

NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, based in New York City, is the nation's largest not-for-profit, non-sectarian hospital, with 2,242 beds. The Hospital has nearly 2 million inpatient and outpatient visits in a year, including more than 230,000 visits to its emergency departments -- more than any other area hospital. NewYork-Presbyterian provides state-of-the-art inpatient, ambulatory and preventive care in all areas of medicine at five major centers: NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital of NewYork-Presbyterian, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Allen Pavilion and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Westchester Division. One of the largest and most comprehensive health-care institutions in the world, the Hospital is committed to excellence in patient care, research, education and community service. It ranks sixth in U.S.News & World Report's guide to "America's Best Hospitals," ranks first on New York magazine's "Best Hospitals" survey, has the greatest number of physicians listed in New York magazine's "Best Doctors" issue, and is included among Solucient's top 15 major teaching hospitals. The Hospital's mortality rates are among the lowest for heart attack and heart failure in the country, according to a 2007 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) report card. The Hospital has academic affiliations with two of the nation's leading medical colleges: Weill Cornell Medical College and Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. For more information, visit http://www.nyp.org.

NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital
http://www.nyp.org

Scientists Decode Entire HIV Genome

A team of US scientists has for the first time unravelled the entire genetic code of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, paving the way for a better understanding of how these types of viruses infect humans and hopefully speeding up the discovery and development of new drugs.

The work was done by Dr Kevin Weeks, a chemistry professor of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill, and colleagues, and features as the cover story of the 6 August issue of Nature.

Before this work, researchers had only modelled small regions of the HIV genome, which is very large and made of two strands of nearly 10,000 building blocks or nucleotides each.

Viruses like HIV, whose genetic code is carried on RNA (rather than DNA) are harder to unravel because unlike DNA where the code is carried almost entirely in sequential building blocks or nucleotides, RNA folds into complex and intricate three-dimensional patterns that are harder to unravel. Other RNA-based viruses include the flu viruses, hepatitis C, the common cold, some cancer precursors, polio, and many others.

The replication of RNA-based viruses is controlled at many levels, including conserved "structures" of RNA genome, many of which have not been studied in much detail.

The way the HIV encodes proteins is not straightforward either: while there is a correspondence between RNA and a primary sequencing of proteins, there is another level of coding between these "structures" and "inter-domain" loops that connect different parts of HIV proteins.

For the study, the researchers used a high-throughput RNA analyser called SHAPE to examine the architecture of HIV genomes isolated from infectious cultures containing trillions of viral particles.

What they found suggests that the complex RNA structures (which they referred to as "motifs") influenced several steps in the HIV infectivity cycle, in other words they modulated "ribosome elongation to promote native protein folding".

They also found that: "Some simple genome elements previously shown to be important, including the ribosomal gag-pol frameshift stem-loop, are components of larger RNA motifs."

Weeks said in a media statement that:

"There is so much structure in the HIV RNA genome that it almost certainly plays a previously unappreciated role in the expression of the genetic code."

The study could be the key to unlocking the secrets of other RNA genomes in other viruses.

"One approach is to change the RNA sequence and see if the virus notices," said co-author Ronald Swanstrom, from UNC's Linenberger Cancer Center.

"If it doesn't grow as well when you disrupt the virus with mutations, then you know you've mutated or affected something that was important to the virus," he added.

And another important insight that Weeks pointed out was:

"We are also beginning to understand tricks the genome uses to help the virus escape detection by the human host."

"Architecture and secondary structure of an entire HIV-1 RNA genome."
Joseph M. Watts, Kristen K. Dang, Robert J. Gorelick, Christopher W. Leonard, Julian W. Bess Jr, Ronald Swanstrom, Christina L. Burch and & Kevin M. Weeks.
Nature 460, 711 -716 (6 August 2009).
DOI: 10.1038/nature08237