Showing posts with label income. Show all posts
Showing posts with label income. Show all posts

Saturday, April 11, 2009

How to make money from your blog?

Want to monetize your site, but seems to take forever to reach the minimum payout of $100 using Google Adsense? Check out these Pay-Per-Click (*PPC) and Cost-Per-Mile (**CPM) advert program.

*Pay-Per-Click is programs such as Google Adsense. You get paid whenever someone clicks on the ads that you have placed. This is probably the most popular one. Payment given can vary depending on the niche of the website and of the publisher you are using.

**Cost-Per-Mille is programs that gives you money per 1,000 times (impressions) that the banner is shown. Payment can range from $0.50 per 1,000 impressions to $5 per 1,000 impressions.

No-Minimum Cashouts,
Paid CPM - A Easy safe CPM Banner that pays $0.01 per CPM. No Minimum cashout. Payments made by E-gold or Moneybookers at end of Every Month. Net 45 Days.

Paid-to-Promote- A CPM Banner. Get Paid $0.005 Per Unique View. 2 Monthly Payments. No Minimum Payouts. Unique Views Count Only if redirected. Great if you need fast cash.

MediaShakers - A Great CPM Banner Program that pays for Raw Impressions. They Pay Extremely High for U.S. Impressions. If you have a lot it will work well. No Minimum Payout. Payments are made net 30 days on the 5th of the month. Payments are made Paypal or wire transfer.

Mvav - A great fast paying CPM Banner Program. They Pay $0.01 Per 2 redirects. Redirects occur only when someone is using IE. No minimum cashout. Payments made by Paypal.

Obeus- A Paid to click Program That has CPM but you can only get CPM is a advertiser buys directly from you. Cashout is $1.00. They are very strict with click fraud. If you happen to click your own ads you will be suspended upon payout. Payments are sent within 48hours and by E-gold.

$1.00 Min. Cashouts
Itsptp - Another well known CPM Banner Program. Its also known to have some background music so if you have a music player its not best to add into your site. You get Paid $1.5 CPM for Canada, United Kingdom, United States, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Italy, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland Traffic. Easy $1.00 Payout. They Pay by E-gold or Paypal.

$10.00 Min. Cashouts
Bidvertiser - A well Known Paying PPC Program. A alternative for Google Adsense. It pays Well if you have lots of clicks. Remember Do not click your own ads. They Will know and suspend your account. They track Ip and a ratio of CTR%. They Pay Net 15. Minimum Cashout is $10.00. They Pay by Paypal or Check.

Adbrite - Great CPM and PPC Program. This is a great alternative for Google Adsense. Low $10.00 Payout. Paid By Check. Net 30.

Orana Ads - Another Great CPM and PPC Program. $0.10 CPM Banner. $0.01 Per Click. $10.00 Cashout. Monthly Payments. Paid by Paypal or E-gold.

$20.00 - $50 Min. Cashouts
Chitika - One of the best paying PPC Publisher Programs Around. They Pay Per click. Net 15. Payments made by Paypal. $20.00 Cashout.

VastGate- A CPM Banner Around for over 2 Years. Many Use it. Not many Reach Payout Due to the $25.00 Min. Payout. It pays $0.25 CPM. It contains a Layer-Ad inside the banner. Monthly Payments made E-gold or Paypal.

Adlandpro - a long term Paid to Search and Paid to Click Program. Minimum Payout is $35.00. They Send Payments every 15th of the Month. Payments are sent by check.

Cpxinteractive- A Well Known CPM Banner Program. They Rarely Accept Members unless the site has over 500,000 traffic monthly page views and follows their site content catagory. If you happen to get accepted by them you will be very lucky. They pay really well. Net 30 days. Cashout is at $50.00. Payments are made by Checks.

Gimmelink - A Brand New CPM/PPC banner Program that pays $0.20 per thousand raw views. Easy money maker. Not sure if it pays yet will update when payment is made. $50.00 Cashout. Payments made by paypal,check,e-gold,safepay,alertpay.

Ads-Click- A Very Great Paying Site. Min. Payout is at $50.00 with Net 30 days. Payments Made with Paypal.

AdultAdWorld - best Well Known Paying Adult CPM Site. They also carry Non-adult CPM Banners. There CPM Pays at this rate. All CPM Banner = $0.05 CPM Raw, All Pop-under/Pop-ups = $5.00 CPM Raw, All Click Thrus Banners $0.05 per click. Minimum cash out is $50.00. They Pay Every Month Net 30. Payments Made By Check. (CAUTION: I don't think you can put this in a blogger account since it does not allow adult content)

Payperwindows - A new type of CPM Program. They pay $1.00 CPM and cashout is $50.00. Weekly payments made. Payments made with Paypal.

Shopzilla- a great PPC Program That pays for Genuine views which means that people who click the ad must surf through the ad and also click a item in order to count as a click. Each Valid Click Generates at least $0.20-$10.00. They Pay By Check. Minimum Cashout at $50.00. Net 30 Days at the end of month.

Tribalfusion - A Well Known Cpm Program. They Accept Almost everyone that has at least over 2000 unique traffic daily. Must also comply to their website terms. Cashout is at $50.00. Payments made by checks. Net 45.

Interserve - A New Paid Per Click Publisher Program. Started On August 2007. Minimum Cashout is $50.00. Each Click = $0.01-$5.00. Very Much Like Google but just a little less. Payments sent Every 28th of the month by E-gold,Check,Bank transfer, and Moneybookers.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Onehunga, Auckland, New Zealand 1-Feb-2009, David Lim, GDI

Took a spin around One Tree Hill and then to Onehunga Mall to have my favourite South Fried Chicken for late lunch. Click here for the location map of Onehunga.
Onehunga has some magnificent buildings and structure. Some of them are pretty ancient too.
No long ago a new apartment block and commercial shop lot had been built. Note that all the pictures were taken by my Nokia E71 PDA phone.

I met up Sukhchain Singh at Mt Wellington area, to burn some DVD's to on GDI Marketing to be shipped to Malaysia and India to grow our network.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

What is the world's smallest street legal car?

Created by the Peel Engineering Company in 1962 the The Peel P50 is the world's smallest street legal car. The car is only 53 inches long and 39 inches wide and weighs a feathery 132 pounds. The Peel P50 can reach staggering speeds of 40 MPH on it's three wheels. The only drawback is the car has no reverse gear, but with the attached handle it's easy to maneuver it yourself.

This page is proudly sponsored by www.TheKiwi.WS

Saturday, January 10, 2009

The 10 Poorest Countries Of The World (GDI, David Lim, Auckland, New Zealand)

The level of economy in countries around the globe is not even. It is somewhere very high and somewhere very low. GDP, literacy rate and employment rate are several parameters of a country to determine the level of its economy. According to a report of the United Nations, hunger causes the death of about 25,000 people everyday. Unfortunately, the number of children is greater than that of adults. Consider several facts of income disparity between rich and poor nations to measure the cleavage between the haves and the haves not. The combined income of the world’s richest individuals leaves far behind that of the poorest 416 million. 982 million out of 4.8 billion people in the developing world live on $1 a day. Another 2.5 billion live on below $2 a day. 40% of the poorest population made up 5% of world income while 20% of the richest population made up 75% of global income in 2005.

A country with a GDP per capita of $765 dollars or less is defined as a low-income or poor country. You may wonder why poor countries remain poor. Some interrelated factors like geography, industrialization, colonialism, education, resources, infrastructure, overpopulation, investment, government and debt make poor countries remain the heavy foot of poverty.

Look into the fragile features of the ten poorest countries of the world.

10. Ethiopia (GDP - per capita: $700)

Seen Better Days - Ethiopia

“The Sadomo region of the Ethiopia is known for producing the best coffee second to Harar….Make Trade Fair!” - mcandrea

Ethiopia ranks 170 out of 177 the poorest countries on the Human Development Index (UNDP HDI 2006). Half of its GDP depends on agricultural activity. The agricultural sector suffers lowdown because of poor cultivation techniques and frequent drought. 50% of its population 74.7 million bears the burden of poverty and 80% lives on bread line. 47% of males and 31% of females are literate. Some parts of Ethiopia run a high risk of hepatitis A, hepatitis E, typhoid fever, malaria, rabies, meningococcal meningitis and schistosomiasis.

Child Poverty

09. Niger (GDP - per capita: $700)

Niger with a population of 12.5 million is one of the ten poorest countries in the world. Drought is a common natural calamity in Niger. It often undergoes a phase of severe food crisis. 63% of its total population lives on below $1 a day. Adult literacy rate is as low as 15%. Life expectancy spans up to 46 years. A number of people die of hepatitis A, diarrhea, malaria, meningococcal meningitis and typhoid fever.

“Escaping from poverty”

08. Central African Republic (GDP - per capita: $700)

Rebel in northern Central African Republic

“Rebel in northern Central African Republic”

The Central African Republic ranks 171 as a poor country. Agriculture is the backbone of its unstable economy. Life expectancy of its meager population 4.3 ranges from 43.46 to 43.62 years. 13.5% of its population is at risk of AIDS.

Destruction in the north-west

“Boy in front of destroyed homes in Ngaoundaye, Central African Republic. Since early 2007, the troubled region has been caught up in fighting between APRD rebels and government troops.” - hdptcar

07. Guinea-Bissau (GDP - per capita: $600)

“Africa, Guinea-Bissau, Bijene, January 2005. Mbemba Djaló, 13 years young, earns some extra cash after school, running his little shop at the veranda of an abandoned colonial house. Photography by Ernst Schade” - ernst schade

The rank of Guinea Bissau as a poor country is 172. Farming and fishing are the only pillars of its economy. The level of income is not even in all parts of the country. About 10% of its adult population is at risk of HIV.

06. Union of the Comoros (GDP - per capita: $600)

Itsandra at sunset

Population growth and unemployment at a high rate are responsible for the poor economy of Union of the Comoros. Population density at a rate of 1000 per square km in agriculture zones may result in an environmental crisis. Agricultural contribution to its GDP is 40%. The low level of education has raised the level of labor force. Economy mainly depends on foreign grants.

05. Republic of Somalia (GDP - per capita: $600)

“Sixteen million people in eastern Africa are in need of emergency food aid and the threat of starvation is severe, according to FAO’s latest report on the Food Supply Situation and Crop Prospects in sub-Saharan Africa.” - ☠ ● qυєєη σƒ яσ¢к ● ☠

Agriculture is the base of the economy of Republic of Somalia in the Horn of Africa. Nomads and semi-nomads comprise a major part of the population. Rearing livestock is the primary source of livelihood for them. The small agricultural industry contributes 10% to its GDP.

Somalia

“Mogadishu. October 2004. View of Mogadishu north. Mogadishu is the place where effects of the conflict are more striking. There are arround 400.000 internally displaced persons. Access to health structures is quite impossible for the danger to circulate in the streets where combats are on-going and all type infrastructures have disapeared: water, sanitation, schools… The absence of state during more than 13 years has made impossible any investment in public structures. It is estimated that around 72% of Somalia’s population lacks access to basic healthcare services and the healthcare system is in ruins.” - abdisalla

04. The Solomon Islands (GDP - per capita: $600)

Solomon Islands Tsunami -- Minister whose church was washed away

“Solomon Islands Tsunami — Minister whose church was washed away”

The Solomon Islands is a country in Melanesia. Fishing holds its domestic economy. Above 75% of the labor class, is involved in fishing. Timber was the main product for export until 1998. Palm oil and copra are important cash crops for export. The Solomon Islands are rich in mineral resources like zinc, lead, gold and nickel.

03. Republic of Zimbabwe (GDP - per capita: $500)

Desperate

“The expression on these guys faces says a million things, weak from hunger and too poor to own shoes or have a shirt to wear. This is all because of the tyrant they call a president.
A beautiful country ruined because of one mans greed. ”
- Mr Sean

Republic of Zimbabwe is located between the Limpopo and Zambezi rivers in the south of Africa. Its economy suffers a slowdown due to supply shortage, soaring inflation and foreign exchange shortage. Zimbabwe’s involvement in the Democratic Republic of the Congo left its economy fragile. The worst consequence of the knelt-down economy is unemployment that is as high as 80%.

“March, 5, 2008. The Zimbabwean currency tumbled to a record 25 million dollars for a single US dollar”

02. Republic of Liberia (GDP - per capita: $500)

Young boy looks through hole in garbage dump

“MONROVIA, LIBERIA - NOVEMBER 12, 2006 : Young Liberian boy standing on Randal street in Monrovia looks through a hole in a garbage filled car that has been turned on its side and salvaged fro spare parts. ( Photo by: Christopher Herwig )” - herwigphoto.com

Republic of Liberia on the west coast of Africa is one of the ten poorest economies across the globe. A decline in the export of commodities, the flight of many investors from the country, the unjust exploitation of the country’s diamond resource, looting and war profiteering during the civil war in 1990 brought the economy of the country to its knees. External debt of the country is more than its GDP.

Government child soldiers

“Liberia: Government child soldiers,Ganta; on the back of their truck is an anti-aircraft gun. © Teun Voeten, 2003.
Liberia’s decade-long civil war was fuelled by weapons imported in to the country in violation of a UN arms embargo. Shipments over three months in 2002 from a Serbian security company, for example, brought in enough bullets to kill the entire population of Liberia.”
- controlarms

01. Republic of the Congo (GDP - per capita: $300)

Street of Kinshasa

“This picture shows what Kinshasa is: full of contradictions. The beauty of the sunlight, nature, happy people contrasts with the filth on the streets, disorganisation, poverty… These two persons seem to stand there, in the middle of all that. Can they push the country forward… Are they part of a generation that will one day live in a modern Democratic Republic of Congo, freed of all suffering and pain?” - fredogaza

Republic of the Congo in Central Africa is the last at the bottom of the economic heaps. Depreciation of Franc Zone currencies, incredibly high levels of inflation in 1994, eruption of the civil war, and continuation of armed conflict and slumping oil price in 1998 broke down the economy of the country.

Former child soldiers

“A group of ‘kotelengana’, or former child soldiers, in DRC” - War Child UK

GDP - per capita (PPP) 2008 Country Ranks. Source: CIA World Factbook 2008.

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Do you know which are the ten richest countries in the world? For answer click here.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Connecting the remote Papua New Guinea, GDI Online Marketing, thekiwi

Isolated spot
Eight hours flying time from the Indonesian capital, the Central Highlands in Indonesia's Papua province are among the least visited places in the world. Life here bears little relation to the chaos of Jakarta's skyscrapers and toll roads. In villages like this, there are usually no permanent roads, no electricity and no phones. Foreign journalists need a permit to travel here. Getting information into - and out of - areas like this has not been easy.

Radio contact
But information should flow more easily into the Central Highlands now. People are gathering here from across the area to celebrate the opening of an independent radio station. Officials say it is the first one to be built in such a remote region. It will be linked to the independent radio news agency KBR68H, and will be staffed by local people - all of whom have been trained from scratch.

Gaining trust
There was a lot of scepticism at first about the benefits of building the station. Promises of development have often gone unfulfilled here and many local people are angry at what they see as neglect from the central government in Jakarta. Papua generates large amounts of money thanks to its vast natural resources, but the region remains desperately under-developed.
The editor of KBR68H, who spearheaded the project, says it took many meetings before locals began to trust in it.

Electricity supply
One of the key problems in building the station was the lack of power. This is an area where most people live in traditional thatch huts, and rely on wood fires to keep warm and cook food. The team behind the project decided the only solution was to build a mini-hydro-electric dam to power the station. There was enough electricity left over to channel some to the school, the church and the more modern houses of several local leaders.

Changing dress
Several people wear traditional dress here, but others - especially children - wear Western-style T-shirts. One man, dressed in a traditional penis gourd, head-dress and beads, told me he was tired of sleeping on the ground in his hut and wanted a modern house and proper roads.
"When that happens," he said, "I'll change the clothes I wear and wear T-shirts instead."

Pig economy
This is an area so cut off and under-developed that there is neither much money nor much day-to-day value in having it. Most people are subsistence farmers and the community is built on a pig economy. For the opening of the radio station, locals celebrated with a traditional pig roast.
Nine pigs were brought to the party, by tribal leaders, local officials and neighbouring villages. One pig can be worth the equivalent of $2,000 (£988).



Outside world
Without phone connections or frequent visits from outsiders, getting information from areas like this used to be slow and difficult. Now rights workers say the radio station will make it easier to connect with the outside world - to share allegations of abuses, develop the local economy and stay in touch with events outside of Papua. People may have been isolated for generations, but many are keen to know what is happening in Jakarta and beyond.

This link is sponsored by GDI Online Marketing.

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