by Mike on March 22, 2010

Using hostgator, I am able to run sites from a datafeed that automatically updates itself!
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There are several different methods for adding AdSense ads to your WordPress posts and pages. You can add code directly to the theme php files using the theme editor (carefully!) or you can add code to each post as you create the post (not too great a way!).
In searching around, however, I found a plugin called Post Layout, that automatically adds code before and/or after each page and/or post. Also, you can add code before the home page posts or category posts.It is not billed as an AdSense Plugin, but it is, in fact, about the handiest plugin I have found yet for automatically inserting AdSense code.
What is really nice about this plugin is that you can add any code in those places! So you can put in AdSense and some other code, or some other code other than AdSense. It just injects whatever you specify into the areas you specify. See the screenshot.
Step-by-Step instructions on how to find, install, and setup this plugin are shown on my AdSense Plugin page.
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by Mike on February 22, 2010

The hostgator chat support is great! I usually only have to wait a few minutes to get my questions answered! No long phone waits or email tag.
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These are the signs of a work from home scam:
- They require you to pay in order to work from them. Why would you pay someone to do work for them? Legitimate advertising opportunities like Google Adsense or affiliate programs like those offered at ShareaSale never ask for a penny. There are exceptions like perhaps an agency that finds you freelance internet work for a fee, but here the fee is going for a service of value.
- Work from home scams do not give you specifics as to how you will make this money. And the reason they don’t is because their scheme generally requires you to dupe your friends and relatives into their program so as to earn referrals – if they made that plain and clear few would sign up. Contrast this to legitimate affiliate programs like Share-a-Sale or AdSense that clearly describe how you would make the money.
- They make fantastic claims of all the money you will make. Thousands per month or more! Yet if you read the fine print (and you may have to look hard to find it) you will see “results not typical” or they word their claims as “You may possibly earn . . . “. In addition, these scams will often feature screen shots of earnings to validate their claims. The screen shots of earnings are often the result of earnings from all the people signing up for the scam itself – again you earn by referral of prospective referrers as opposed to producing leads for the sale of an actual product.
- The sales-pitch in a work from home scam will often take the format of an ebook pitch not all that different from the fictitious page shown below. Note that this example was based on an actual get-rich quick site I visited. Wild claims galore. If you land on a page that looks anything like the one below, take caution!
If you see something like this, it is probably a scam!
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