Do you like this tool? Are you intrested in adding it to your blog or website just copy the below code. Select New Post in blogger and in the Html section delete everything and paste this code. That's It!
Feel free to hit Like, Share or Comment if you like this Post.
Hai friends here is the code to display your ads whether it's adsense or anything else below the Post title in Blogger. Putting the ads below the post title attracts more and more visitors as the visitors first sees the post title then the content(By which they are made to see the ad below it too) And increases the chances of getting them clicked. So be cool, Just follow the below steps! :)
Note: The below tutorial will help you to display ads below post title on post pages and not on home page or on search results!
Follow the Below Steps:
1.) Getting the code:
First copy the code of the ad size to get displayed on this region from your Publisher's panel of any ad network.
Then Encode the copied code using this tool(Click me) to escape special characters. If you directly implemented then blogger won't accept it.
Copy that escaped code.
2.) Adding The code to your Template:
After you have encoded your ad code it's ready to be implemented.
Now go to your dashboard.
Go to design>Edit Html.
Tick the expand widget templates check box.
Look for the following code in your template,
<div class='post-header-line-1'/>
After you have found the above code paste the following code below it.
<b:if cond='data:blog.pageType == "item"'>PLACE ESCAPED AD CODE HERE</b:if>
Relpace the word PLACE ESCAPED AD CODE HERE with the escaped code you generated.
That's it! Save the template and watch for the ads to get displayed below every post's title on every post page.
Feel free to hit Like, Share or Comment if you like this Post.
Seo Master present to you: Aza Raskin delivered the eighth Web Exponents tech talk at Google last week. Aza is head of user experience at Mozilla Labs. He's an entrepreneur and Renaissance man, as evidenced by the breadth of topics in his presentation.
What I like about Aza is that he's a user advocate - sharing our frustrations over the complexities and hurdles of interacting with computers. It's not that applications lack functionality. Aza points out that "90% of the feature requests for features in [Microsoft] Word are in fact for features that are already in Word." The problem is that humans can't interact with, speak with, computer applications using a familiar language.
Ubiquity is one of the projects from Mozilla Labs that bridges this digital divide. Ubiquity is a Firefox add-on that allows users to complete tasks using a more intuitive language. One example Aza shows is highlighting part of a web page and typing "translate this to Russian". Ubiquity acts on the user's request by replacing the text in the web page with the Russian translation. Another example is typing an address in a Yahoo! Mail message, typing "map this", and having Ubiquity embed the desired Google map inside the email.
Aza calls this you-centric computing - allowing us to interact by talking about what we want to do, rather than forcing us to think about how to do it. Ubiquity achieves this, moving us from a web of nouns to a web of verbs. The point, according to Aza, is "perhaps by adding language, by making things hackable, we go from interfaces which work to our failabilities and our frailities, and instead are a little bit more human and hence a little bit more humane."
Jetpack extends Ubiquity's theme of making the Web hackable. Aza describes it as "an incredibly fast prototyping environment for changing the Web to make the Web yours. Sort of like taking the idea of Greasemonkey and mashing it up with extensions and giving it all steroids." Ubiquity and Jetpack allow each of us to make the Web our very own by modifying it to work the way we want.
Empowering users to customize the Web and more easily complete tasks moves us from a feeling of helplessness to a feeling of being in control. This is an important point and reminds me of Matt Mullenweg's talk at Velocity about slow web sites (my personal bent). There Matt says, "...when an interface is faster, you feel good. And ultimately what that comes down to is you feel in control." Empowering users is a common goal, and yet today's web applications still contain many hurdles (complexity, poor interaction language, slowness) that need to be addressed to make users feel in control and ultimately happy. Thanks to Aza and the folks at Mozilla Labs, we're moving closer to the you-centric Web each of us wants.
By Steve Souders, Performance Evangelist2013, By: Seo Master