Thursday, March 1, 2007

Basis of my Reason

Blog ini adalah My first Blog, sepertinya saat ini kalau gak punya blog
sendiri kurang mantap.
Sekalian juga buat nyoba Google Addsense, kan lumayan bisa dibuat sambilan.

Mengapa saya pilih tema mydreamswork karena ini juga menjadi dasar dari
impian meraih suatu keberhasilan dalam artian bukan hanya secara
material tapi juga dapat menambah wawasan dan ilmu di dunia maya ini.

Hidup penuh tantangan dan perjuangan dan suatu saat kita merasa sudah
mencapai titik kejenuhan dan rasa cape, kadangkala kita sudah merasa
berusaha keras namun hasil yg dicapai masih kurang memuaskan.

Waktu inilah yg biasanya akan memunculkan impian-impian untuk menjadikan
hidup lebih baik. Angan lebih tinggi, motivasi lebih terpacu dan tentu
hidup akan kembali menjadi semangat siap menghadapi tantangan yg lebih
berat.

semua hal inilah yg menjadikan dasar dari ide pembuatan blog ini.
Smoga saya dapat slalu mengisi artikel² seiring KerjaImpianKu yg slalu
melambung dan penuh harap untuk dicapai.

Tangerang, Feb'07

Saturday, January 27, 2007

Make Money Quick With Google Adsense

by: Jeff Schuman

Do you want to make money quick? In this article we are going to talk about one of the quickest ways you can make money. Making money quick is not only possible there are people doing it everyday with Google Adsense.

Google AdSense delivers text and image ads that match the content on your website. These are very targeted ads that you can choose the size and color of and they come across to your customer as helpful more than an ad itself.

Google Ads require virtually no maintenance and they help you put advertising on your website without actually having to deal with advertisers yourself. If you can copy and paste a small code you can have targeted advertising on your website in minutes.

Adsense is simple to join and it is free to join. Whether you are an internet newbie or a veteran you can profit quickly by placing Google Adsense ads on your web pages.

Since Google does all of the work by finding the most profitable ads for your pages you can do what you do best....provide good content and lots of it. The more web pages you create the quicker you will be making money. You can learn more here:
https://www.google.com/adsense/
Once you have joined Google Adsense you will want to combine Google search with AdSense to monetize more of your web pages. You can do this by placing a Google search box on your pages. Google AdSense combines Google's search technology with thousands of keyword advertisers to deliver targeted text-based ads to search result pages. People find these ads useful and click on them, and when they do, Google pays you.

You can see an example of how this works right here on this web page. In fact we combine Google search and Google Adsense on almost every website and web pages we create. We have found it a very easy way to make money quick and to make money over and over. It's great.
The internet offers many ways to make money quick. The nice thing about Google Adsense is you have the largest search engine in the world doing your advertising for you. This truely allows you to make money quickly and you can do it over and over with as many products as you want.

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About the author:Team-Schuman.com contains the best of everything you need to make money online. Their make money quick website contains links to the Top 10 webites to help you make money quickly on the internet. http://www.team-schuman.com/make-money-quick.html

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Google AdSense and Blogs

by © Diane Nassy

If you have a blog, or are thinking about starting a blog, then you are definitely going to want to read this article. It’s all about how to line your pockets with money that’s just waiting to be made without working much harder than you already are.
No only are blogs the hottest thing on the ‘net right now, but they are custom-made for Google’s AdSense program. Why? It’s simple. Blogs represent constantly changing and fresh content to Google’s search engine spiders. Feeding fresh content to those little spiders is just like tossing raw meat to a tiger. They just gobble it up. The more pages of your blog that get indexed, the more traffic you get. And the more traffic you get, the more exposure your AdSense ads get. Are you beginning to see where I’m heading here?
It’s not just Google that loves new content, all of the major engines do. In fact, some web-savvy bloggers are testing Google ads on one page and Overture ads on the other. It doesn’t take too long to see which ads are doing the best when you have nearly side-by-side comparison statistics to look at. Just don’t make the mistake of putting Google and Overture ads on the same page together. While they won’t kill each other like a pair of Siamese fighting fish in the same bowel will, you will be violating both sites’ Terms of Service, and it isn’t worth killing the goose (geese) that laid the golden egg.
It’s a snap to set up Google AdSense ads on your blog. Everything you need to know is right inside of the Google control panel. What’s not so easy is figuring out what ads are going to appear on each page. Since Google targets your key words, and your blog articles could possible wander towards any subject, you never know what you’re going to get.
Well, “never” is a strong word because there actually IS a way to pre-test your blog’s ads before you post your newest edition. Here’s what you do:
• Write your blog article like you normally would • Plug in your AdSense code and then post your newest page to a sub directory that’s not part of your blog. • Click refresh a few times until Google wakes up and starts sending ads. • If you don’t like what you see then fine-tune the article until you see the types of ads that you’re looking for.
With some ads paying as much as $5 per click or more, I’d certainly spend an extra 30 minutes or so tweaking my blog. That’s for sure.
If you’re working hard to get your blog in front of visiting eyeballs, then it doesn’t make any sense at NOT to be using Google AdSense to draw every penny out of your site that’s possible. OK, that’s the end of the article. Now get busy tweaking your blog and checking your ads. You’ve got money waiting to be made!
About the author:Diane provides marketing and internet profit tips. For more Google AdSense tips, visit http://www.adsense.deeljeabiz.comEmail : deeljeabiz@gmail.com

Sunday, December 24, 2006

The Creative Impulse in Dreams

by © Jeremy Taylor

There is an archetypal creative impulse woven into the fabric of every dream. Sometimes this creative energy is clearly visible to the dreamer, but more often it is hidden by the emotional experience of the dream. It may require an unusual effort of imagination (often aided by the suggestions and assistance of other people) to bring the dream's message more fully into the light of conscious self-awareness, but with careful study, we often find dreams provide solutions to problems the conscious mind is grappling with to no avail.
The story of Elias Howe's invention of the sewing machine in 1845 is a case in point. Howe had been struggling to invent a machine that would sew with the same speed and efficiency as Hargreaves' and Cartwright's new machines would spin and weave, but with no success. As the tale goes, exhausted by frustration, Howe fell asleep at his workbench one night and had this dream:He is in Africa, fleeing from cannibals through the jungle. Despite his frantic efforts to escape, the natives capture him, tie him up hand and foot, and carry him back to their village slung from a pole. There they dump him into a huge iron pot full of water. They light a fire under the pot and start to boil him alive.As the water starts to bubble and boil around him, he discovers that the ropes have loosened enough for him to work his hands free. He tries repeatedly to take hold of the edge of the pot and haul himself out of the hot water, but every time he manages to heave himself up over the edge of the pot, the natives reach across over the flames and forcibly poke him back down into the pot again with their sharp spears.
When Howe awoke from this "nightmare," much of his mind was absorbed with sorting through the emotions of the dream--but another part was able to note with objectivity, "That's odd--those spears all have holes in the points...." As Howe came more fully awake, he thought, "Holes in the points... holes in the points! That's it! That's the answer!As he awoke, Howe realized that the trick to making his sewing machine work was to move the thread transport hole up to point of the needle (as opposed to a handheld needle, where the hole is on the base). It then was a relatively simple matter to design a system of gears that would cause the needle to poke the thread down through the layers of cloth, wrap it around a second thread, and then pull it up again, all very neatly and efficiently. And with the invention of the sewing machine, the last bottleneck to the mechanical production of clothing was broken--this dream lead very directly to the realization of the industrial revolution!
Unfortunately, I do not know enough about Howe's personal life and emotional history to make anything more than vaguely educated guesses about the layers of meaning and significance in this historic dream that refer to his personal psychology. Even though I can only guess at them, they certainly exist. At the level of Freudian sexual imagery, for example, the sewing machine itself is a prime example of the sublimation of primitive libidinal energy into creative expression and cultural artifacts, and the specific imagery of the dream evokes that layer of possible meaning very strongly. In any case, it is very likely that the hot water was also metaphoric of the sweat of Howe's intense mental efforts.
Even more importantly, the dream offers an extraordinary example of the Jungian archetype of the "shadow" and its creative and gift-giving aspect. In Howe's dream, the creative solution to the technical problem is literally in the hands of the darkest, scariest, and most repugnant figures--the cannibals. This imagery manifests one of the deepest truths about the archetypal energy of the shadow: The conventional waking consciousness views all that is not yet clearly manifested and understood in the world of the ego as nasty, ugly, frightening, dark, and dangerous. Yet the deep unconscious contains the things the waking unconscious desires and longs for the most (the energies of love, creativity, and communion with the divine, to name a few); strip away the dark and frightening mask of the shadow, and that which is devoutly wished for and sought is revealed.
In all our nightmares there is this challenge to look into "the magic mirror that never lies," see the reflections of the least understood and most problematic shadow aspects of the self, and consciously acknowledge, "I am that, too." When we have the courage and imagination to do this, we are invariably rewarded with the gift of greater awareness of the creative impulse that is part of every dream.

Saturday, December 23, 2006

Dream Work In Cyberspace

© Jeremy Taylor

I have been exploring dreams with an eye to discovering their deeper meanings for almost 30 years. I have written down and worked with more than 10,000 of my own dreams and probably 100,000 dreams of others during that time. This work has convinced me that our dreams always have multiple meanings, and that those meanings are always helpful and supportive to the dreamer, if only they can be "unpacked" at any level of depth.
Until I came to THE HUB to host "The Dream Show," all my experience helping people figure out what their dreams mean was gained by speaking to individuals and groups in person, on the telephone, or in written correspondence.
I decided to give on-line dream work a try, even though it means that I had to be bright-eyed and bushy-tailed in front of my computer out here in California at 6:00 A.M. (which up until now has not been my habit).
Initially, I had some reservations about working dreams through this distinctly "cool" and physically isolating on-line medium. When I imagined as carefully as I could what it might be like, I was particularly concerned that the "flat" and highly compressed computer communication format might inhibit the flow of imagination, intimacy, and mutual respect so necessary for good dream work.
In fact, I have found the emotionally and physically "flat" format of computer chat between people in widely separated locations appears to enhance many important elements that make group exploration of dreams so productive.
The fact that every participant appeared on the screen identified only by his or her screen name meant that the sense of safety and anonymity so necessary for productive dream work was assured. I also found that the necessity of compressing our questions and comments into to two-line "sound bites" in order to send them to the communal screen serves to discourage needless verbosity. This "compression" of ideas required by the AOL's format tended to draw us all into the work at a deep level more quickly than is sometimes the case in face-to-face dream groups.
I was also very impressed with the sense of emotional equality created by the fact that everyone's comments appears on the screen in the same bland type-face with the same "inflection." In face-to-face dream work, the comments of participants are always weighted to some degree by our responses to their physical appearance and the timbre of their voices. People have prejudices about who they want to listen to and take seriously, and who they want to dismiss. On the screen, all that is gently wiped away. All comments appear equal, and the participants are much freer to discover insights for themselves in the various remarks without unconsciously pre-judging the speaker.
I regularly found myself musing more freely and "speaking" more openly as I sat comfortably in my ergonomic computer chair, sipping my morning fruit juice, physically much more comfortable and relaxed than I sometimes am doing face-to-face dream work (sitting in a metal folding chair in a drafty church basement). I can only imagine that this "relaxation factor" has a positive effect on all the other participants as well. Presumably, we are all comfortably ensconced in our own private, safe, comfy computer chairs, free from the judgment of others, and thus more able to think and intuit creatively and sensitively about our own imagined versions of the dreams being discussed.
In the virtual dream group, people are free to come and go as their interest and energy dictates, without distracting or offending other participants. By the same token, people are much freer to simply watch, listen, and generate their own "aha's" of insight without participating directly in the work. Such people are commonly known as "lurkers," and "lurking" is a perfectly acceptable activity in this context.
In the virtual dream group, the host has even more influence over the process than in a face-to-face group, since he or she has the power to determine which comments go to the screen. All the problems of differing levels of sophistication and seriousness among participants that arise in face-to-face dream work still exist in cyber-space, but the format allows the host to keep people from interrupting each other, talking too much, or making gratuitous, rude, or insensitive remarks. Balanced against this is the problem of the host/facilitator's unconscious projections and "counter-transference" issues. The unconscious biases of the host have even more influence over the group process than in face-to-face dream work, precisely because the host has so much more influence and control.
In "The Dream Show," the problem of the exaggerated influence of the host over the content and tone was offset by the fact that there was also a 24-hour bulletin board associated with the program where people can leave their dreams for others to comment on and can make suggestions and ask questions without any censorship from the auditorium host. This bulletin board turned into a vital and eclectic community forum all on its own, and I hope and believe the dream board we have set up on this site will be just as vital and eclectic. Here's a hyperlink to that local dream board, where you can work your own dreams and others'.
Albert Einstein was fond of saying that "If you can't explain what you are doing to a reasonably intelligent ten year old, you probably don't really know what you are doing." This principle of simplifying and clarifying even the most abstruse and emerging intuitive understandings of one another's dreams regularly comes into play in computer connected dream work. Some of the lyric poetry may be lost in the process, but the "haiku" remain.
Every morning, there was a wide sample of the dreams of people from Canada to Florida, and across six time zones (counting Hawaii) shared over the computer connection. It's like taking the pulse of the continent's unconscious. Computer-assisted "virtual dream groups" will never replace the richness, vitality, and intimacy of face-to-face dream work, but they are another way to explore the creative possibilities that are our birth-right as human beings.
The Dream Show is no longer active on AOL, but this site is the first step toward a larger, on-line dreamwork community available not just to AOL participants, but to anyone who can access the World Wide Web. I hope you will be part of the on-line community as it grows and evolves here!