Showing posts with label money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label money. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Vatican City:- smallest country

National name: Stato della Città del Vaticano (Santa  Sede)
Current government officials
Languages: Italian, Latin, French, various other languages
Ethnicity/race: Italian, Swiss, other
Religion: Roman Catholic.
Labor force: dignitaries, priests, nuns, guards, and 3,000 lay workers who live outside the Vatican.
Budget (2010): Revenues: $326 million; expenditures: $313 million.

Geography

The Vatican City State is situated on the Vatican hill, on the right bank of the Tiber River, within the city of Rome.

Government

The pope has full legal, executive, and judicial powers. Executive power over the area is in the hands of a commission of cardinals appointed by the pope. The College of Cardinals is the pope's chief advisory body, and upon his death the cardinals elect his successor for life.

History

The Vatican City State, sovereign and independent, is the survivor of the papal states that in 1859 comprised an area of some 17,000 sq mi (44,030 sq km). During the struggle for Italian unification, from 1860 to 1870, most of this area became part of Italy. By an Italian law of May 13, 1871, the temporal power of the pope was abrogated, and the territory of the papacy was confined to the Vatican and Lateran palaces and the villa of Castel Gandolfo. The popes consistently refused to recognize this arrangement. The Lateran Treaty of Feb. 11, 1929, between the Vatican and the kingdom of Italy, established the autonomy of the Holy See.
The first session of Ecumenical Council Vatican II was opened by John XXIII on Oct. 11, 1962, to plan and set policies for the modernization of the Roman Catholic Church. Pope Paul VI continued the council, presiding over the last three sessions. Vatican II, as it is called, revolutionized some of the church's practices. Power was decentralized, giving bishops a larger role, the liturgy was vernacularized, and laymen were given a larger part in church affairs.
On Aug. 26, 1978, Cardinal Albino Luciani was chosen by the College of Cardinals to succeed Paul VI, who had died of a heart attack on Aug. 6. The new pope took the name John Paul I. Only 34 days after his election, John Paul I died of a heart attack, ending the shortest reign in 373 years. On Oct. 16, Cardinal Karol Wojtyla, 58, was chosen pope and took the name John Paul II. Pope John Paul II became the first Polish pope and the first non-Italian pope since the 16th century.
Pope John Paul II Brings the Vatican Into the Modern Age
On May 13, 1981, a Turkish terrorist shot the pope in St. Peter's Square, the first assassination attempt against the pontiff in modern times. The pope later met and forgave him. On June 3, 1985, the Vatican and Italy ratified a new church-state treaty, known as a concordat, replacing the Lateran Treaty of 1929. The new accord affirmed the independence of Vatican City but ended a number of privileges that the Catholic Church had in Italy, including its status as the state religion.
On April 2, 2005, John Paul died. He was the third-longest reigning pope (26 years). A champion of the poor, he is credited by many with hastening the fall of Communism in Poland and other eastern bloc countries. His vitality and charisma energized the world's 1 billion Catholics. His rule was characterized by conservatism regarding church doctrine, particularly on issues such as birth control, women's roles in the church, and homosexuality. The pope also remained circumspect about the U.S. church's sexual abuse scandals in 2002. He was the Vatican's greatest ambassador, traveling to 129 countries. John Paul canonized 482 saints and beatified 1,338 people, which was believed to be more than all his predecessors combined.
On April 19, German cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was named the new pope. Pope Benedict XVI is known as an accomplished scholar of theology and is considered an arch conservative in his religious views. He served as Pope John Paul II's closest associate and is expected to continue the policy of a “strong Rome.” In Sept. 2006, Pope Benedict XVI apologized after angering Muslims around the world by quoting medieval passages that referred to Islam as “evil and inhuman.”
Pope Benedict XVI Becomes the First to Resign in Six Centuries
On February 11, 2013, the former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Pope Benedict XVI announced his retirement, becoming the first pope to do so since 1415. His retirement would begin on February 28, 2013.
He cited advancing age and a growing physical weakness as his reasons for retirement. Speaking to a small group of cardinals at the Vatican, Pope Benedict XVI said, "Before God, I have come to the certainty that my strengths, due to an advanced age, are no longer suited" for leading the Catholic Church. He has been pope since 2005.
For a list of all the popes, see the table in Religion .



Thursday, August 1, 2013

Start Earning on your blog with Infolinks

What is Infolinks?
Infolinks is an advertsing platform which is engaged in showing campaigns that does not sacrifice the integrity of the website by showing annoying ads in the page.

What are the Ad Unit Choices?
They offer different ways of monetizing your blog such as Inframe (new)InSearch, InTag andInText. These ad units are not like the classic banners we are familiar with because it uses less space. Ads can appear when a reader hovers over a word in your post (InText), when a reader reach the bottom of your post and hovers over the tags there (InTag), or when a reader landed  your site through a search engine (InSearch). InFrame is a brand new earning facility which generates ads through the unused or vacant left and right margins of your blog layout. The ads are only visible to readers who use widescreen desktop or laptop monitors when they browse your site. Even if the ads in Inframe are always on display as readers scroll your pages, they move comfortably with the eyes. Infolinks ads are very minimalist but you earn in many ways while you keep your site's decency.
Ad type

How to Earn:
You can earn from Infolinks through eCPM or the number of times your readers hover over the word and allows the ad to show and be clicked. Their eCPM is also higher than Kontera or Vibrant Media. They pay every 45 days when your balance reach the minimum threshold which is either USD50 (for Paypal, ACH  for US resident, Payoneer or eCheck) or USD100 (for Bank Wire or Western Union). Also, they have an exclusive Infolinks Prepaid Mastercard on which they can make payments free of charge. 

You can also customize their ads by changing the color of your ads to blend with your blog theme. If you are using Intext ads, better to use the dotted lines instead of the double underline option because the double underline uses a bit more space. 

Infolinks now have a downloadable mobile application for Android phones and iPhone that you can use to view your Infolinks reports, clicks and impressions on the go. 

How to Place Their Ads in Your Blog?
Infolinks is popular with the business tag of "One-Minute Integration". No need to worry about those HTML codes or javascript for they will do all these after you put their code inside your blog template. A single code to turn on or off ALL their ad types. You put the code in your blog then manipulate it through your Infolinks dashboard/account. Once you signed up, you will be given a code for you to copy and paste it before the </body> tag in your template. And that's it. 

Have your account now and you will no longer need for other ad network. It's all in there in a simple but effective way to monetize your blog. Sign-up at Infolinks