AdWords Campaign Experiments: Introduction
To improve your AdWords experience, we’re testing a new tool that helps you optimize your account. AdWords Campaign Experiments, or ACE, does this by letting you accurately test and measure changes to your keywords and bids, ad groups and placements.
This video describes what ACE is, the benefits of using it, different use cases and walks through an example.
For more information and links to the six how-to videos, please visit the Help Center at http://adwords.google.com/support/aw/bin/topic.py?&topic=28565.
Duration : 0:5:15
RT
They have always been, there has never been nothing. There has to be something for it to be nothing, no one knows what nothingness is, it's just a word. The molecules came from atoms, “hydrogen” was the first atom, it evolved they took from eachoter and “mutated” moving into bigger and different atoms. Later hanged together into molecules, the molecules crashed and caused a chemical reaction. Science is latin and means knowledge, it's not a matter of belief, but knowing
#laritapiki: #marcmasferrer: US House panel OKs measure to end Obama changes in #Cuba travel, money rules. Cuts…
RT rel=”nofollow” RT rel=”nofollow” Groggy Head please help me to help rel=”nofollow” set up a help center
Iron eh sem duvida a banda mais tesao que jah vi, mas ainda sou fã de guns hehehe
Thanks Lurk,
Intraspecific latitudinal clines in the body size of terrestrial vertebrates, where members of the same species are larger at higher latitudes, are widely interpreted as evidence for natural selection and adaptation to local climate. These clines are predicted to shift in response to climate change. We used museum specimens to measure changes in the body size of eight passerine bird species from south-eastern Australia over approximately the last 100 years. Four species showed significant decreases in body size (1.8–3.6% of wing length) and a shift in latitudinal cline over that period, and a meta-analysis demonstrated a consistent trend across all eight species. Southern high-latitude populations now display the body sizes typical of more northern populations pre-1950, equivalent to a 7° shift in latitude. Using ptilochronology, we found no evidence that these morphological changes were a plastic response to changes in nutrition, a likely non-genetic mechanism for the pattern observed. Our results demonstrate a generalized response by eight avian species to some major environmental change over the last 100 years or so, probably global warming.
They eliminated nutrition which probably isn't possible. Somehow extracted natural pressures on the species and determined… guh yup – it must be global warming!
RT