By selling ad space to mobile marketers and advertisers through a mobile ad network, publishers and app developers may generate passive revenue from their website or app. Here is the list best ad networks.
AdPumb
Tapjoy
AdMob
Inmobi
Unity
Smaato
Smarty Ads
There are several popular platforms and networks for adult ad monetization that advertisers and publishers often rely on. Some of these include: 7Search PPC: One popular PPC platform or network for adult ad monetization is 7Search PPC. It is a self-serve ad network that focuses on the adult industry, allowing advertisers to bid on targeted traffic and publishers to earn revenue by displaying adult ads on their websites or mobile apps. TrafficJunky: Known as one of the largest and most popular adult advertising networks, TrafficJunky provides a wide range of ad formats and targeting options for publishers looking to monetize their adult sites. ExoClick: Established in 2006, ExoClick is another prominent platform that offers adult ad monetization solutions. With a large network of advertisers and publishers, they provide various ad formats and targeting capabilities. PlugRush: PlugRush is an adult ad network that caters to both advertisers and publishers. It offers a self-serve platform, allowing users to easily manage their campaigns, and provides multiple ad formats. EroAdvertising: Focused exclusively on the adult industry, EroAdvertising offers a range of ad formats, targeting options, and detailed analytics for publishers to optimize their revenue streams. TrafficStars: TrafficStars is a platform that specializes in ad monetization for the adult niche. It provides various ad formats, detailed targeting options, and real-time statistics to maximize revenue for publishers. AdXpansion: Aimed at specifically adult-oriented publishers, AdXpansion offers multiple ad formats, precise targeting, and competitive payouts to ensure maximum revenue generation. JuicyAds: JuicyAds is a popular adult advertising platform that offers a marketplace for publishers and advertisers to buy and sell ad space. It provides various targeting options and ad formats to leverage monetization opportunities.
Yield Manager is an open ad management platform where campaigns bid for ad space based upon website vistors' predicted responses. Yield Manager causes each ad request to be individually valued by inviting advertisers, networks and other participants to bid. I think this platform has been creeated by a company called right media and is owned by Yahoo... So think of it as an stock exchange (platform) where you trade ad space inctead of stocks. Advertisers (bidders) bid for a given space and publishers (ad networks or publishers) ask for a price. When these match you have a deal.
Because CSMA/CD does not prevent Hidden terminal problem. so it is onlly applicable in Wired networks.
Probably the most quickly developing areas in wireless networks is wireless ad hoc networks. A wireless ad hoc network is an autonomous system consisting of nodes, which might can become mobile, connected with wireless links and without using pre-existing communication infrastructure or central control. Ad hoc networking is expected to play an important role in future wireless mobile networks because of the widespread use of mobile and hand-held devices. Mobile Ad hoc Networks (MANETs) and Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) are two prominent classes of these infrastructerless wireless networks. While MANETs exhibit dynamic topology changes due to free node mobility, WSNs have unreplinishible energy limitations. Hence, topology control, Quality of Service (QoS) routing, and power control become challenging issues.
Mobile ad hoc networks refer to the networks that cellphones and other mobile devices are connected to. Laptops and computers may also connect to such networks by means of tethering to a mobile device.
A wireless mesh network is a type of ad hoc network. The difference would be that clients on mesh networks are dedicated to the role of routing by relying on an infrastructure of sorts, while ad hoc clients are generally user to user and not fixed to any kind of infrastructure.
Ad Networks and Ad Exchanges…What is an Ad Network? Ad Exchange? There is a lot of talk about what each one means, what the difference is between those two, which one is more effective to buy the online ads from. We are here to address these questions in this blog and make sure that we are all on the same page when referring to ad exchanges and ad networks. Let's start with defining these terms (applied to the digital marketing industry):Advertiser - an individual or a corporation that places an ad in order to reach out to the potential/existing customers.Publisher - an individual or a corporation responsible for posting/distributing digital ads.Advertising Network (ad network) - a corporation that connects advertisers to the publishers. The main function of the ad networks is to match supply (the ad spaced offered by publishers) with advertisers demand. Ad networks aggregate publishers' inventory, segment audiences and then sell online ad impressions to the advertisers. Otherwise it would be very time-consuming for the marketers to run around collecting online inventory from hundreds of publishers.Advertising Exchange (ad exchange) - a real-time bidding technology (as opposed to ad network - negotiating price on media inventory) platform that facilitates the buying and selling of online media advertising inventory from multiple ad networks.Since we are now familiar with the definitions needed for understanding ad networks and ad exchanges, we can now look into how they operate, how they differ and what the advantages and disadvantages of each one are. Ad networks collect the data from the publishers, aggregate it and then segment it based on the selected criteria - behavioral, registration, gender, age and other. Ad networks will then sell these slices (for instance, women, age - 20-35, like travel) to the advertisers based upon their needs. Some of the advertisers may have a $1M budget targeting the group of people 18-25 who like horror movies, the other might be interested in the groups with other behavioral patterns, demographic characteristics or any other criteria. Once the common ground is found and the sale transaction has taken place, the ad network will take 40 - 50% commission and give the rest to the publisher. There are certain drawbacks of this relationship for:- Advertisers. Since the most relationships with ad networks are 'blind', the advertisers can't identify the best inventory because it is very hard to evaluate the performance at the aggregate level. As we mentioned earlier, the advertisers only get the information at a very high level knowing how the overall segment performed not having the visibility into the data at the domain level.- Publishers. The publishers can't identify the best advertisers since there is no transparency into advertisers through ad networks.- Ad Networks. It is extremely challenging to forecast inventory therefore overselling or underselling may occur.An ad exchange is a single platform on which publishers, advertisers and networks can buy and sell the ad spaces. Any publisher's unsold inventory is collected by the exchange and each impression is auctioned off to the highest bidder. How does it work? When a user visits a site, the publisher that owns the site sends the impression to the ad exchange requesting to sell the ad space presented to the buyers. This impression is being sent to the advertisers. The advertiser in turn has two options at this point:- To look at every impression and determine the value and send the bid back to the ad exchange.OR- To set up a rule, say, to buy sport inventory in NY with a bid $ 1.40. The highest bidder wins.An ad exchange has the following advantages:- Direct connection between the buyer and the seller.- The advertisers have more transparency into the domain's performance knowing exactly what is working and what is not. In addition, the advertisers are no longer committed to buy impressions with a pre-determined budget; the advertiser now manages the process of buying the number of highly qualified impressions.- The publishers can now maximize revenue by allowing the advertiser to have a healthy competition for the ad spaces.
Ad Networks and Ad Exchanges…What is an Ad Network? Ad Exchange? There is a lot of talk about what each one means, what the difference is between those two, which one is more effective to buy the online ads from. We are here to address these questions in this blog and make sure that we are all on the same page when referring to ad exchanges and ad networks. Let's start with defining these terms (applied to the digital marketing industry):Advertiser - an individual or a corporation that places an ad in order to reach out to the potential/existing customers.Publisher - an individual or a corporation responsible for posting/distributing digital ads.Advertising Network (ad network) - a corporation that connects advertisers to the publishers. The main function of the ad networks is to match supply (the ad spaced offered by publishers) with advertisers demand. Ad networks aggregate publishers' inventory, segment audiences and then sell online ad impressions to the advertisers. Otherwise it would be very time-consuming for the marketers to run around collecting online inventory from hundreds of publishers.Advertising Exchange (ad exchange) - a real-time bidding technology (as opposed to ad network - negotiating price on media inventory) platform that facilitates the buying and selling of online media advertising inventory from multiple ad networks.Since we are now familiar with the definitions needed for understanding ad networks and ad exchanges, we can now look into how they operate, how they differ and what the advantages and disadvantages of each one are. Ad networks collect the data from the publishers, aggregate it and then segment it based on the selected criteria - behavioral, registration, gender, age and other. Ad networks will then sell these slices (for instance, women, age - 20-35, like travel) to the advertisers based upon their needs. Some of the advertisers may have a $1M budget targeting the group of people 18-25 who like horror movies, the other might be interested in the groups with other behavioral patterns, demographic characteristics or any other criteria. Once the common ground is found and the sale transaction has taken place, the ad network will take 40 - 50% commission and give the rest to the publisher. There are certain drawbacks of this relationship for:- Advertisers. Since the most relationships with ad networks are 'blind', the advertisers can't identify the best inventory because it is very hard to evaluate the performance at the aggregate level. As we mentioned earlier, the advertisers only get the information at a very high level knowing how the overall segment performed not having the visibility into the data at the domain level.- Publishers. The publishers can't identify the best advertisers since there is no transparency into advertisers through ad networks.- Ad Networks. It is extremely challenging to forecast inventory therefore overselling or underselling may occur.An ad exchange is a single platform on which publishers, advertisers and networks can buy and sell the ad spaces. Any publisher's unsold inventory is collected by the exchange and each impression is auctioned off to the highest bidder. How does it work? When a user visits a site, the publisher that owns the site sends the impression to the ad exchange requesting to sell the ad space presented to the buyers. This impression is being sent to the advertisers. The advertiser in turn has two options at this point:- To look at every impression and determine the value and send the bid back to the ad exchange.OR- To set up a rule, say, to buy sport inventory in NY with a bid $ 1.40. The highest bidder wins.An ad exchange has the following advantages:- Direct connection between the buyer and the seller.- The advertisers have more transparency into the domain's performance knowing exactly what is working and what is not. In addition, the advertisers are no longer committed to buy impressions with a pre-determined budget; the advertiser now manages the process of buying the number of highly qualified impressions.- The publishers can now maximize revenue by allowing the advertiser to have a healthy competition for the ad spaces.We really hope that you will find this blog very interesting and it answers your questions about ad networks and ad exchanges.
Wireless Ad Hoc Networks has been ongoing for decades. The history of wireless ad hoc networks can be traced back to the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DAPRPA) packet radio networks (PRNet), which evolved into the survivable adaptive radio networks (SURAD) program [11]. Ad hoc networks have play an important role in military applications and related research efforts, for example, the global mobile information systems (GloMo) program [12] and the near-term digital radio (NTDR) program [13]. Recent years have seen a new spate of industrial and commercial applications for wireless ad hoc networks, as viable communication equipment and portable computers become more compact and available. Since their emergence in 1970's, wireless networks have become increasingly popular in the communication industry. These networks provide mobile users with ubiquitous computing capability and information access regardless of the users' location. There are currently two variations of mobile wireless networks: infrastructured and infrastructureless networks. The infrastructured networks have fixed and wired gateways or the fixed Base-Stations which are connected to other Base-Stations through wires. Each node is within the range of a Base-Station. A "Hand-off" occurs as mobile host travels out of range of one Base-Station and into the range of another and thus, mobile host is able to continue communication seamlessly throughout the network. Example applications of this type include wireless local area networks and Mobile Phone. The other type of wireless network, infrastructureless networks, is knows as Mobile Ad-hoc Networks (MANET). These networks have no fixed routers, every node could be router. All nodes are capable of movement and can be connected dynamically in arbitrary manner. odeavesdropping, spoofing and denial-of-service attacks in these networks.
There are lots of ad publishers other than Google Adsense. I have listed most popular Ad Publishers on the Internet. 1. Chitika 2. Tribal Fusion 3. Kontera 4. InfoLinks
Shahid Bashir has written: 'Effective and efficient resource discovery protocols for mobile ad hoc networks'
AdMob is the platform that is used by the majority of developers to monetize their apps. But it is hard to follow the policies of Google AdMob and there are numerous complaints about the workings of AdMob. Here I'm suggesting you try AdPumb. AdPumb is an AdMob alternative that offers a mobile app monetization service that assists app developers or publishers in earning 2x more revenue through the best app monetization functions. AdPumb’s advanced mediation solutions help publishers to connect with Demand Side Platforms.