Monday, 14 April 2014

Free Google Images Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Free Google Images
  Source:- Google.com.pk
   Welcome to PakEarn.com (Facebook Photo Posting Jobs)

Images spice up any write up and add to its appeal to readers. Modern writers, journalists and photographers around the globe, refer to the World Wide Web as a content resource where they can have free access to copyright-free images for their writing projects.  These images are considered free content that has no legal restriction on a user’s right to copy, redistribute or modify.  They are also called images in the public domain.
But let's be clear. This does not mean that any     image placed on the internet is free for use in the public domain.The owner or originator of the image must expressly clearly that this image is given to the public domain.
In legalese speak, public domain images are creative or original works not protected under intellectual property laws.  They are images whose copyrights have expired, or were never copyrighted.
 In other words, a public domain image assumes that the creator of the work has relinquished his work to the public or can no longer claim exclusive rights over it.  The work is now owned by the public.  Once an image enters the public domain, anyone can copy, manipulate, distribute, display or simply use it anyway he wants without legal encumbrances.  To put it more bluntly, granting an image to the public domain is a total unconditional abandonment of all rights to the image.
Public Domain vs Creative Commons Licensed Images
Apart from images that already belong in the public domain and which you can download and use without obligation or legal infirmities, there’s a group of photos you can also download and use for free that are, however, still protected under the country’s IP laws.  These are licensed under the Creative Commons (CC).  There’s an owner who has copyrighted the work to his name but has allowed his work to be used by anyone for personal, educational or non-profit non-commercial purposes.  Depending on the CC license used, images can be copied, distributed, adapted or altered, provided that the owner or creator of the image is acknowledged which is called attribution.  No such thing is needed for images in the public domain.  
Ethical Responsibilities
While public domain images allow you to use the images anyway you want, in that ethical considerations may compel users to at least acknowledge the creator or owner of a PD image if the information is there. Many of these images found online have been donated by news, science, medical, academic, historical and cultural organizations, privately held or from the government.  For instance the Russian International News Agency recently donated 100 historical photos from its collection to the Wikimedia Commons.  NASA, likewise, has been regularly doing the same thing as NASA photographs are not generally protected by copyright unless otherwise indicated.
Acknowledging the creator or owner of a photograph is called attribution in the copyright jargon.  Not only does it demonstrate respect and appreciation to the creator or owner of the work, it can impart a level of credibility to the image and to the work in general, especially if the source or owner is an authority in the subject.  Users can simply make  statements like “Courtesy of NASA” or go into more specifics like “Courtesy of NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope, taken 2007”   This attribution often ends a photo caption. 

How to know if an Image is in the public domain
Images in the public domain may indicate they are in the public domain.  On the other hand, copyrighted images are no longer required by law to use the copyright notation. It used to be that published photos contain a copyright notation that contain the international copyright symbol “C” inside a circle before the year first published and the owner or creator’s name or organization.  But after March 1st 1989, this is no longer required under the revised Copyright Act. 
If you encounter an image in an online site that is neither indicated to be in the public domain nor has a copyright notation,  you can assume that it is copyrighted.  If you want to use this image, contact the publisher or owner of the work where the image is used to seek permission.  While you won’t be sued if you use the image for personal non commercial purpose, you may still be asked to take it down if the owner discovers you had used it without his or her permission. 
To be sure that you are downloading images in the public domain, simply email the site owner or article owner if the image used is copyrighted and indicate your request for permission to use and your objective.  Otherwise, there are countless online sites that offer free images in the public domain.
 Free Google Images Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
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Free Google Images Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Free Google Images Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download 

Free Google Images Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Free Google Images Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Free Google Images Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Free Google Images Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Free Google Images Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity


 

Google Images Clip Art Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Google Images Clip Art
Source:- Google.com.pk
 Welcome to PakEarn.com (Facebook Photo Posting Jobs) 

Clip art, in the graphic arts, refers to pre-made images used to illustrate any medium. Today, clip art is used extensively in both personal and commercial projects, ranging from home-printed greeting cards to commercial candles. Clip art comes in many forms, both electronic and printed. However, most clip art today is created, distributed, and used in an electronic form. Since its inception, clip art has evolved to include a wide variety of content, file formats, illustration styles, and licensing restrictions. Clip art is generally composed exclusively of illustrations (created by hand or by computer software), and does not include stock photography.

Histor

 The term "clipart" originated through the practice of physically cutting images from pre-existing printed works for use in other publishing projects. Before the advent of Computers in Desktop Publishing, clip art was used through a process called paste up. Many clip art images in this era qualified as line art. In this process, the clip art images are cut out by hand, then attached via adhesives to a board representing a scale size of the finished, printed work. After the addition of text and art created through phototypesetting, the finished, camera-ready pages are called mechanicals. Since the 1990s, nearly all publishers have replaced the paste up process with desktop publishing.

After the introduction of mass-produced personal computers such as the IBM PC in 1981 and the Apple Macintosh in 1984, the widespread use of clip art by consumers became possible through the invention of desktop publishing. For the IBM PC, the first library of professionally drawn clip art was provided with VCN ExecuVision, introduced in 1983. These images were used in business presentations, as well as for other types of presentations. Many people credit Apple Computer with providing desktop publishing with the tools required to make it a reality for consumers, with the introduction of the Macintosh's graphical user interface (GUI) in 1984 and the LaserWriter laser printer in late 1985. After software maker Aldus introduced PageMaker in 1985, professional quality desktop publishing became possible with consumer desktop computers.
After 1986, desktop publishing generated a widespread need for pre-made, electronic images as consumers began to produce newsletters and brochures using their own computers. Electronic clip art emerged to fill the need. Early electronic clip art was simple line art or bitmap images due to the lack of sophisticated electronic illustration tools. With the introduction of the Apple Macintosh program MacPaint, consumers were provided the ability to edit and use bit-mapped clip art for the first time.
One of the first successful electronic clip art pioneers was T/Maker Company, a Mountain View, California company which had its early roots with an alternative word processor, WriteNow, commissioned for the Macintosh by Steve Jobs. Beginning in 1984, T/Maker took advantage of the capability of the Macintosh to provide bit-mapped graphics in black and white; by publishing small, retail collections of these images under the brand name "ClickArt." The first version of "ClickArt" was a mixed collection of images designed for personal use. The illustrators who created the first "serious" clip art for business/organizational (professional) use were Mike Mathis, Joan Shogren, and Dennis Fregger; published by T/Maker in 1984 as "ClickArt Publications."
In 1986, the first vector-based clip art disc was released by Compuset, a small desktop publishing company based in Eureka, California. The black-and-white art was painstakingly created by Rick Siegfried with MacDraw, sometimes using hundreds of simple objects combined to create complex images. It was released on a single-sided floppy disc.
In 1986, Adobe Systems introduced Adobe Illustrator for the Macintosh, allowing home computer users the first opportunity to manipulate vector art in a GUI. This made the higher-resolution vector art possible and in 1987 T/Maker published the first vector-based clip art images made with Illustrator, despite widespread unfamiliarity with the bezier curves required to edit vector art. However, graphic designers and many consumers quickly realized the enormous advantages of vector art, and T/Maker's clip art became the gold standard of the industry in the late 1980s and early 1990s. In 1994, T/Maker was sold to Deluxe Corp and then two years later to its main rival, Broderbund.
With widespread adoption of the CD-ROM in the early 1990s, several pre-computer clip art companies such as Dover Publications also began offering electronic clip art.
The mid-1990s ushered in more innovation in the clip art industry, as well as a marketing focus on quantity over quality. Even T/Maker, whose success was built upon selling small, high quality clip art packages of approximately 200 images, began to get interested in the volume clip art market. In March, 1995, T/Maker became the exclusive publisher of over 500,000 copyright-free images which was, at the time, one of the world's largest clip art libraries. This licensing agreement was subsequently transferred to Broderbund.
Also during this period, word processing companies, including Microsoft, began offering clip art as a built-in feature of their products. In 1996, Microsoft Word 6.0 included only 82 WMF clip art files as part of its default installation. Today, Microsoft offers clip art as part of over 140,000 media elements in the Microsoft Office product suite.
Other companies such as Nova Development and Clip Art Incorporated also pioneered the marketing of large clip art collections in the late 1990s, including Nova's "Art Explosion" series, which sold clip art in increasingly large libraries up to a million images.
Between 1998 and 2001, T/Maker's clip art assets were sold each year as a result of some of the largest mergers and acquisitions in the computer software industry, including those of The Learning Company (in 1998) and Mattel (in 1999). All of T/Maker's clip art is currently marketed through the Broderbund division of the Irish company Riverdeep.
In the early 2000s, the World Wide Web continued to gain popularity as a retail software distribution channel, and several companies pioneered the sale of clip art through online, searchable libraries, including Clipart.com (part of Jupiter Media), WeddingClipart.com (part of Letters and Arts Incorporated), and GraphicsFactory.com (part of Clip Art Incorporated). Because of the Web, clip art is now not only sold through retail channels as packaged bundles of images, but also as individual images and subscriptions to entire libraries (which allow you to download an unlimited number of images for the duration of the subscription).
In the mid-2000s, the clip art market is segmented in several different ways, including the data type, the art style, the delivery medium, and the marketing method.
Clip art is divided into two different data types represented by many different file formats: bitmap and vector art. Clip art vendors may provide images of just one type or both. The delivery medium of a clip art product varies from different types of traditionally boxed retail packages to online download sites. Clip art is sold via both traditional and web-based retail channels (as with Nova Development products), as well as via online, searchable libraries (as with Clipart.com). Clip art vendors typically market clip art by focusing either on quantity or vertical market specialty. The marketing method often goes hand in hand with the art style of the clip art sold.
To compete largely on quantity, some clip art vendors must produce or license new and old clip art collections in volume. Clip art marketed in this way is often less expensive but simpler in structure and detail, as is typified by cartoons, line art, and symbols (e.g. Nova Development, http://www.iClipart.com and http://www.GraphicsFactory.com). Clip art which is sold according to smaller, specialized subject genres tends to be more complex, modern, detailed, and expensive (e.g. WeddingClipart.com, GoodSalt.com).
Google Images Clip Art Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

http://files.plagiarismtoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/cliparthuh.jpg
Google Images Clip Art Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/45/Cliparts_(examples).png
Google Images Clip Art Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

http://www.wix.com/support/main/html5/sites/default/files/contents2/clipart.jpg
Google Images Clip Art Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

http://img.labnol.org/di/microsoft-office-images.png
Google Images Clip Art Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

http://s3.amazonaws.com/xmindnet/blog/en/xmind2013_new_clip_art
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Google Images Clip Art Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

http://www.presentationmagazine.com/powerpoint-templates/00224/468slide1.jpg
Google Images Clip Art Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

http://www.newclipartdesign.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Google-Clip-Art-39.jpg
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Google Image Search Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Google Image Search
  Source:- Google.com.pk
  Welcome to PakEarn.com (Facebook Photo Posting Jobs)
Google’s January 23 image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.
In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
- See more at: http://www.definemg.com/how-googles-image-search-update-killed-image-seo/#sthash.gqtZ66Ai.dpuf
 Google’s image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.

In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
This served the best of both worlds: allowing the user to see the high res version of the thumbnail, while also allowing the publisher to gain a return on the investment they’d made in the image displayed within search results.

The new interface alters this experience. Per Google:
Google, thou doth protest too much. Although it made an effort to assuage site owners that this change would be better for users and for publishers (promising higher clickthrough rates in the process), the reality is that the new interface makes it a two-click process to reach the website where the image is hosted. And with this higher resolution image displaying directly within Google’s search results, there’s very little need for users to click through, since users are treated to a high res version of the image directly on Google.com.
The Image Search Numbers (NSFW)

Since the new version of Google Images rolled out, the impact to image search traffic has been nothing short of devastating. We examined 87 different sites, both international and US, originating from many networks and belonging to a wide range of verticals. Collectively, image traffic decreased 63% after Google launched its’ image search change:
In the weeks immediately prior to Google’s Image update, the sites in this study had been making strong week-over-week gains, nearing 1.4MM referrals in aggregate.  11 weeks after the update, image traffic has remained steady at the drastically reduced numbers, plateauing around 400K image search referrals per week.

The table below (with anonymized site names) shows that sites in the Fashion & Lifestyle, Entertainment, News and Photo verticals were the ones that experienced the heaviest losses
Ironically of course, these are the sites that had placed the most effort optimizing their images, by meticulously following image SEO best practices, such as developing image XML sitemaps, defining keyword-rich alt tags, file names and captions, and making sure all images within galleries were fully indexable.

Image SEO as a percentage of overall search traffic varies widely among sites, depending on their content strategy and how well they’ve executed their image optimization efforts. There are some sites where the percentage decrease in image traffic may be high, but because the actual image search traffic is so low, the change has not caused a noticeable decrease in overall site visits or total organic search traffic.

Other sites aren’t as lucky. For sites that have placed images at the heart of their content efforts, including the implementation of the heavy-lift image SEO tactics enumerated above, a significant and as of yet irreplaceable traffic and revenue loss has occurred. For some of these sites, image search had been 20% or more of all organic traffic. With Google’s new image search, image traffic for these sites now ranges in the low teens or high single digits of all organic traffic. For the hardest hit sites, this has resulted in the loss of well over a hundred thousand image search referrals per week.
Ok, So Image Search is (Nearly) Dead. Now What?

It’s difficult not to consider Google’s image UI change a shameless content grab – one which blatantly hijacks material that has been legitimately licensed by publishers so that Google Image users remain on their site, and are de-incentivized from visiting others.

If you’re an SEO, site owner, product manager, photo editor, developer or designer, the yield from image SEO suddenly looks much less attractive. If Google is going to only send a fraction of the image traffic it used to, there’s considerably less incentive to put in the work involved in optimizing images. Don’t get us wrong: we’re not saying that site owners shouldn’t follow image SEO best practices; what we are saying is that when force-ranking SEO priorities, this new data clearly shows that until Google changes its image UI to be fair to publishers, image SEO should be moved further down the list.
Google Image Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
http://images.gizmag.com/hero/google-search-by-image.jpg
Google Image Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
 https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEji2PcWCGv6p2FzoENb7gjiJfbV0GkoHHi-lJc07CDpDjGL8YGUh9OXEvD36rABOr9Rp03c6XQ7IA38BWPiRmteDcr7J-NOhgLdPV-pOvS8j6qdLlO2mntPF-l2ZzfvNmV60MA83X9-8oA/s640/google-image-search-ads-jan09.png
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http://static4.businessinsider.com/image/5192493e69beddb51e000004/do-a-google-image-search-for-the-words-atari-breakout.jpg
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 http://www.google.com/insidesearch/images/landing/powersearchingleaves.jpg
Google Image Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
 http://howtosection.com/files/2012/08/Upload-Image-in-Google-Search.png
Google Image Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
http://www.arvide.com/TechTips/2009-02-10-Top_10_Obscure_Google_Search_Tricks/image006.png
Google Image Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
http://tothepc.com/img/2011/02/google-image-search-option.png
Google Image Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
http://thesocialsuite.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Google-Search1.jpg
Google Image Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
http://s3.amazonaws.com/raven.sitening.com/images/vertical-search-google-2.png
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 http://searchengineland.com/figz/wp-content/seloads/2013/03/gangnam-style-Google-Search-1-600x341.png
Google Image Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity         

Google Images Search Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Google Images Search
  Source:- Google.com.pk
  Welcome to PakEarn.com (Facebook Photo Posting Jobs)
Google’s January 23 image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.
In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
- See more at: http://www.definemg.com/how-googles-image-search-update-killed-image-seo/#sthash.gqtZ66Ai.dpuf
 Google’s January 23 image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.

In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
This served the best of both worlds: allowing the user to see the high res version of the thumbnail, while also allowing the publisher to gain a return on the investment they’d made in the image displayed within search results.

The new interface alters this experience. Per Google:
Google, thou doth protest too much. Although it made an effort to assuage site owners that this change would be better for users and for publishers (promising higher clickthrough rates in the process), the reality is that the new interface makes it a two-click process to reach the website where the image is hosted. And with this higher resolution image displaying directly within Google’s search results, there’s very little need for users to click through, since users are treated to a high res version of the image directly on Google.com.
The Image Search Numbers (NSFW)

Since the new version of Google Images rolled out, the impact to image search traffic has been nothing short of devastating. We examined 87 different sites, both international and US, originating from many networks and belonging to a wide range of verticals. Collectively, image traffic decreased 63% after Google launched its’ image search change:
In the weeks immediately prior to Google’s Image update, the sites in this study had been making strong week-over-week gains, nearing 1.4MM referrals in aggregate.  11 weeks after the update, image traffic has remained steady at the drastically reduced numbers, plateauing around 400K image search referrals per week.

The table below (with anonymized site names) shows that sites in the Fashion & Lifestyle, Entertainment, News and Photo verticals were the ones that experienced the heaviest losses
Ironically of course, these are the sites that had placed the most effort optimizing their images, by meticulously following image SEO best practices, such as developing image XML sitemaps, defining keyword-rich alt tags, file names and captions, and making sure all images within galleries were fully indexable.

Image SEO as a percentage of overall search traffic varies widely among sites, depending on their content strategy and how well they’ve executed their image optimization efforts. There are some sites where the percentage decrease in image traffic may be high, but because the actual image search traffic is so low, the change has not caused a noticeable decrease in overall site visits or total organic search traffic.

Other sites aren’t as lucky. For sites that have placed images at the heart of their content efforts, including the implementation of the heavy-lift image SEO tactics enumerated above, a significant and as of yet irreplaceable traffic and revenue loss has occurred. For some of these sites, image search had been 20% or more of all organic traffic. With Google’s new image search, image traffic for these sites now ranges in the low teens or high single digits of all organic traffic. For the hardest hit sites, this has resulted in the loss of well over a hundred thousand image search referrals per week.
Ok, So Image Search is (Nearly) Dead. Now What?

It’s difficult not to consider Google’s image UI change a shameless content grab – one which blatantly hijacks material that has been legitimately licensed by publishers so that Google Image users remain on their site, and are de-incentivized from visiting others.

If you’re an SEO, site owner, product manager, photo editor, developer or designer, the yield from image SEO suddenly looks much less attractive. If Google is going to only send a fraction of the image traffic it used to, there’s considerably less incentive to put in the work involved in optimizing images. Don’t get us wrong: we’re not saying that site owners shouldn’t follow image SEO best practices; what we are saying is that when force-ranking SEO priorities, this new data clearly shows that until Google changes its image UI to be fair to publishers, image SEO should be moved further down the list.
Google Images Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/enVZiSNpLcn_qa1u8iLJHT8NcxqE4TGuShfiKvgXuR6EmK_2bB3f5W4ptSI2HctW8byaK6WcZQ=s640-h400-e365

Google Images Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

 http://blogs.reuters.com/mediafile/files/2012/01/GooglePersonalSearch1.jpg
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 http://blogoscoped.com/files/shaun-google-ie7.jpg

Google Images Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
 http://0.tqn.com/d/websearch/1/0/n/v/googleimages.png

Google Images Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

 http://blogs.independent.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/google-zip.jpg
Google Images Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
 http://images.gizmag.com/hero/google-search-by-image.jpg

Google Images Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
 http://tothepc.com/img/2011/02/google-image-search-option.png

Google Images Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
 http://www.saynotes.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/google-search-with-an-image.jpg

Google Images Search  Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
 https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgqawOlyXIA4a-6SfPvPyCt3XWn1coJR9EZv9bZ2SKqRsxvG2zmAGEZfohyphenhyphenTLAljNPLq-esgxw8oOv_y8MxFNvfx7nVVFtMtn0d6H1MuI6rv4A8Ug1RZYcVbYTcunpuzXNgXgYbwBtmrWh0/s640/chrome-os-ntp-test.png

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 http://0.tqn.com/d/websearch/1/0/w/a/google-book-search.png

 Google Images Search  Google ImagesSearch  Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity



Google’s January 23 image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.
In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
- See more at: http://www.definemg.com/how-googles-image-search-update-killed-image-seo/#sthash.gqtZ66Ai.dpuf
Google’s January 23 image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.
In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
- See more at: http://www.definemg.com/how-googles-image-search-update-killed-image-seo/#sthash.gqtZ66Ai.dpuf
Google’s January 23 image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.
In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
- See more at: http://www.definemg.com/how-googles-image-search-update-killed-image-seo/#sthash.gqtZ66Ai.dpuf
Google’s January 23 image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.
In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
- See more at: http://www.definemg.com/how-googles-image-search-update-killed-image-seo/#sthash.gqtZ66Ai.dpuf
Google’s January 23 image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.
In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
- See more at: http://www.definemg.com/how-googles-image-search-update-killed-image-seo/#sthash.gqtZ66Ai.dpuf
Google’s January 23 image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.
In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
- See more at: http://www.definemg.com/how-googles-image-search-update-killed-image-seo/#sthash.gqtZ66Ai.dpuf
Google’s January 23 image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.
In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
- See more at: http://www.definemg.com/how-googles-image-search-update-killed-image-seo/#sthash.gqtZ66Ai.dpuf
Google’s January 23 image search update brought high resolution pictures directly within search results, leaving users with little incentive to clickthrough to the sites hosting and licensing the pictures. We analyzed the image search traffic of 87 domains and found a 63% decrease in image search referrals after Google’s new image search UI was released. Publishers that had previously benefitted the most from their image optimization efforts suffered the greatest losses after the image search update, experiencing declines nearing 80%.
In the eleven weeks after Google’s new image search was released, there has been no recovery – which means for image search, the significantly reduced traffic levels we’re seeing is the new normal. In the aftermath of the new image search experience, image SEO has been severely compromised, and we have no choice but to recommend deprioritizing image SEO when weighed against other search traffic initiatives.
- See more at: http://www.definemg.com/how-googles-image-search-update-killed-image-seo/#sthash.gqtZ66Ai.dpuf

Saturday, 12 April 2014

Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Google Cartoon Character
Source:- Google.com.pk
Welcome to PakEarn.com (Facebook Photo Posting Jobs)

What a Cartoon! is an American animation showcase series created by Fred Seibert for Hanna-Barbera Cartoons which aired on Cartoon Network. The project consisted of 79 short cartoons, intended to return creative power to animators and artists, by recreating the atmospheres that spawned the great cartoon characters of the mid-20th century. Each of 79 short cartoons mirrored the structure of a theatrical cartoon, with each film being based on an original storyboard drawn and written by its artist or creator.

The series first aired on February 20, 1995, and were promoted as World Premiere Toons. During the original run of the shorts the series was retitled as The What a Cartoon! Show until the final short aired August 23, 2002. The project served as the launching point for multiple successful Cartoon Network series, including Dexter's Laboratory, Johnny Bravo, Cow and Chicken, The Powerpuff Girls, Courage the Cowardly Dog, Mike, Lu & Og, Sheep in the Big City, Whatever Happened to... Robot Jones?, Codename: Kids Next Door, The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy and Megas XLR as well as a precursor to Fox's Family Guy. The series is influential for birthing a slew of original Cartoon Network hits and helping to revive television animation in the 1990s. Once it had several original series, those became the first Cartoon Cartoons.

A character (or fictional character) is a person in a narrative work of arts (such as a novel, play, television series or film).[1] Derived from the ancient Greek word kharaktêr, the English word dates from the Restoration,[2] although it became widely used after its appearance in Tom Jones in 1749.[3][4] From this, the sense of "a part played by an actor" developed.[4] Character, particularly when enacted by an actor in the theatre or cinema, involves "the illusion of being a human person."[5] In literature, characters guide readers through their stories, helping them to understand plots and ponder themes.[6] Since the end of the 18th century, the phrase "in character" has been used to describe an effective impersonation by an actor.[4] Since the 19th century, the art of creating characters, as practised by actors or writers, has been called characterisation.[4]

A character who stands as a representative of a particular class or group of people is known as a type.[7] Types include both stock characters and those that are more fully individualised.[7] The characters in Henrik Ibsen's Hedda Gabler (1891) and August Strindberg's Miss Julie (1888), for example, are representative of specific positions in the social relations of class and gender, such that the conflicts between the characters reveal ideological conflicts.[8]
In fiction writing, authors create dynamic characters by many methods, almost always by using their imagination. Jenna Blum in The Author at Work described three ways of creating vivid characters:[26]

    a magic character comes into the author's head and "lives there", sometimes "dictates their story" to the author.[26]
    a borrowed character is created by taking an emblematic quality or character trait from a real person, plugging that trait into a fictional situation, and then the author uses imagination to transform the character into a unique construct.[26]
    a made-up character is created from the "ground up", often starting from expediency as a two-dimensional creation which the author then tries to get to know better, sometimes by adding trouble and conflict.[26]


The study of a character requires an analysis of its relations with all of the other characters in the work.[9] The individual status of a character is defined through the network of oppositions (proairetic, pragmatic, linguistic, proxemic) that it forms with the other characters.[10] The relation between characters and the action of the story shifts historically, often miming shifts in society and its ideas about human individuality, self-determination, and the social order.
     Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
 
Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
 
Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
  
 Google Cartoon Character Google Images Search Flowers Logo  Advanced Tattoos Upload   Flowers Roses Valentines Day
          Download Gravity

Saturday, 5 April 2014

Google Images Copyright Free Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity

Google Images Copyright free
 Source:- Google.com.pk
 Welcome to PakEarn.com (Facebook Photo Posting Jobs)
From guest blogger Lesley Ellen Harris, copyright lawyer and editor of The Copyright & New Media Law Newsletter.
Search engines such as Google have opened up a huge world of images to us. In fact, Google Images is the first stop for many of us looking for the perfect image on our blog, e-book or presentation slide. Once you find that image, what can you legally do with it? Can you copy and paste it, perhaps even adapt it for your own purposes? In other words, are Google images free for the taking and using?

Assume Google Images Are Protected by Copyright
Although some images found in search engines may be in the public domain, you should actually assume the opposite – that all online content is protected by copyright law. Even content from other countries may be protected by copyright law in your own country.

One way to instill this message in others you work with and want to educate about copyright law is to remind them that Google is a search engine. Search tools such as Google Images locate content such as images and photos. Google is not a content depository nor is it a collection of public domain or copyright-free works. Google directs us to images and photos according to our search criteria. Once you find that perfect image or photo, you must take certain steps before you may legally use it.

No ©, No Copyright?

Even if the located image does not have a copyright notice, the familiar © symbol, it may still be protected by copyright. As with any other content you use, you will need to conduct research to see whether the image or photograph is in fact protected by copyright law or whether it may be in the public domain. If protected by copyright, find out if there are any terms of use attached to the image or photograph. These terms may be stated right beside the image, or you may need to dig deeper into the site to look for copyright information and permissions. Once you find any terms of use or copyright information, read the information carefully to determine whether the illustrator or photographer allows you to use the image or photo for certain purposes without obtaining permission. Similarly, if there is a Creative Commons license attached to the image or photograph, read that license carefully – does it permit limited or unlimited use of that image without communicating with the copyright owner?

Bottom line: Never assume that online images are free for the taking. Do your research. When necessary, obtain permission before using the image or photo.

Learn More:
More information about managing digital content and social media copyright issues will be shared in CCM400, an online course from SLA’s Click University. CCM400 starts March 18. Register today!
- See more at: http://www.sla.org/using-google-images-think-about-copyright-permissions/#sthash.h2dZ9dIi.

Google Images Copyright Free Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload  Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download   Gravity
,
Google Images Copyright Free,Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download   Gravity
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgr27PsVvs82J1nGQH2Rhx9MGp3S8bP-LiWfuiyEHjcYbQCyAsh62nMdCIBXUD65CRMht7bGW557zLUOECZpDTvfveZWMfq1CN9UoFzQEfkYu8WiZwCUMIjXHhvgtozxt5nl7XJbsxsn3ao/s1600/FireShot+Screen+Capture+%23021+-+%27blogger+-+Google+Search%27+-+www_google_co_in_search_q=blogger&rls=com_microsoft_en-US&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=RzULU6L3K8mBrQeD2oCoDQ&ved=0CAkQ_AUoAQ&biw=1600&bih=775&sout=.png
Google Images Copyright Free,Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download   Gravity
Google Images Copyright Free,Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download   Gravity
   Google Images Copyright Free,Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download   Gravity
  Google Images Copyright Free  
Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
http://www.industryleadersmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Google-Inc.-headquarters.jpg
  Google Images Copyright Free  
Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
  Google Images Copyright Free  
Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
  Google Images Copyright Free  
Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity
        Google Images Copyright Free  
Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity 
  Google Images Copyright Free  
Google Images Search Flowers Logo Advanced Tattoos Upload Flowers Roses Valentines Day Download Gravity