As you probably know, Microsoft and Yahoo have A search and the publicity treat in place. Microsoft has now released a guide for migrating from the Search of Yahoo that Sells API to its own adCenter API.
The guide is intended to explain how to develop ad campaigns and request reports in adCenter.
"More specifically, the guide maps Search Marketing operations to adCenter operations," explains Microsoft's Scott White. "For those Search The marketing operations that adCenter does not support directly, steps are provided to perform a similar functionality in the adCenter, if applicable. The guide includes a mapping from each field in the adCenter objects (For example, the Campaign and AdGroup) to the corresponding Search Marketing object and field. “
The 46-page guide runs down identifications, building SOAP requests, quota, deleting entities, fault handling, campaigns (adding, deleting, obtaining, to bring up to date, etc.), the groups of announcement (adding, bidding, deleting, updating, etc.), ads (adding, deleting, updating, etc.), keywords (adding, erasing, to bring up to date, etc.), concentrating on (adding targets, getting targets, deleting targets, updating targets, et.), and reporting (requesting a report, obtaining the report, report type mapping).
Readers are encouraged to let the company know (presumably via the comments on this announcement) if they come across any missing details that they feel would make the transition process easier.
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The dichotomy that surrounds the real estate crisis in the United The states can be encapsulados in two news reports during the past three days.
First, billionaire mogul Sam Zell added significantly to his holdings in Starwood Hotels and Resorts (HOT) to become that company's second-biggest shareholder. In the answer, James Corl, the chief investment officer fo r real estate securities at Cohen and The young bulls optimisim INC. and aforesaid when he told Bloomberg News: "Sam Zell as a seller began the descent of the market of REIT last February and I think Sam Zell as a buyer probably mark the fund in true estate stocks."
But even before investors could breathe a sigh of relief or contemplates its next movement in the market, the headlines in Friday's Wall Street Journal screamed "Commercial Real The Bust of the property". It based on a report released last week by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the dire warnings of a University of new York economist, the Journal declared that the property investment market is about passing underneath from.
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" The arrival bust of commercial real estate will lead to another round of massive losses for the banks that made these loans and the investors who bought these toxic mortgages," said Nouriel Roubini of NYU. "The financial one markets massacre is just starting and a generalized liquidity and financial restriction will come be to great scale in the next few months."
Yikes!
Who to follow? Zell, who famously has sat in the sidelines as the world's credit burned, or Roubini, that obtains the prestige for sounding alarm bells last year prior to the subprime mess? points
Two should be raised. One, commercial real estate loans didn't goes the people that didn't know what they were getting into. While commercial foreclosures can occur, the most probable one scenario is valuable land will be snapped up quickly by sage investors. The second, the construction in America isn't slowing. In December, the Census Bureau reported that not residential construction was up 20% year-over-year.
Also, the MIT report mentioned in the Journal indicated there was a 7% drop in commercial property prices during the second time of 2007, but that was after a five-year run up and the drop came among the decline in seemingly every asset but gold.
In these times when mediocre economic news quickly comes be warnings of destiny, many pundits have already positioned commercial real estate the market in a precipice. If they've done so hastily, you can be sure investors like Zell will takes advantage of properties undervalued.




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