The Official AdSense For Android App Is Available Now

The Official AdSense For Android App Is Available Now

AdSense is one of the most used ad networks online. The platform itself is very diverse. Google makes much of its revenue through advertisements, a part of which trickles down to publishers through AdSense. Publishers are able to manage the performance of ads and check up on revenue stats through the AdSense web portal. Today Google has finally released the official AdSense app for Android. The app currently only works with Android smartphones, no word as yet when native tablet support will be baked in.

It goes without saying that AdSense is one of Google’s most important services, so it never really made sense why the company hadn’t rolled out an app for its own mobile platform. Through the app, publishers can check revenue stats, manage various reports as well as check up on ad units, set payment alerts and also view top custom and URL channels. The app is a blessing in disguise for all those publishers who constantly feel the need to steal a glance at their AdSense account, provided that they use Android smartphones. Google’s official AdSense app is now available for download from Google Play Store.

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Google retires more services, consolidates others in continued efficiency bid

Google retires more services, consolidates others in continued efficiency bid

When you run as many services as Google does, every once in a while you’re going to have to do some pruning. Evidently Mountain View’s got the secateurs out, having just announced the next batch of its projects that will be getting axed wound down. For the chop are: AdSense for Feeds, Classic Plus, Spreadsheet Gadgets, Places for Android, and +1 Reports in Webmaster Tools. Other services are being merged into existing properties to prevent overlap, such as Google Storage for Picasa and Drive — which are now consolidated — and Insights for Search is now part of Google Trends. Naturally, the search giant claims this is all about streamlining, and improving other core products. If the retired service involves a paid subscription, or legacy data, then you’ll need to check the specifics on the official blog to find out how this will affect you, which fortunately for you, is just a tap of the source link away.

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Google retires more services, consolidates others in continued efficiency bid originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 30 Sep 2012 07:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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