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If there is any question about usage, requests for clarification or permission may be submitted through the process outlined at: http://www.google.com/permissions/.

Google Trademarks and Suggested Accepted Generic Terms

The following are some of the trademarks owned by Google Inc. and the suggested generic terms for those trademarks.

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AdSense for Feeds and FeedBurner Blog: Enabling social sharing with FeedFlare




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Enabling social sharing with FeedFlare

Friday, April 23, 2010 | 12:52 PM

Labels: Feed Optimization, New Features

Feed content is being constantly distributed via new channels and endpoints every day. More and more, these new channels involve sharing your content in social networks and applications such as Facebook, Twitter and Google Buzz.

Recently, we launched our Socialize service to help you as the publisher distribute your feed via social networks, with the first network being Twitter. If you use Blogger, you can already connect your feed to Buzz via the "connected sites" link in Buzz.

But it's equally important in the social world to make sure your subscribers can also share your feed content easily on these social networks. FeedFlare helps enable this by allowing you to configure links in your feed that promote sharing. You can do this by going to the Optimize tab FeedBurner and choosing FeedFlare, and then of course, adding some flare.

Now, we won't berate you for only doing the "bare minumum," nor do we recommend having "37 pieces of flare" in your feed - but we do think you should express yourself with at least a little flare that helps your subscribers move your content around these social networks a little easier.

To that end, just yesterday we enabled the official "Post to Google Buzz" FeedFlare in our catalog, which easily allows users to repost your content to Google Buzz, and then automatically updates the label with the number of times it was posted.



These links appear as so in your feed (though the exact presentation will vary depending on where your feed is being displayed):



Also included in our official catalog are "Share on Facebook" and others that may be relevant for your audience. If you are an old time FeedBurner user, it may be time to revisit your FeedFlare setup and add some of these new ones.

In addition, if you don't see the FeedFlare you need, you can always develop one using the FeedFlare API which is documented in our FeedFlare Developer Guide.

Posted by Steve Olechowski, FeedBurner Team

21 comments:

Kim Woodbridge said...

"Expressing myself with flare" is really making me thing about Office Space.

April 23, 2010 7:36 PM

New Digits said...

This is really great option

April 25, 2010 3:19 AM

farshad said...

hey guys , i think feedburner lack an important feature , named font or style selector . if we could choose our suitable font , that would be perfect, because in Persian feeds we need to use Tahoma Font to show our feeds properly

April 27, 2010 3:28 AM

Maith said...

Great!

Finally the buzz flare! Been waiting for that a long, long time ;)

Thank you very much. Keep it up..

April 27, 2010 4:40 AM

MAC O said...

Love what google doing awesome, but really I still can't found my self comfortable with it

April 30, 2010 5:32 AM

Justine said...

This is great, except I use Blogger and it already automatically updates Buzz.

Problem I'm having now is the delay in my feeds. Lately, it's been taking over 6 to 8 hours before my feeds actually show up on my google reader. What's up with that? I do use the ping shot and even then, it doesn't seem to help.

It shows up on Twitter just fine though.

Why the delay? How can I improve on the speed?

Thanks!

April 30, 2010 11:17 AM

hgardner said...

I would love to check out all these new features, too bad there is absolutely NO SUPPORT for Feedburner account issues!! Anyone who can not access their account is simply SOL as Google is completely ignoring the Feedburner Help Center.
Hundreds of posts from people looking for assistance accessing their accounts and no response from Google staff!!

May 13, 2010 12:13 PM

Andre - Sahan said...

nice options..

May 14, 2010 9:39 AM

Jeremy Barker said...

I like Socialize but not so much now that it is sending out many posts twice for no apparent reason and there is no contact info for support. Anyone know what can be done?

May 18, 2010 12:58 PM

Steve said...

@Jeremy - the duplicate tweet problem was a bug due to us temporarily moving from one data center to another. We've identified the issue and are fixing so this doesn't happen again.

May 18, 2010 2:26 PM

Dragonfly Paths said...

I love Google and use their tools almost 100% of the time. The sites are great and filled with tons of ideas, help and other information.
My only real issue is the help and support on a couple of services. Feedburner is one of the biggest ones, I don't mean 'live' support or anything like that, I mean topics and help articles in them. It tells you what's wrong, then what needs to be fixed, but not how to fix it.
You are sent to the 'help forum' where you ask and people answer you. You may get 5 or 6 different directions, which individually work perfectly, but listed on the same post can be very confusing to a novice.
Thats when the questions start, and I have seen more then a few 'contributers' get testy in their replies and I can understand why. Because they are answering the same things over and over again. But every 'tech' has their own language, wording, even paths to take to complete it. Unfortunately the novice doesn't understand or realize sometimes that just because one tech said to do a particular fix one way, that doesn't mean others will or that other issues that seem similar to the novice can be corrected.
It just seems like it may be easier to include the steps to fix it in the content or may be to link the top answers to the questions to the page instead of people posting the same question, though worded differently over and over.
Just a thought.......

Thanks again for everything you all do, I (and millions of others) would be completely lost without it!

Peace and Take Care!
Colleen
Exploring Life's Paths

May 25, 2010 9:57 PM

Fleck said...

nice feature. Please change del.icio.us to delicious.com; the service switched domains in 2008. Thanks

June 17, 2010 10:40 AM

Brilliant Success said...

I love feedburner features. But my feedburner was created with my blogger gmail id. My Adsense account was created on another gmail id. So my feeds are not getting updated. I'm confused what to do now?

June 23, 2010 7:32 AM

Thomasin Durgin said...

I have been clicking the "add titter account" for tow days and all I get is a 500 server error. Do I have to use adsense to make use of this feature?

July 3, 2010 12:29 PM

Restaurant Broker said...

I really like the idea of feed flare. It does have an office space feel to it but it gets me even more excited about my blog and my other social networks such as twitter, facebook, foursquare and others.

John Powers
Restaurant Agent
Restaurants4SaleOnline.com

July 5, 2010 10:11 AM

Gustav said...

Adding the twitter feature results on a constant 500 error. Please check it and let me know if everyone is running into this problem. Thanks

July 6, 2010 10:09 AM

digipassion.com said...

It is now considered an essential step especially for blogs to add a "Share this on xyzsocialbookmarkingsite" widget. However the complex scripts of such widgets that are added to blog's template (Already stuffed with loads of other scripts) adversely affect blog loading time and hence search engine rankings.
Feedflare is much better in this respect because of its simplicity. However it needs to polished to match other such widgets look and function-wise. Incidentally I have also written a post describing Feedflare at my blog DiGi-PASSION.

July 7, 2010 11:27 AM

Hadedyite Sammy said...

I agree with you feedburner need to step up

August 18, 2010 4:29 AM

99 said...

It's not delivering "email the author" messages.

August 26, 2010 1:31 AM

Tom Retterbush said...

Feedburner is getting better and better. I just purchased a custom domain through Blogger.com and so far so good. It took only minutes for my site to be up and running under my new domain name. I just wonder how long it will take Feedburner to catch up. Particularly since I have several feed subscribers.

October 20, 2010 11:52 PM

Rafiqul Islam said...

Hey guys , i think feedburner lack an important feature , named font or style selector . if we could choose our suitable font , that would be perfect, because in Persian feeds we need to use Tahoma Font to show our feeds properly

October 21, 2010 10:28 PM

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Transactional Services Help Technology Buyers Get the Value They Bargained For
posted by steve@bizmanualz.com - 09/03/08

HOUSTON, TX, Sept. 3, 2008 As products and software get more complex, simply shipping a product to the customer ceases to be an option. Delivering the value that the customer is expecting typically means someone has to install the product. Installation responsibility falls on the product maker, who wants to ensure that technology buyers have a great experience with the product right from the beginning.

“Transactional services start out as something that we have done a number of times,” according to Devin Rickard, Senior Director of Business Process Quality and a former Director of Professional Services at Symantec, the security, storage, and systems management solutions company. For Rickard, high-volume services included installation and configuration of security, storage, or availability solutions. Most engagements ranged from four days to three weeks.

Jay LaCroix’s service team at Internap, an enterprise-level internet service provider, installed and configured intelligent outbound Cisco router controllers with the objective of optimizing bandwidth performance for large enterprises. Jay said, “We did a few hundred router deployments a year and it was probably 80 hours of work to do all the planning, design, and implementation for the engagements.” There was some customization for the client’s network but for the most part, the work was the same every time.

Transactional services are repeatable because they are high-volume, according to Mason Jones, senior managing consultant with Houston-based Entelligence LLC, a services firm that specializes in providing transactional services under product makers’ brand names. Entelligence engagements run from three days to three weeks, on average.

“We have heard transactional services referred to as rapid deployment services, rapid deployment model, quick starts, and packaged services. The thing they all have in common is that the projects are short in duration, performed under fixed statements of work, and associated with products,” said Jones.

Under whatever name, the short duration and defined nature of the work helps define and separate transactional services from services delivered as part of a longer-term enterprise professional services relationship.


Fixed-Price Proposals Help Define the Value for Customers

At Symantec, Internap, and Entelligence, the high volume of similar service engagements has made it possible for each firm to define what is included in their transactional engagements, and what is not.

If you want to be clear about what is included in typically fixed-price transactional service engagements, you need to draw the line on what is included and what is not. On router installations, LaCroix and his group prepared a sales slick, “a packaged data sheet with a fixed price”, to discuss with customers. The deliverables were listed on the sheet, along with the budgeted days of effort. If the customer wanted more, that is where we would need to write a custom statement of work.

Of course, when you are in the service business, time is money, LaCroix said. “Behind the curtain, we developed an estimate of the average amount of work that would be required, and we priced based on that. From an operational delivery standpoint, we reviewed our actual performance against what we quoted—at least annually—to see if we were still within the profit margins [that we had established].

Symantec, Internap, and Entelligence agree that the value proposition is simple from the customer’s perspective: Fixed price, fixed work, and fixed deliverables.


Transactional Services Are Easier to Sell

The fixed nature of the transactional proposals makes them easier to sell, providers agree. When little customization of the statement of work (SOW) is required, transactional engagements are easy add-ons to a product sale. Fixed statements of work - or "data sheets", as LaCroix described them - are often presented to customers by sales executives at the time the product is sold, without further involvement from sales engineers or technical service team.

“The sales team could say, ‘Here is the solution that we offer. This is the price. This is what we can do for that price’”, LaCroix said. The customer can either agree or the sales team could confer with the technical service team to determine if the potential engagement warrants customization. It may not, but at least the customer has been informed that services are required to get the most from their product purchase.

Jones at Entelligence agrees. When product companies define and sell services by stock keeping unit (SKU) just like they do with products, “attachment of the service is almost automatic,” Jones said.


Demonstrable in Pre-Sales

“Transactional services should be easier to sell than more consultative services in part because they may be more demonstrable to the client during pre-sale. If the product company can refer prospects to a willing reference account; an example installation; or for simple services, a data sheet, it should be easier for customers to see what they are buying. This is especially important if the client has neither procured nor evaluated services before,” Jones said.

Anything that can be done during the sales process to make the value of services tangible should be done. Jones shared some strategies that his service teams use: Clearly documenting how the services support or enable product features and capabilities helps customers see how services will help them get the benefits that they want.

“Another effective strategy is to create scripted demonstrations that can be quickly scheduled and performed by a sales person or technical service team, or made available to the customer in a self-service fashion,” Jones said. “During the demonstration, the benefits of the transactional service engagement can be explored right along with the product features.”


Strategy Determines How You Deploy Transactional Services

When product companies view services as supporting customer satisfaction and ongoing license sales you are more likely to see a high proportion of transactional services. “Whereas, as with us if your services organization has its own revenue and profitability targets, then you are more likely to see less transactional services, and more consultative services,” Symantec’s Rickard said.

But most service-providers want to weight their service business toward strategic relationships because cost of sales and other overhead can be spread over more revenue, and profit margins are better, according to Jones.

That is, in fact, a key point of value for transactional service provider Entelligence. “We help our clients focus on their strategic customers by specializing on transactional services,” Jones said. “We protect their brand on the transactional business, and our clients can concentrate their resources on their enterprise customers.”


Transactional Services Can Challenge Margins

Product makers say that they provide transactional services like installation because customers expect them to. And product makers know, they say, that decreasing the time it takes for customers to get the value they want from their purchases relates directly to higher customer satisfaction.

But, for product companies used to performing a full assessment for strategic customers, transactional services can be a risky, low-margin, business, Jones said.

“While product makers might prefer to perform a full assessment with every customer, many customers won’t pay for that. But they still need some services to get the value out of their purchase,” Jones said. “That’s why it is important to segment enterprise services from strategic services, and manage them differently.”

Managed well, transactional services can be an opportunity for product companies to protect and grow their reputation with customers. Without a defined process to manage transactional services, margins and customer satisfaction are often at risk, service companies say.


Transactional Services Specialists Focus on Growing Margin

It seems that product companies are, like Symantec, making a strategic decision: Are they going to set up and optimize for the enterprise consulting services that account for most of their service revenue? Or are they going to organize around delivering transactional services? Can they do both?

“A lot of companies don’t recognize that the [transactional service] segment has unique characteristics and, therefore, has unique requirements as a line of business,” said Gary Doughty, Vice President of Sales at Entelligence.

According to Entelligence, transactional services are often tucked away within a product manufacturer’s much larger professional services organization. But, “We have found that you can’t support your transactional business with the same organizational structure that supports your enterprise services,” Jones said. “From a fiscal, process and execution standpoint, supporting 20 transactional projects a month is very different than supporting a few enterprise consulting projects ranging from two weeks to six months. The alignment is not right.”

Doughty observed that lumping transactional services in with other lines of professional services often impacts overall margin, customer experience, and new product sales. That can put a strain on product and software companies. “Companies will often admit that they need help,” said Doug Chandler, an analyst covering storage solutions with the research firm IDC.

“The reality is that many technology companies struggle to keep up with the changing demands with the right skill sets on hand when the demand increases. This may revolve around new-product roll-outs for example, when suddenly you have new requirements around planning, integration and eventually support,” Chandler continued. “And some companies are better than others at planning the requirements for these types of services.”

Product companies that that treat transactional consulting services as a separate practice can customize processes to the needs of transactional business, and enjoy better margins, and more satisfied customers, Doughty said.

“Product companies need to become very efficient in the transactional services segment in order to improve margins and deliver excellent customer experiences, especially when these services touch 80% of their customers", Doughty explained. "Companies will have to come to grips with the fact that they are spending lots of time and resources on services that account for about 20% of their services revenue.”

by Daniel Davison, Principal, BentonsEdge LLC.

Google Toolbar Help: releases

releases. Show older posts

2010-09-27

Google Toolbar 6.6.916.106 for IE

Google Toolbar 6.6.916.106 for IE has been optimized for the new Internet Explorer9 beta. If you are planning on trying out the IE9 Beta browser, then please download the latest version of Toolbar.

Please continue to report new Toolbar bugs to us through the Report a Toolbar bug contact form.

2010-05-21

Google Toolbar 6.5.518.1650 for IE

Google Toolbar 6.5.518.1650 for IE fixes several issues reported by users on the Known Issues page: issues with GoogleToolbarUser_32.exe CPU usage and the "Clear History" link in the search box drop-down menu should now be resolved. For more information about recent changes to Google new tab page, see my help forum post.

Please share your feedback in the blog comments below, or report new bugs to me using the Report a Toolbar bug contact form.

2010-04-14

More love for our multilingual Toolbar users

(Cross-posted from the Google Translate Blog)

Last July we enabled automatic page translations in Google Toolbar and we’ve been thrilled by the positive response. Today, we’re taking another step to make automatic translation easier. Now, if Google Toolbar’s default language is set to one of our supported languages, you can use our new Word Translator feature to hover over a word with your mouse and get an automatic instant translation. If you want Toolbar to translate into a different language, you can change it in the Toolbar Options menu.

Entire page translations are great if you have little knowledge of a given language. However, if you’re a multi-lingual user who just needs certain words translated, hovering is a lot quicker than searching word-by-word on Google Translate.

Here is an example of the word “vitesse” (speed) translated from French to German:


The new Word Translator feature is available for Internet Explorer and Firefox. And if you use Google Chrome, automatic page translation is already built in, and we're working to build more Translate features.

We hope this helps you browse pages in non-native languages faster, regardless of your language proficiency. Install the latest Toolbar version and give it a try!

Posted by Dmitry Gozman, Software Engineer

2010-03-31

Google Toolbar 7.0.20100326 for Firefox

Google Toolbar 7.0.20100326 for Firefox fixes several issues originally reported in the Google Toolbar Help Forum:
  • Empty searches from the Firefox search box send users to the Firefox Start Page.
  • The Google Calendar gadget displays a list of upcoming events.
  • Searches from Google.com also populate Google Toolbar search box.
  • You can edit Google Bookmarks from the "Bookmarks" drop-down menu.
  • Lastly, Torbutton is compatible with Google Toolbar.
If you have any general feedback or suggestions for our team, we love hearing from you and you can send Google Toolbar feedback here.

If you find any new issues that aren't already reported on our known issues page, please let me know by using this Report a Google Toolbar problem contact form.

2010-02-16

Google Toolbar 6.4.1321.1732 for IE

Google Toolbar 6.4.1321.1732 for IE includes My Location to enable geolocation features in Internet Explorer, and Share to allow you to share any webpages with one click.



This version also fixes an issue resetting IE8 Text Size to Medium when searching from Toolbar, but we're still investigating a fix for resetting IE8 Page Zoom. If you're not already on the latest version of Toolbar, download it from our homepage.
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İsmet Ateş - Google Profile

Press Room of the Recovery utilities from Recovery Toolbox

Press Room of the Recovery utilities from Recovery Toolbox

Press Room

OE-Mail Recovery 1.4

We've all, at some point in time, experienced losing email messages and being unable to recover them, due to corruption in the Outlook Express DBX files. When this happens, Outlook Express is unable to access the files and the emails stored in them, which means that you will be unable to read them.

This is where OE-Mail Recovery steps in. The purpose of this utility is to recover messages from damaged or corrupted Outlook Express 5, and higher, DBX email-storage files.

A really nice feature of OE-Mail Recovery is that when you've opened the program, you can choose between two recovery options. The first option, and probably the easiest, is the OE-Mail Recovery Wizard that will take you step by step through the whole process of recovering your emails, should you be unsure of how to use the program. Otherwise, you can extract messages manually, using the program's toolbar buttons and Explorer-like interface, which allows you to select the source path of your DBX files on a hard drive or a CD-ROM, say. You are then shown a list of all the DBX files in that folder. If you select a particular DBX file, the program will search through the file and display summary details of all the emails it is able to find. You can then select which email(s) you would like to recover, and the program will extract them as separate email files (in the format .eml) to a folder that you have specified.

The program can also be used as a DBX viewing/extracting utility if you don't have, or make use of, Outlook Express, but need to access content in a DBX file.

OE-Mail Recovery is compatible with all Microsoft Windows operating systems, except Windows 95, and supports Microsoft Outlook Express 5 and higher. A trial version can be downloaded from the Internet and the full package can also be bought online.

This program is really easy to use and it will definitely come in handy if you have a mail crash and have not taken precautionary measures.


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Offline browser SurfOffline which can download any website or web pages to your hard drive completely or partially in minutes.


Press-Release

Outlook Express Recovery

REGAIN ACCESS TO EMAILS FROM DAMAGED OUTLOOK EXPRESS D-BASE FILES

Recovery Toolbox announces the release of OE-Mail Recovery for Windows 9x/NT/2000/XP, and advanced tool which lets users recover lost emails from damaged Outlook Express d-base files.

Ever logged on to Outlook Express one day only to discover that all of your emails are missing, or received error messages that Outlook cannot find your emails? Many people lose their emails to Outlook Express and think that they're gone forever. This is because the proprietary dbx format Outlook Express uses to store mails is very complicated and sensitive to damage. When this files are corrupted even slightly, Outlook will not be able to access the emails. Don't worry, your emails may not be permanently gone, but the file in which the emails are stored may be damaged. However, as long as they are damaged, Outlook is unable to access them.

Let OE-mail Recovery help you gain access to all your emails again. Don't feel frustrated for losing all your valuable mail or waiting and then paying for expensive professional technicians to recover your emails. OE-Mail Recovery is able to immediately retrieves all those lost emails stuck in damaged dbx files! OE-Email Recovery fixes the damaged dbx files in many cases and let you export the emails in eml format which can be opened by Outlook Express. You can then view the recovered emails and easily store or move into to its folder. And the best thing is, you can use OE-Mail Recovery to recover any time this problems occur again. Tool can aswer on questions: How to export dbx file? How to save and export outlook express e-mails?

OE-Mail Recovery is like life insurance for your Outlook Express Emails. It gives you peace of mind at all times, and you'll be glad its there when something goes wrong.


See also:


Outlook Express repair tool. Repair dbx file, repair dbx files, dbx repair tool, dbx file repair, recover dbx, dbx recover, dbx file recovery

How to find the IP address of the email sender in Gmail, Yahoo mail, Hotmail, AOL, Outlook Express, etc : Arul John

How to find the IP address of the email sender in Gmail, Yahoo mail, Hotmail, AOL, Outlook Express, etc

When you receive an email, you receive more than just the message. The email comes with headers that carry important information that can tell where the email was sent from and possibly who sent it. For that, you would need to find the IP address of the sender. The tutorial below can help you find the IP address of the sender.

Note that this will not work if the sender uses anonymous proxy servers.

Also, note that if you receive an email sent from a Gmail account through the web browser, you may not be able to find the real IP address because Google hides the real IP address of the sender. However, if someone sends you a mail from his/her Gmail account using a client like Thunderbird, Outlook or Apple Mail, you can find the originating IP address.

Lets begin this. First of all, the IP address is generally found in the headers enclosed beween square brackets, for instance, [129.130.1.1]

Finding IP address in Gmail

  1. Log into your Gmail account with your username and password.
  2. Open the mail.
  3. To display the email headers,
    • Click on the inverted triangle beside Reply. Select Show Orginal.
  4. You may copy the headers and use my IP address detection script to ease the process. Or if you want to manually find the IP address, proceed to 5.
  5. Look for Received: from followed by the IP address between square brackets [ ].
    Received: from [69.138.30.1] by web31804.mail.mud.yahoo.com
  6. If you find more than one Received: from patterns, select the last one.
  7. Track the IP address of the sender

Finding IP address in Yahoo! Mail

  1. Log into your Yahoo! mail with your username and password.
  2. Click on Inbox or whichever folder you have stored your mail.
  3. Click on the Subject of the email you want to track and right-click. You should get a menu like this.
    Yahoo! headers
  4. You may copy the headers and use my IP address detection script to ease the process. Or if you want to manually find the IP address, proceed to the next step.
  5. Look for Received: from followed by the IP address between square brackets [ ].
    That should most likely be the IP address of the sender.
    If there are many instances of Received: from with the IP address, select the IP address in the last pattern. If there are no instances of Received: from with the IP address, select the first IP address in X-Originating-IP.
  6. Track the IP address of the sender

Finding IP address in Hotmail

Hotmail has been integrated with Windows Live, or vice-versa. And the format has changed. Here is how you find the IP address of the sender.

  1. Log into your Hotmail/Windows Live account with your username and password.
  2. Click on the Inbox link on the left.
  3. Under the column that says "Sort by", find the email that you want to track and right-click on it. You should get a menu that has something like Mark as read, Mark as unread, and so on. The last option in the menu should be View message source. Select it.
    headers hotmail
  4. You should see the email headers now.
  5. You may copy the headers and use my IP address detection script to ease the process. Or if you want to manually find the IP address, proceed to step 6.
  6. If you find a header with X-Originating-IP: followed by an IP address, that is the sender's IP address
  7. If that doesn't work, look for Received: from followed by IP address within square brackets[].
  8. * If you have multiple Received: from headers, eliminate the ones that have proxy.anyknownserver.com.
  9. Track the IP address of the sender

Finding IP address in AOL

  1. Log into your AOL Mail AIM account with your username and password.
  2. Open the email that you want to track.
  3. On the top row, click on Action and in the drop-down menu, select View Message Source
    headers aol
  4. It opens a new page with the headers. Once you have the headers, look for the IP address that follows X-AOL-IP:. That should be the IP address of the sender.
  5. Track that IP address of the sender

IP Address Detection Script

I wrote a Perl script to automate this task for you. All you have to do is select your email service and copy your email headers in the box below.

You may do one of the following:

  • You can copy all the headers from your email and paste them here.
    In this case, the unnecessary headers (like Subject:) will be removed automatically.
  • You can remove all headers except those beginning with
    • X-Originating-IP:
    • Received:


Last Update: 2009

How do I create a CNAME record for my custom domain? - Blogger Help

Blogger Help

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New to Blogger?

Before you jump in, check out our Getting Started Guide.

How do I create a CNAME record for my custom domain?

Note: The setup process for newly-purchased domains may take up to 24 hours.

The Quick Answer

  • If you bought your domain name from Blogger, you won't need to create a CNAME record.
  • If your domain is registered with another company, you'll need to follow company-specific instructions.

A CNAME, or Canonical Name, record is an entry within the Domain Name System (DNS) that specifies where a user can find your web pages, or any other URL. You'll use this to associate your custom domain with your blog.

After registering your domain, decide if you want to use a particular subdomain for your blog. E.g. instead of www.mydomain.com you could use something like blog.mydomain.com, if you want. Then you'll create a corresponding CNAME record for that address, associating it with ghs.google.com. Keep in mind that changes to DNS records make take up to 48 hours to take effect.

Each hosting service has slightly different ways to create CNAME records. Guidelines are provided here for some of the common services. When in doubt, check with the particular company you're using for additional help or instructions.

GoDaddy.com

  1. Log in to your account at www.godaddy.com.
  2. Open the Domains tab and select My Domain Names. You'll be directed to the Domain Manager page.
  3. Click the domain that you'd like to use with your blog.
  4. Click the Total DNS Control And MX Records link at the bottom of the section entitled Total DNS.
  5. Click Add New CNAME Record in the box labelled CNAMES (aliases). If you've already created a CNAME record for your blog's address, click the pencil icon next to the existing CNAME record.
  6. For the Name, enter only the subdomain of the address you want to use for your blog. For example, if you picked www.mydomain.com as your address, enter www here.
  7. Enter ghs.google.com as the Host Name. Specify a TTL or use the default setting of 1 hour.
  8. Click OK, and then click OK again.
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ix web hosting

  1. Log in to your account at ix web hosting.
  2. Click Manage below the Hosting Account section.
  3. On the left side, click the domain you'd like to use with your blog.
  4. Next to DNS Configuration, click EDIT.
  5. Click Add DNS CNAME Record.
  6. Under Name, enter only the subdomain you want to use. For example, if you picked www.mydomain.com as your blog's address, just enter www as the entry under Name.
  7. Enter ghs.google.com under Data.
  8. Click Submit.
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1and1

  1. Log in to your account at https://admin.1and1.com
  2. If it's not already selected, click the Administration tab.
  3. Click Domains. The Domain Overview page appears.
  4. From the New drop-down menu, select Create Subdomain. (If you've already created a subdomain for your blog's address, skip to step six.)
  5. Enter only the subdomain you want to use, and click OK. For example, if you chose www.mydomain.com for your blog's address, you should enter www here.
  6. Select the checkbox next to the subdomain that you will be using. (Example: www.mydomain.com)
  7. From the DNS menu, select Edit DNS Settings.
  8. Click the radio button next to CNAME.
  9. Enter ghs.google.com next to Alias.
  10. Click OK.
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EveryDNS.net

  1. Log in to your account at EveryDNS.net.
  2. On the left side, click the domain you'd like to use with your blog.
  3. Since EveryDNS.net is your hosting service, and not your domain registrar, be sure that your domain points to EveryDNS.net's nameservers. This will allow your CNAME record configuration to take effect.
  4. Below Add a Record:, you can create your CNAME record.
  5. Next to Fully Qualified Domain Name, enter only the subdomain you want to use. For example, if you picked www.mydomain.com as your blog's address, just enter www as the entry next to Fully Qualified Domain Name.
  6. Select CNAME as the Record Type.
  7. Enter ghs.google.com as the Record Value.
  8. Click Add Record.
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Yahoo!SmallBusiness

  1. Log in to your account at smallbusiness.yahoo.com.
  2. Click Domain Control Panel below the domain you'd like to use with your blog.
  3. Click Manage Advanced DNS Settings.
  4. Click Add Record.
  5. In the Source field, enter only the subdomain you want to use. For example, if you designated www.mydomain.com as the address of your blog, enter www in the Source field.
  6. Enter ghs.google.com in the Destination field.
  7. Click Submit.
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No-IP

  1. Log in to your account at No-IP.
  2. On the left side, click Host/Redirects.
  3. Click Manage underneath Host/Redirects.
  4. Click Add for a new entry, or click Modify and skip to step six for an existing entry.
  5. Enter the host name (example: www from www.mydomain.com), and select your domain name.
  6. Select DNS alias CNAME at the host type.
  7. Enter ghs.google.com as the Target Host and click Modify.
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DNS Park

  1. Log in to your account at DNS Park.
  2. On the left side, click DNS Hosting.
  3. Click the domain you'd like to use with your blog.
  4. Since DNS Park is your hosting service, and not your domain registrar, be sure that your domain points to DNS Park's nameservers. This will allow your MX record configuration to take effect.
  5. Click Alias Records.
  6. Under Host Name, enter only the subdomain you want to use. If you picked www.mydomain.com as your blog's address, enter www.
  7. Under Destination Name, enter ghs.google.com.
  8. Click Add Alias.
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Other hosting services

  1. Log in to your account on your hosting service's website, and go to the DNS management page.
    Since CNAME records are special Domain Name Service (DNS) records, they may be in sections such as DNS Management or Name Server Management. It's possible that you will have to enable advanced settings to create a CNAME record.
  2. Delete existing CNAME entries for the address you want to use with your blog.
    Before entering a new CNAME record to point to Google, you should first delete any existing entries for the same alias. If you plan to transfer an existing web address to Blogger, you may want to copy any content currently at that address elsewhere first.
  3. Use the information in the following table when you create your CNAME record.
    If your service requires you to enter server information directly into the DNS tables, the entry below needs to have a type CNAME associated with them.

    Host Name/Alias

    Value/Destination

    www ghs.google.com
    * This is the part of your website's address that you designated. For instance, if you chose www.mydomain.com as the address, www is the host name.
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