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BRAND NEW AFFILIATE PROGRAM!
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Offer searchable dream symbol definitions for free on your site or your personal home page simply by signing up to become a Dreamstop.com affiliate. Fill out our short contact information form below and we'll provide you with several choices of pre-formatted search boxes all ready to be placed on your site or home page.
What does it cost you? Absolutely nothing! We are happy to let you provide this cool service on your site for free in exchange for the good old fashioned word-of-mouth promotion you'll be providing for our site.
What is required? You must have a existing accessible website. We validate the url you provide. You can't be a site that has adult content. Other than that we simply ask that you give us accurate contact information and that you do not modify the HTML we provide for placement on your site.
What else do you need to know? After you fill out the form, you'll pick a search box that fits the look and size you want for your site, copy the HTML we provide for that particular box and paste it anywhere you want on your site. Users will type in a dream symbol in your search box, and the definition will appear in a new small pop-up window from Dreamstop.com.
If you are not completely familiar with editing HTML documents, please check out our HTML tutorials for help.
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If you are interested in other licensing options with Dreamstop.com, please contact us directly by sending email to webmaster@dreamstop.com
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IT'S THAT EASY! IT'S FREE! SIGN UP NOW!
* All fields are required.
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Existing affiliates can login below.
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What is a URL?
Uniform Resource Locators (URIs aka URLs)
are short strings that identify resources in the
web: documents, images, downloadable files,
services, electronic mailboxes, and other
resources.
For example: A document called "hello.html"
on webserver "www.cool.com" in directory
"/pub/files" corresponds to this URL:
"http://www.cool.com/pub/files/hello.html"
Many other URLs are possible. At the top of
your browser window there is a text field,
commonly referred to as the "Address" bar. If
you watch the contents of that as you
navigate through information (i.e. websites)
on the Internet, you'll get to observe how
URLs are put together for many different
types of information.
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