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  • Oh, I see what you mean. I wouldn’t know how to do that, specifically, but I think you’re right about using templates.

    Maybe take a peek at the templates documentation at Codex and see if you can create a custom template for your posts that is displayed when the post is displayed by itself (i.e. when the URL is the permalink for that particular post). From there, you should be able to float:right a Google AdSense ad block.

    It’s all a personal preference. If you find the performance of your web server to be too slow for your clients, then you should look into all the tweaks you can do to increase performance. Moving to static pages is one way to cut load times.

    However, the transition costs may (or may not) be significant as you try to move the content that is loaded dynamically in WordPress to a more permanent framework in which the pages are “baked” (as per the article to which you linked) before they are published to the web.

    There is a reason some people moved away from static publishing, and not just because it was “bleeding edge” technology. It removes a lot of the hassle from the web administrator’s responsiblities, and it gives your site more of a living, breathing feel rather than the older, more dull static environments of the past.

    It’s all personal preference. If you want static pages, look into it and see what you need to do to make that happen. If you prefer dynamic loading and the various other advantages to using WordPress, stick with that. I certainly prefer WordPress to the alternatives.

    I’m not sure exactly what you’re talking about. https://problogger.com does not render but https://problogger.net does. However, I don’t see what you mean about the AdSense code only existing on the post pages and not the main page.

    Specifically, I see “Ads by Google” just below th eheader on all pages.

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