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Research and data to make progress against the world’s largest problems
What do you do when you see a lot of numbers, charts and the word, “statistics”? You very well may ignore them. But not today! We’ve collected some of the most interesting statistical facts that reveal a lot about the world around us. For example, did you know that around 1,700 people in the U.S. become millionaires every day?
Web Analytics is the process of collecting and interpreting your web content’s data in order to have meaningful information on how your visitors behave on your site, where are they coming from? And etc. If you do not use Analytics properly you may not understand how effective your contents are. When most people think of free web analytics, they immediately think of Google Analytics. But there are many other free, innovative statistic tools available on the web and today's post will show you the 15 Leading Tools for Free Website Analytics to help you gather and analyze data about your web content.
Traffic on your blog represents everything from your popularity in the marketplace to your income and lifestyle, making it very important to track. The better you know what attracts visitors and what topics and titles are popular, the better you can serve your visitors and the more success you will have. Monitoring traffic to your blog can be confusing, especially when dealing with all those mysterious log files that come from your hosting provider. Here are 10 WordPress plugins to monitor your blog’s traffic that makes checking your traffic as easy as pushing a button or clicking a link.
Each and every person who owns a website will likely have some sort of Analytics script installed to monitor traffic. And it is probably Google Analytics.
Don’t get me wrong, Google Analytics is an Awesome packages and gives you tons of data about your visitors but just sometimes you need something different (or you don’t like Google and want to host your data elsewhere :) ).
Whatever your reason, you need look no further.
GAPI is now at version 1.3 - This version contains fixes for the handling of very large metric values represented in scientific notation. Thanks to austinrehab for raising this issue.
Development is complete on the Google Analytics filter control. You can now filter your results using a simple GAPI filter string, for example:
$filter = 'country == United States && browser == Firefox || browser == Chrome';
You can create simple query strings that represent the logic Google Analytics requires, but it is abstracted enough to be more readable and easier to work with.