Usage Statistics for anchor.com.au

Summary Period: Last 12 Months
Generated 17-Aug-2004 04:05 EST

Usage summary for anchor.com.au

Summary by Month
Month Daily Avg Monthly Totals
Hits Files Pages Visits Sites KBytes Visits Pages Files Hits
Aug 2004 9770 6684 895 357 3184 701328 6078 15218 113637 166100
Jul 2004 9917 6548 849 350 5131 1203936 10859 26342 203015 307436
Jun 2004 10959 6944 807 339 5027 1230941 10184 24239 208320 328794
May 2004 10497 6913 867 349 5256 1264983 10831 26905 214331 325408
Apr 2004 13511 9230 824 313 5884 1486889 9411 24728 276901 405339
Mar 2004 14067 10765 3571 220 4732 2335198 6822 110704 333738 436107
Feb 2004 13968 11106 3288 233 5180 2106859 6775 95369 322076 405100
Jan 2004 12659 10386 3855 237 5461 1205283 7361 119516 321993 392440
Dec 2003 8656 6120 700 337 5484 967785 10449 21704 189748 268364
Nov 2003 11391 7247 1589 1035 5543 1079531 31062 47681 217426 341744
Oct 2003 8507 5840 399 133 898 231068 1064 3198 46726 68057
Totals 13813801 110896 515604 2447911 3444889


Generated by Webalizer Version 2.01

How To Interpret the Statistics

  • The most important value is 'Visits' this gives the most accurate representation of the total number of people that visited your site. Visits are always displayed in yellow. All of the other information provided in the statistics is not very important compared with the number of visits. A detailed description of each of the other terms is provided below.
  • Use the number of visits as a relative measure of the to compare the performance of the site from day to day or month to month.
  • Hits. Any request made to the server which is logged, is considered a 'hit'. The requests can be for anything... html pages, graphic images, audio files, CGI scripts, etc... This number represents the total number of requests that were made to the server during the specified report period.
  • Files. Some requests made to the server, require that the server then send something back to the requesting client, such as a html page or graphic image. When this happens, it is considered a 'file' and the files total is incremented. The relationship between 'hits' and 'files' can be thought of as 'incoming requests' and 'outgoing responses'.
  • Pages. Pages are, well, pages! Generally, any HTML document, or anything that generates an HTML document, would be considered a page. This does not include the other stuff that goes into a document, such as graphic images, audio clips, etc... This number represents the number of 'pages' requested only, and does not include the other 'stuff' that is in the page. Some people consider this number as the number of 'pure' hits... I'm not sure if I totally agree with that viewpoint. Some other programs (and people :) refer to this as 'Pageviews'.
  • Sites. Each request made to the server comes from a unique 'site', which can be referenced by a name or ultimately, an IP address. The 'sites' number shows how many unique IP addresses made requests to the server during the reporting time period. This DOES NOT mean the number of unique individual users (real people) that visited, which is impossible to determine using just logs and the HTTP protocol (however, this number might be about as close as you will get).
  • Visits. Whenever a request is made to the server from a given IP address (site), the amount of time since a previous request by the address is calculated (if any). If the time difference is greater than a pre-configured 'visit timeout' value (or has never made a request before), it is considered a 'new visit', and this total is incremented (both for the site, and the IP address). The default timeout value is 30 minutes (can be changed), so if a user visits your site at 1:00 in the afternoon, and then returns at 3:00, two visits would be registered. Note: in the 'Top Sites' table, the visits total should be discounted on 'Grouped' records, and thought of as the "Minimum number of visits" that came from that grouping instead. Note: Visits only occur on PageType requests, that is, for any request whose URL is one of the 'page' types defined with the PageType option. Due to the limitation of the HTTP protocol, log rotations and other factors, this number should not be taken as absolutely accurate, rather, it should be considered a pretty close "guess"
  • KBytes. The KBytes (kilobytes) value shows the amount of data, in KB, that was sent out by the server during the specified reporting period. In general, this should be a fairly accurate representation of the amount of outgoing traffic the server had.
  • Top Entry and Exit Pages. The Top Entry and Exit tables give a rough estimate of what URL's are used to enter your site, and what the last pages viewed are. Because of limitations in the HTTP protocol, log rotations, etc... this number should be considered a good "rough guess" of the actual numbers, however will give a good indication of the overall trend in where users come into, and exit, your site.