The session in which the user program runs in cross-session animation.
Each time a site visitor with a unique IP address enters a Web site during a specified period of time; usually 20-30 minutes, is counted as one user session. If the visitor exits the site and reenters within the specified period of time, it does not count as another user session.
Each visit to a web site by one person. The session is usually "ended" when all pages have been closed or after a specific time of inactivity. Valid Date The date embossed by the card issuer on the credit card. An establishment cannot accept a card for payment of goods or services prior to this date. Web Server A computer dedicated to storing the various files that make up Web pages and the protocols needed for communicating with other computers via the Internet.
A person visiting a web site over a short period of time. Usually a user session is considered ended if there is no activity from that user for 30 or so minutes.
A user session is someone with a unique address that enters or reenters a Web site each day (or some other specified period). A user session is sometimes determined by counting only those users that haven't re-entered the site within the past 20 minutes or a similar period. User session figures are sometimes used, somewhat incorrectly, to indicate "visits" or "visitors" per day. User sessions are a better indicator of total site activity than "unique visitors" since they indicate frequency of use.
the session for activity for one user on a website
A user's visit to a site begins when the user first accesses any page on a given site and ends after a visitor has left that site and not revisited it within a specified amount of time (normally 20 minutes) or when the user's browser is closed.
A series of user- application interactions that are tracked by the server. Sessions maintain user state, persistent objects, and identity authentication.
An instance of an Internet user accessing your web site for a length of time, then leaving. During a user session any number of pages may be accessed. A user session is considered finished once an arbitrarily chosen period of inactivity - typically 30 minutes - is exceeded.
A period of activity (all hits) for one user of a website. A unique user is determined by the IP address or cookie. Typically, a user session is terminated when a user is inactive for more than 30 minutes. See also visit.
A session of activity (all hits) for one visitor to a Web site. A unique user is determined by the IP address or domain name. By default, a user session is terminated when a user falls inactive for more than 30 minutes.
A session of activity (all hits) for one user of a web site. A unique user is determined by the IP address or cookie. By default, a user session is terminated when a user is inactive for more than 30 minutes. Synonym: Visit.
The session of activity that a user with a unique IP address spends on a Web site during a specified period of time. The number of user sessions on a site is used in measuring the amount of traffic a Web site gets. The site administrator determines what the time frame of user session will be (e.g., 30 minutes). If the visitor comes back to the site within that time period, it is still considered one user session because any number of visits within that 30 minutes will only count as one session. If the visitor returns to the site after the alotted time period has expired, say an hour from the initial visit, then it is counted as a seperate user session. This is another good indicator as to the quality of the website. THe higher the time spent the better.