A counter tabulates hits or page views of a web page, typically using cgi programs. CPA
Device which tallies the number of occurrences of an event (example, a cash register) .
A program or applet created to record the number of times a Web site has been visited by "Web tourists". Also referred to as a "hit counter".
A counter is a program which as the name suggests counts the number of visitors to your page. This helps you in determining the popularity of your website.
Graphics or numbers on a Web page that state how many visitors have entered a site.
A program that allows you to know the number of hits to your site. Often it is able to track a number of statistics including: raw vs. return hits, browsers used to view your site, country/location of surfer coming to your site and much more. Some counter programs also count your outgoing traffic to help you track your hits to partnership and other sponsored programs.
a small software application (written in perl, php etc) that counts the number of hits, unique visitors, and/or page views that a web page receives.
Returns the current repetition number of a repeat.
A device that keeps track of the number of visitors that a web page has received.
A variable tracked and set by p4 review. Used internally by Perforce to track which changelists have and haven't been reviewed; users can create their own counters for use in their own daemons.
A string of numbers used to denote how many people ...
a calculator that keeps a record of the number of times something happens
a cgi programmed software that is programmed to record the hits to your website
a dynamic image displayed on a webpage that is loaded by someone's browser each time they visit your web page
a graphic that you can add to a web page to track and display the number of
a Java application that measures the types of browsers that hit a web site by reading through its web server log
an object which stores a number
a part of your site statistics - it tells you is how many times a page is called - it doesn't tell you if the same person is visiting again, or even if it's you visiting
a program that will count the number of times a Web page is loaded
a simple script that records the number of visitors to a site and displays the total on the web site
a simple script that records the number of visitors to a site in a text file or database and then displays, either in text of graphically, the count on the website
a simple script that records the number of visitors to a site in a text file or database and then displays the total, either textually or graphically, on the Website
a simple way to track visits to your site's home page
a single statistic that falls under the heading of an object
a small device on a webpage used to tell how many visitors one has received on that page
a small image visible or invisible generated by few lines of javascript code that tracks all your websites traffic
a statistical marketing tool that counts and displays the number of hits to a web page
a tool that helps you count the number of views your page has received
a valuable tool for marketing and advertising purposes, and lets you tinker with marketing tactics to get as many visitors to view your offerings as possible
a variable that starts at a certain number and increases or decreases based on a certain condition
a way for you to keep track of how many people have looked at your web page
Although somewhat outdated counters can be used to track visitors to your web site.
A number seen on some web pages which indicates the number of visits the page has had.
In the context of the Internet, a counter is a server-side script that counts the number of visitors to a URL (websit/page address). Counter quality and features can vary widely.
Displays to the viewer how many hits a page has recieved. Nice doodad for personal websites but use on commercial websites appears unprofessional. Instead of using a counter, owners of commercial websites can (and should) review data logs provided by their server.
A counter calculates hits or page views of a web page, typically using CGI programs or Javascript.
A counter is displayed on a Web page and show how many people have visited it. A counter is usually made with a CGI script. CPU ( Central Processing Unit) -- The main part of a computer control system where arithmetic and logical operations are performed. It also contains the main memory and instructions to carry out system control functions. Domain Name System (DNS) -- This is the way in which the network turns a host or Internet domain (e.g., www.mydomain.com) into an Internet IP address for use with TCP/IP.
Coding script that keeps track of the amount of unique visitors that view that web page or entire web site.
The name by which the rule is tracked, or counted, for statistics that are contained in reports. This is the name that appears in the report. See also: Custom Counter.
Tracks the number of visitors to a Web site. 15.32
device placed on a web page to count how many times the page was downloaded from the host computer server; not a reliable or accurate indicator of the page's popularity
Typically, a CGI that tracks (and optionally displays) how many hits web page has had.
A program that keeps track of the number of visits to your website. It is often able to track a number of statistics including: raw vs. return hits, browsers used to view your site, country/location of surfer coming to your site and much more. Some counter programs also count your outgoing traffic to help you track your hits to sites that credit you as the referrer, such as partnership and other sponsored programs.
A service that counts the number of viewers of an auction.
A program that a web site uses to count the number of visits to a web page.
is a program or script that counts hits/visitors to a specific page.
a company that counts Web page and ad deliveries. Counters include AccessWatch and WatchWise.
A CGI script which counts the number of times your page is requested by visitors. Remember that a visitor which visits your page more than once will be counted every time.
1 : a device that increases or decreases a number or amount. [SEMATECH] 2 : a location in a computer or other machine where information about accumulative events is stored. [SEMATECH
By placing HTML code on any of your web pages you can have an easy to use counter. You can also access your raw logs or the statistics we provide for you for another way to count visitors.
Typically accompanied by something like "You are visitor number ___ since Oct 2001". Counters count page views , not visitors . The difference is that one visitor can generate many page views by opening many pages on the site. Counters offer a relatively inaccurate way to measure site traffic and are generally considered amateurish. Log files offer far more accurate and comprehensive visitor data.
A script on your web page that tracks the number of visitors to your site.
A program or script that measures the number of hits on a web page. Can also measure the number of page views on a web site.
You can create a counter to count and show how many visitors have been to your site.
A counter counts hits or page views to a web site. Counter quality and features can vary widely. Most common are image tag counters that are activated when anyone views a page with graphics enabled.
A script that counts the number of hits, unique visitors, and/or page views that a web page (or an entire site) receives. These "stats" provide very useful information for the webmaster.
An interactive element you can add to your pages that counts and displays the number of visits, or \"hits,\" to your Web page. You can add a counter from the Creative Kit.
A number on many web pages that will count the number of hits or count the number of times the page has been accessed. Basically, it counts the number of people that have visited that page.
A script that counts hits or visits to a page.
A program that keeps track of the number of visitors that visit a web page. The counter is often implemented as a CGI application. Often, such programs also keep track of other related information, such as IP addresses, times of the day for each visit, browser type, etc.
A variable used to keep track of the number of times an event has occurred in a program.
Normally counters counts the page views not visitors.
A number on many web pages that provides a count of the number of hits or number of times a page has been accessed.
An object used to track the number of users on a given site.
A program or script that counts the number of visits to a web page.
A counter is a program that counts and typically displays how many people have visited an HTML page (usually the home page). Many sites include a counter, either as a matter of interest or to show that the site is popular. The counter can be part of the common gateway interface application that logs and analyzes requests.
counter is a program that you can set up to keep a tally of the number of people who have viewed that page. You can make your counter viewable by your site visitors or invisible, if you simply want to keep track of your page views. The Counter add-on allows you to easily add a counter to your web page. Learn more.
A Counter shows you how many page views or hits occurred on a certain Web page on your Web site.
A database field where the number of times a specific transaction occurs is recorded.
Free Web service used to count the number of visits per page and/or per site.