Welcome to the first installment in the 10-part series Better Know a Web Metric!
In this feature, I will try and explain Web analytics terms and what they’re all about.
In this week’s episode, we will explore… the Page View!
Sur ce blog, Julien Coquet partage ses réflexions, trucs et astuces autour de l'utilisation des données
Welcome to the first installment in the 10-part series Better Know a Web Metric!
In this feature, I will try and explain Web analytics terms and what they’re all about.
In this week’s episode, we will explore… the Page View!
Those of you who know my sense of humor know that I absolutely love Stephen Colbert. If you follow his show, the Colbert Report on Comedy Central, he has a segment called Better Know a District, which aims to present every single US district in an educational and yet funny way 🙂
Anyhow, I intend to have a weekly feature on this blog, trying to present Web Analytics terms in a more understandable way. Stay tuned!
12.30AM I’m all packed, got a long day ahead of me when I wake up in 6 hours
7.50AM – Took a train to Brussels on Friday and went to visit the good folks at the OX² web agency. Let me tell you that travelling 7 hours is not something I do without proper motivation
10.00AM — After a few prayers and a healthy dose of wishful-thinking, it seems that train users these days cannot care less about the no-cell-phone guidelines. Not only did a fellow travellers three rows back have an obnoxious ring tone to the tune of the “Cucaracha”, he pretty much yelled out his credit card PIN to about everyone in the train…
I’m trying to optimize my battery usage but it seems I only got 10 minutes worth of electricity left so I’ll sign off for now.
1.30PM — After much SNCF employee confusion in Lille, I got to the Lille Europe station where I caught the EuroStar mere seconds before it left the station and, lo and behold, the controller waved me into first class, free – until further notice!! Merci beaucoup!!
I always enjoy the more modern train cars (or the first class ones, whichever I can afford) because they have electric outlets in which I can plug my laptop. Glee! ^_^ Currently typing those lines from seat 35, with a window view of the Belgian country side zooming by, as our bullet train makes its way to Brussels.
There is a group of senior/elderly – and ostensibly bourgeois, I might add – Brits and their grandchildren, chatting away and exchanging recipes, discussing their grandchildren’s future careers. They apparently do not think much of plumbers, firemen and astronauts. Pity, really.
2.00PM – The controller hasn’t come round again so fingers crossed!! René and Aurélie are already kind enough to have me over so if I can save them the expense, all the better!
I’m really looking forward to seeing them again. I like the way they approach Web Analytics and I’d definitely like to know more about OX², even though I had a good overview last time I visited with them.
WebTrends seems fascinating in its new On Demand version. The last time I used WebTrends, it choked on my Apache log files and spurted out meaningless reports. It now appears that it made its way into a market leadership since then. I’m more knowledgeable in Omniture and Google Analytics but I just set my brain in “sponge mode”. 🙂
2.15PM – The Belgian GSM provider Proximus eventually managed to get things straight with SFR and I can now place and receive calls to/from Belgium on my mobile phone. Expensive as hell. Which meant I just HAD to place calls every minute to make sure it worked. And there was much rejoicing.
3.00PM – I arrive at OX² right on schedule ; what happens next is between Aurelie, Rene and myself 🙂
6.30PM – Aurelie and Rene kindly drop me off at Brussels South station and there ends my trip to Brussels; the return trip is uneventful 🙂 (phew)
I had a great time reading Stephen Clarke’s two books, A year in the Merde and Merde Actually.
I think the image in the link below illustrates the irony in Clarke’s books.
Link: Wullf Morgenthaller
Oh noes! what happened? Julien’s blog posts are now in English!!?
Well, it just so happens that my day is spent speaking English over 80% of the time so I figured it’s only fair I finally switched.
Bilingual posts will have an excerpt in the other language to help persuade visitors to keep reading, if only for a few more lines 😉
As a result, some posts will be translated over the coming days, and the blog’s interface will gradually be Englicized as well (sp.)
I can never get enough North Korean propaganda movies 😀
Link: tadspot.com
While we’re at it, I found an interesting article on how North Korea profits from international aid: they steal the Chinese trains the aid packages are transported on!!!
Link: Dirty Little Secrets
In France we usually say that “a good drawing is better than a long explanation“.
This is only true to some extent.
Continue reading “On report visualization”