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Unique Visitor |
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When tracking the amount of traffic
on a Web site, it refers to a person
who visits a Web site more than once
within a specified period of time.
Software that tracks and counts Web
site traffic can distinguish between
visitors who only visit the site
once and unique visitors who return
to the site. Different from a site's
hits or page views -- which are measured
by the number of files that are requested
from a site -- unique visitors are
measured according to their unique
IP addresses, which are like online
fingerprints, and unique visitors
are counted only once no matter how
many times they visit the site. There
are some ISPs that use Dynamic Host
Configuration Protocol, such as AOL
and cable modem providers, which
use different IPs for every file
requested, making one visitor look
like many. In this case, a single
IP address does not indicate a unique
visitor.
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Universe Count |
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The total count (number of names)
on a list.
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URI |
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Short for Uniform Resource Identifier,
the generic term for all types of
names and addresses that refer to
objects on the World Wide Web. A
URL is one kind of URI.
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URL |
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Abbreviation of Uniform Resource
Locator, the global address of documents
and other resources on the World
Wide Web. The first part of the address
indicates what protocol to use, and
the second part specifies the IP
address or the domain name where
the resource is located.
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