Website developers and owners can use a simple code to find out more than 20 visitor data. Whether technical (monitor resolution, browsers and operating systems used) or marketing (which sites users come from, countries of origin, etc.). Further extended statistics and their long-term storage are available as part of the measurement and are completely free.
Flag Counter counts with pageviews
- Works at all web pages / blogs / social network profiles / envato pages
- Track website traffic & Visitors geolocation information
- No external database needed!
- Advance statistics with charts
- Create unlimited flag counters widgets
- Compare today and yesterday traffic
- It reveal Visitors Country, Visited time, Browser and OS info.
- Live real-time traffic feed
A web counter or hit counter is a computer software program that indicates the number of visitors, or hits, a particular webpage has received. Once set up, these counters will be incremented by one every time the web page is accessed in a web browser.
Website visits
This is the basic measured quantity. As a general rule, this is a page view in a browser over a period of time. According to the rules used in the world (see Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bounce_Rate) this time is 30 minutes. This means that if a user returns to the page from the same computer after more than 30 minutes, a new visit is counted. Daily values are archived for the entire period since registration.
Pageviews
This value means each pageview (or pages if the code is placed on multiple). Even if the user uses the Reload button, for example.
Unique IP
Shows from how many different computers visitors came from over a period of time. The code calculates a unique IP by the hour and for the whole day. If, for example, users are "behind" a proxy server, a relatively large number of different computers can log in under one IP. Therefore, the measurement of Visits is more in line with reality.
These are the main variables we measure about traffic. Additional values are additional and allow further refinement of visitor information. These include information about the browsers used, operating systems, visitor domains, resolutions and color depth of monitors, etc.