Home page Česká verze Slovenská verzia English version


 INFO
Service description
Service usage
Service target
Advantages and properties
Monthly PDF report
PDF report in thumbnails
Counter
License agreement
Personal data protection
Service pricelist
Provider
Press information
 TECHNOLOGY
Technical information
HTML code insertion
HTML code presence check
 DOWNLOAD
Technical vocabulary
Documents
 DEVELOPMENT
Bug reporting
Tips and ideas
Custom statistics
 COOPERATION
Business representatives
Dealers



Technical vocabulary Print page Print page

Download: Word137 kB PDF211 kB

Applet (Java applet)
An applet is a small program that runs in the context of a larger program on a client computer. Nowadays this usually refers to Java applets, which run in a browser, though it is possible the introduction of the term in AppleScript in 1993 slightly predated this usage. A similar program on a server is called a servlet. Macromedia Flash is another widespread applet nowadays that provides motion graphics, interaction and sound. Applets tend to have some form of user interface. This distinguishes them from a program written in a scripting programming language (such as JavaScript) that also runs in the context of a larger, client program, but which would not be considered an applet. Applets generally have the capability of interacting with and/or influencing their host program, although they are generally not required to do so.

Color depth
Color depth is a computer graphics term describing the number of bits used to represent the color of a single pixel in a bitmapped image or video frame buffer. This concept is also known as bits per pixel (bpp), particularly when specified along with the number of bits used. Higher color depth gives a broader range of distinct colors.

Cookie
A small data file created by a Web server that is stored on your computer either temporarily for that session only or permanently on the hard disk (persistent cookie). Cookies provide a way for the Web site to identify users and keep track of their preferences. It is also commonly used to "maintain the state" of the session as a user browses around on the site.

Cookie identifier
It's the number from infinite row. This nubmber is generated for the user in the time of first visit. This identifies the user as new or frequent.

Domain
The Domain Name System or DNS is a system that stores information about host names and domain names in a kind of distributed database on networks, such as the Internet. Most importantly, it provides an IP address for each host name, and lists the mail exchange servers accepting e-mail for each domain. The DNS provides a vital service on the Internet, because while computers and network hardware work with IP addresses to perform tasks such as addressing and routing, humans generally find it easier to work with host names and domain names, for example in URLs and e-mail addresses. The DNS therefore mediates between the needs and preferences of wetware and of software.

Forms
Parts of websites that can be filled by user and sent. Forms are commonly used for user registration and for sending information from the web browser.

Search engines
A search engine is a program designed to help find files stored on a computer, for example a public server on the World Wide Web, or one's own computer. The search engine allows one to ask for media content meeting specific criteria (typically those containing a given word or phrase) and retrieving a list of files that match those criteria. A search engine often uses a previously made, and regularly updated index to look for files after the user has entered search criteria. In the context of the Internet, search engines usually refer to the World Wide Web and not other protocols or areas. Furthermore search engines mine data available in newsgroups, large databases, or open directories like DMOZ.org. Because the data collection is automated, they are distinguished from Web directories, which are maintained by people.

Hit
Means views, eg. page loads done by visitor's web browser. Hit count, is a total count of viewed pages of the monitored presentation.

HTML (Hypertext Markup Language)
In computing, HyperText Markup Language (HTML) is a markup language designed for the creation of web pages and other information viewable in a browser. The focus of HTML is on the presentation of information?paragraphs, fonts, italics, tables, and so forth?rather than the semantics?what the words mean.

Searched keywords
Words and word connections inputed bu visitors to the search- engines. Search engine answers the keyword with the list of web presentations that contain the keyword.

Hypertext link (Hyperlink, URL)
In computing, hypertext is a user interface paradigm for displaying documents which contain automated cross-references to other documents called hyperlinks. Selecting a hyperlink causes the computer to display the linked document within a very short period of time.

IP address
An IP address is a unique number, akin to a telephone number, used by machines (usually computers) to refer to each other when sending information through the Internet using the Internet Protocol. This allows machines passing the information onwards on behalf of the sender to know where to send it next, and for the machine receiving the information to know that it is the intended destination.

ISP (Internet Service Provider)
An Internet service provider (ISP) is a business or organization that offers users access to the Internet and related services. Most telecommunications operators are ISPs. They provide services such as Internet transit, domain name registration and hosting, dial-up access, leased line access and colocation.

Java
Java is an object-oriented programming language developed initially by James Gosling and colleagues at Sun Microsystems. The language, initially called Oak (named after the oak trees outside Gosling's office), was intended to replace C++, although the feature set better resembles that of Objective C. Java should not be confused with JavaScript, which shares only the name and a similar C-like syntax. Sun Microsystems currently maintains and updates Java regularly.

Linking website
Link to monitored presentation from other website that is not a search-engine.

Linux
Linux is a computer operating system and its kernel. It is among the most famous examples of free software and of open-source development. Initially developed and largely used by individual enthusiasts, Linux has since gained the support of IT industry mammoths from IBM to Hewlett-Packard, and is overtaking most proprietary versions of Unix and Microsoft Windows in the server space. It is also becoming increasingly popular as an operating system for desktop computers. Proponents and analysts attribute this success to its vendor independence, low cost of implementation, security and reliability. It was originally developed for Intel 386 microprocessors and now supports a variety of computer architectures. It is deployed in applications ranging from personal computers to supercomputers and embedded systems such as mobile phones and personal video recorders.

Local search-engines
Search engines that contain links to websites in the same language as monitored presentation or in the same country. Examples: Seznam, Atlas, Centrum, Quick, RedBox, Jyxo, klikni.idnes.cz and others.

Microsoft
Headquartered in Redmond, Washington, USA, is the world's largest software company (with over 50,000 employees in various countries, as of May 2004). Microsoft develops, manufactures, licenses and supports a wide range of software products for various computing devices. Its best known product is the Microsoft Windows operating system family, which has achieved near ubiquity in the desktop computer market.

Random visitors
Visitors that got to the presentation using the hypertext link, seen only one page of the presentation and left.

Visit
Random entrance of visitors to the page. Visits can be unique - different users entering the page, or frequent - returning users.

Visitor
Access of concrete visitor to the website. Visitors can be new, frequent and random.

New visitors
Visitors (domains and IP addresses), that visited monitored presentation first time and viewed more than three web pages.

Picures
Random graphics objects on the presentation.

Linking server
Web presentation that contains a link to your presentation.

Linking page
Concrete page with hypertext link (URL) with an address to your presentation.

Operating system (OS)
Operating system (OS) is the system software responsible for the direct control and management of hardware and basic system operations. Additionally, it provides a foundation upon which to run application software such as word processing programs and web browsers.

Last visitor
Is the last visit represented by the domain, that was your presentation accessed from.

Frequent visitors
Visitors (domains and IP addresses), that visited your presentation at least three times a month.

Direct access
Direct access is an entrance to your presentation without using a hypertext link or a search engine. This means that user had to type the address or used Favourites in his browser.

Browser
A web browser is a software package that enables a user to display and interact with documents hosted by web servers. Popular browsers available for personal computers include Microsoft Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, Opera, and Safari. A browser is the most commonly used kind of user agent. The largest networked collection of linked documents is known as the World Wide Web.

Screen resolution
The display resolution of a digital television or computer display is the number of pixels (or maximal image resolution) that can be displayed on the screen, usually given as a product of the number of columns (horizontal, "X") is always stated first and the number or rows (vertical, "Y") make up the aspect ratio.

Script
Script, roughly speaking, is a computer program that automates the sort of task that a user might otherwise do interactively at the keyboard. A shell script often consists largely of the sort of commands that might be typed at a command prompt, or in a word processing program a user might write a script that would combine a sequence of editing tasks that the user expects to perform repeatedly. Languages that are largely used to write such scripts are called scripting languages. Many such languages are quite sophisticated, and have been used to write elaborate programs, which are often still called scripts even if they go well beyond automating simple sequences of user tasks.

URL (Uniform Resource Locator)
A Uniform Resource Locator, URL (either pronounced as "earl" ? IPA: /?l/ (American) or /??l/ (British) ? or spelled out), or Web address, is a standardized address for some resource (such as a document or image) on the Internet (or elsewhere). First created by Tim Berners-Lee for use on the World Wide Web, the currently used forms are detailed by Internet standard RFC 1738.

Search engines
Search engines usually refer to the World Wide Web and not other protocols or areas. Furthermore search engines mine data available in newsgroups, large databases, or open directories like DMOZ.org. Because the data collection is automated, they are distinguished from Web directories, which are maintained by people.

Web Server
A computer software application that carries out some task on behalf of users. This is usually divided into file serving, allowing users to store and access files on a common computer; and application serving, where the software runs a computer program to carry out some task for the users. This is the original meaning of the term. Web, mail, and database servers are what most people access when using the internet.

Source code
Source code (commonly just source or code) is any series of statements written in some human-readable computer programming language. In modern programming languages, the source code which constitutes a program is usually in several text files, but the same source code may be printed in a book or recorded on tape (usually without a filesystem). The term is typically used in the context of a particular piece of computer software. A computer program's source code is the collection of files that can be converted from human-readable form to an equivalent computer-executable form. The source code is either converted into executable by a compiler for a particular computer architecture, or executed from the human readable form with the aid of an interpreter.

Countries
Most active countries for given season, ordered by hit count, on the presentation.



home page | about the service | comparing versions | demo version | questions | contacts | server map | new registration

(c) 2002-2012 developed by euneco.com


Reklama:
MIRROR PROMOTION - reklamní agentura
Webconsult - odborné konzultace v IT na klíč
Internetlab - poradenství v oblasti internetu, marketingové studie ze zahraničí
Datesoft - portálové řešení, podnikové informační systémy,...