- From: Keith Instone <instone@cs.bgsu.edu>
- Date: Wed, 7 Dec 1994 09:09:48 -0500
- To: www-vlib@www0.cern.ch
Here is a proposal, off the top of my head, and probably not the best way to do it: At the same level as the "home page" for each area of the Virtual Library exists a file called "stats". The URL for this file can be easily computing by looking at the URL for the home page. The URL for ALL of the stats can easily be accessed by scanning thru the main WWW VL page itself. So, cern runs a program nightly that gathers up info from all of the stats files and generates the appropriate (sorted) HTML files as an optional way to see the topics in the VL. Usage should be one of these stats. Probably averge number of downloads of the home page per day (take the weekly total and divide by seven, so we don't have weekday/weekend problems). Later, usage will probably have to be listed in terms of HOURS, but we can deal with that when the time comes. Other stats could be # of links and # of megabytes, perhaps. For each stat, the cern program would generate a different variation of the VL list of topics. Even fancier stats can be dreamed up, such as the number-of-links-traversed (since the real usefulness of a home page full of links is not who downloads it, but who finds something worth jumping to from it). The stats file should be really simple, so that someone can edit it by hand, and so that different platformns can easily write programs to generate it automatically. Maybe something like: <Usage>350 <Links>765 The stat collection program sounds pretty easy to write: grab all of the HREFs from the WWW VL page, modify the URL for the stats file, use url_get to grab the file, parse the file for each stat, add the stat to a big file contain that stat for each of the topics, sort each file and slap the right HTML at the beginning and the end, and you are done. Comments? Keith
Received on Wednesday, 7 December 1994 14:09:44 UTC