Access Statistics for Sí,Spain

[ Index | Back ]
----------

The following statistics do not include access to any of the images, nor do they count accesses by DocuWeb nor by the Embassy.

An 'access' is the retrieval of one specific page or file.

CountryPercent
of Total
Accesses
Unresolved 26.3%
United States Educational (*.edu) 18.5%
United States Commercial (*.com) 17.8%
United States Network (*.net) 7.2%
Spain 5.1%
Canada (excluding Carleton) 4.1%
Great Britain 3.8%
United States 1.4%
Germany 1.4%
Sweden 1.3%
United States Non-Profit (*.org) 1.1%
Netherlands 1.0%
United States Government (*.gov) 0.9%
Finland 0.7%
France 0.7%
Carleton University 0.7%
Australia 0.7%
Mexico 0.7%
Japan 0.6%
Norway 0.5%
United States Military (*.mil) 0.5%
Italy 0.5%
Belgium 0.4%
Switzerland 0.4%
Argentina 0.4%
Israel 0.3%
Austria 0.3%
Denmark 0.3%
Portugal 0.2%
Ireland 0.2%
Brazil 0.2%
Chile 0.1%
Iceland 0.1%
Costa Rica 0.1%
New Zealand 0.1%
Poland 0.1%
Singapore 0.1%
Uruguay 0.1%
Czech Republic 0.1%
South Africa 0.1%
Estonia 0.1%
International Organizations 0.1%
Slovenia 0.1%
Malaysia < 0.1%
Dominican Republic < 0.1%
Greece < 0.1%
Luxembourg < 0.1%
Korea < 0.1%
Hungary < 0.1%
Colombia < 0.1%
United Arab Emirates < 0.1%
Hong Kong < 0.1%
Ecuador < 0.1%
Philippines < 0.1%
Lithuania < 0.1%
Venezuela < 0.1%
Bermuda < 0.1%
Taiwan < 0.1%
Indonesia < 0.1%
USSR (former) < 0.1%
Trinidad and Tobago < 0.1%
Latvia < 0.1%
Peru < 0.1%
Georgia < 0.1%
Thailand < 0.1%
Romania < 0.1%
Malta < 0.1%
Nicaragua < 0.1%
Turkey < 0.1%
China < 0.1%
Panama < 0.1%
Croatia < 0.1%
Russian Federation < 0.1%
United Kingdom < 0.1%
Bahrain < 0.1%
Ukraine < 0.1%
Egypt < 0.1%
Slovakia < 0.1%
Liechtenstein < 0.1%
Bulgaria < 0.1%
Kuwait < 0.1%
Bolivia < 0.1%
Cayman Islands < 0.1%
Cyprus < 0.1%
Morocco < 0.1%
Andorra < 0.1%
Jamaica < 0.1%
Puerto Rico < 0.1%
Zambia < 0.1%
Greenland < 0.1%
Albania < 0.1%
83 countries

It is very difficult to say what these access numbers mean as far as real accesses or number of people involved. The numbers represent only the direct accesses to the local Sí, Spain server. Major on-line services, such as Prodigy and AOL (and probably CompuServe) use cacheing proxy servers to service their subscribers; this means that one request from the local server could service hundreds or even thousands of requests from their subscribers. In addition, the growing usage of psuedo-slip adapters such as TIA and Slirp means that many people could be identified as using one host.

----------
[ Index | Back ]
----------
WWW presentation © (1996) DocuWeb Information Services Inc.