kintespace.com
This documents the number of accesses and “accessors” to the domain kintespace.com. This report is based on the log files prepared by the web hosting service of kintespace.com. The foremost need for this report is to provide contributors to kintespace.com a way to measure access to their content. Most web hosts provide hits data for entire web sites and have no way of distinguishing user-defined subsets of content.
In this report, a “hit” is defined as a request for a single HTML or PHP text file, PDF document or SWF (Shockwave Flash) file and its associated content (usually MP3 files). This rightfully excludes bitmaps and other files that misleadingly increase hit counts.
There are some noticeable “gaps” or discontinuities in the reports. Almost all of these inconsistencies are due to not having access to the log files due to the designs of a former hosting service—or, in the worst case, downtime due to human error of one or more representatives of a former web hosting service.
Note that the grand total hit count may be larger than the total of the individual presentation hits because presentations marked inactive in our database are no longer displayed on this page. The most prominent example of this is the “Funky Knowledge Base,” which was moved to SonghaySystem.com. Apart from this, the bottom line is that the figures presented here should error on the side of undercounting the amount of traffic through kintespace.com to avoid inflating numbers and inspiring delusions of grandeur!
Alternatively, the database report failed to count PDF, SWF and MP3 files in monthly hits, which is quite a daft oversight. This means that monthly hit counts will retroactively increase as of July 2005. It took me almost a decade to catch this counting error but here we are: imperfect and more to come…
Month 6, 2008: In June of 2008, kintespace.com was moved to a virtual private server. During this move about 18 days of web traffic data was lost! This was entirely my fault! Because of my daft oversight, you will see a dramatic drop in hits for June 2008.