Inline analytics on Facebook Pages April 4, 2011 In posts Stats appear where they’re contextually relevant. Useful. #analytics #design #Facebook #ideas #publishing #reading interfaces Michelle’s first day at Yelp! 10 useful resources about data visualization 4 Comments Andrew Spittle April 4, 2011 Reply That’s slick. Beats having a separate stats page in some ways. I assume the .21% Feedback is a combination of Likes, comments, and shares? Daniel Bachhuber April 4, 2011 Reply No idea, but that sounds like a logical guess to me. I want WordPress.com Stats to add individual page stats to my admin bar… Daniel Bachhuber April 4, 2011 Reply Also, if WordPress.com Stats supported multisite, that would be wicked awesome. Andrew Spittle April 4, 2011 Reply Agreed on both ideas. The spark graph in 3.1 will show your site total for 48 hours but it would be cool to adjust that on a per post or per page basis. Leave a Reply Cancel replyComment * Name * Email * Website Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email. Δ
4 Comments
That’s slick. Beats having a separate stats page in some ways. I assume the .21% Feedback is a combination of Likes, comments, and shares?
No idea, but that sounds like a logical guess to me. I want WordPress.com Stats to add individual page stats to my admin bar…
Also, if WordPress.com Stats supported multisite, that would be wicked awesome.
Agreed on both ideas. The spark graph in 3.1 will show your site total for 48 hours but it would be cool to adjust that on a per post or per page basis.