My company is in the search process for using web analytics on our company intranet application. Anyone have any recommendations for some 3rd party software to accomplish this?
We use Google analytics for the public site, but according to the documentation, we have to use a fully qualified domain name for the intranet it order for it to work with google.
I want to place a piece of JavaScript at the top of my page/s that wil tell all links on that page to open in certain target windows dependin on the hostname.
Suppose the intranet address is http://intranet so this means that the hostname is "intranet" right? If I want all intranet page links to open in the same window but al other links (ie external internet links) to open in a new windo (_blank) then would I use something like below? Please correct an place I've gone wrong:
But somewhere in there I would also need an "else" statement to tell i to open all other links in "_blank" target. Can someone please tell m where that should be added in. I'm fairly new to javascript and am no exactly sure what order some of this stuff should go in.
Looking over other threads on this site I was able to use another members script to build my own for adding a network printer via JavaScript on our Intranet. With that, the script works perfectly fine when testing it on the local machine I built it on, but not on other machines in the office. Currently I'm remoted into the branch office I reside in from the corporate office where I'm currently at so the machines being tested are on different subnets, but the script is simple calling the UNC path for the printer. When tested on any other computer, and the link is clicked on the page, the user is taken back to the folder in windows explorer the HTML file is saved in, rather than executing the add printer portion of the script.
This is my full code as of now, I was trying to get the function correct before formatting the actual website (obviously) Code: <html><head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Language" content="en-gb"> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=windows-1252"> <title>Printer Mapping</title> </head> <script> function addPrinter25(){ var x=confirm("You are about to add printer GPSACC01. Would you like to make this your default printer?") if (x==true){ WshNetwork = new ActiveXObject("WScript.Network"); var PrinterPath = "\\gpsprnt02\gpsacc01"; WshNetwork.AddWindowsPrinterConnection(PrinterPath); WshNetwork.SetDefaultPrinter(PrinterPath); alert("Printer GPSACC01 has been added successfully and set as default") }else{ WshNetwork = new ActiveXObject("WScript.Network"); var PrinterPath = "\\gpsprnt02\gpsacc01"; WshNetwork.AddWindowsPrinterConnection(PrinterPath); alert("Printer GPSACC01 has been added successfully") }} </script> <font color="#0000FF" face="Arial"> <a href="" onclick="addPrinter25(); return false;">GPSACC01</a></font> </body></html>
I've been going bonkers trying to find the answer to this question... I'm hoping somebody out there can help me. Our network environment is Active Directory and our web server is Windows 2003 IIS 6.
I've got an ASP page that we include into each of our pages to act as our companywide header. We force users to authenticate into our Intranet site, and we are able to display the following information about them on each page:
Welcome (username) Today is (whatever)
Can Javascript or Dhtml or something else get me this information? We have thousands and thousands of webpages and I don't want to have to use the .asp extension on every single one if I don't have to... but I can't find a way to display the username in the header without it =| Somebody mentioned using File System Objects, but I haven't yet experimented in that arena. Code:
There are multiple intranet pages with a list of names on them that are updated regularly.At the moment, there is no easy way to check if a name is on the pages without going in to each one at a time and searching them individually.
Is there a javascript script I could use to search all of the pages at the same time, and if a match is found, open the relevant page and highlight the result?
I have an asp.net app running on an Intranet. From one of my aspx pages I would like to run a javascript that will run the following command OUTSIDE of the IIS/asp.net environment on the CLIENT machine (remember, a controlled Intranet!). Is this possible? This windows program needs to be opened and data entered periodically while using the asp.net app as well.
The exe runs in a dos command window, tied to a Citrix ica file.
I have been using jQuery for only a few weeks now, replacing all of my standard js in a massive Intranet PHP application with lovely and space-saving jQuery. However, I've been using FF to write and test code while the company standard is IE6. Nothing works in IE6 - nada, zip, zilch. It bugs out on the very first call to the js file and wants me to begin debugging. Am I correct in assuming that I'm going to have to go back to regular js? I'd love to get the company to upgrade to IE7 - I've not seen ANY complaints about IE7 and jQuery.
Since the client user has no totally installed flash player in their computer, so that No need to detect if they have installed flash player. I try to create an alert and I found out that it�s impossible to put a link in the alert. Now I remove the flash installer in my computer, so that the flash in my webpage become a box. I want to happen when they open my webpage that contains a flash; an alert or message on the top was appearing saying that �You do not have flash installed in your computer. Follow this link to get the installer. I try it using alert but the link is impossible to appear.
i'm currently pitching some website development. The majority of this site is behind a paywall (meaning users must pay subscription to view the content). There is much talk about google analytics being used. I can't help but wonder a few things about this:
1) does google analytics function correctly behind a paywall -- i.e., when a session is required for viewing?
2) Does this present any kind of security problems?
I'm imagining that the google analytics script will most definitely load if embedded in a paywalled page. I'm also imagining that such a script could easily parse the content of that page and deliver it to google. Any thoughts on this matter are welcome.
I am trying to get my head around this AJAX/JS problem with IE where I am getting visitor info like cookie, ip, URL, referrer, user agent and sending it to an external domain where my database is storing all the stats for the client. In short something like Google Analytics does. My script is working fine in Firefox and chrome so far but getting "Access Denied" error on http.open() in IE. I did try derelict's method but I guess I am missing something and same thing happens in IE without error. It is not sending the data to external domain. I am sure many of you have tried and make it worked but I am not able to get it working. I have another option where I can add a php or asp file and use cURL to send the value but I want to make it simple like GA as there may be many clients with different servers and might not possible to add additional pages.
Code: //This is processJS.shtml page to use PHP within JS var guestID=getCookie('guestID'); if (guestID==null || guestID=="") { setCookie('guestID',"-1",365); } var guestID=getCookie('guestID'); var siteurl = '<!--#echo var="HTTP_HOST"-->'; var ip = '<!--#echo var="REMOTE_ADDR"-->'; var agent = '<!--#echo var="HTTP_USER_AGENT"-->'; var page = document.URL; var ref = document.referrer; var clientID = '123'; // clientID will be different for each client .....
This question pertains to Google Analytics (GA). GA provides a specific way you can assign a Goal to the event when a user clicks a link on your site that points to an external site.
Implementing this code isn't confusing, however, because it relies on the javascript onClick, I am worried it is conflicting with my links - as they, too, are configured using onClick. Here's an example of one of my links, with the GA onClick command added after it:
As you can see, I am using onClick twice in the same code. I don't think that that's correct syntax. I tried putting them together like this, but it didn't work:
I've noticed that my site has been loading slower lately, especially in google images. I'm thinking that this could be due to the google analytics javascript. I was told that page load slows down if its placed on top (which I have). Is this true? I'm not really warming up to GA but I also don't want to nix it completely. Bottom placement doesn't work for me as GA does not record then.
get some help setting up eCommerce on my Google Analytics account.How do I add a unique order ID to the javascript field? Do I just leave it blank? All of my customers are directed to the same thankyou page so I'm not sure how to track a bunch of unique order ID's on the one page.The code is on this site and the code I've altered below: I just need to alter the _addTrans and _addItem parts.http:[url]....This is my altered version:
HTML Code: <script type="text/javascript"> var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www.");[code]....
I was reading the Google Analytics support docs and it says that webmasters must be careful not to have ANY javascript errors on their webpages, because if there is an error, GA will not log visits for that page.
Is this true? I often wrap add onclick functions to various links on my pages dynamically, eventhough I may not have declared the specific onclick function in the page (thus causing an error). Does this mean it won't track when I setup GA?
With Google Analytics, you have to create a new profile for each domain, and post different code on each domain.
I'd like a traffic stats script (or website) where you can just add the same code for any domain, and that domain will be automatically tracked, even if it's a new domain. So if I have 100 domains and then add the same code to the 101st domain, it will track that domain fine.
Doesn't matter if the script needs to be hosted on your own server, or if it's 3rd party like Google Analytics. It can be commercial too if it's got an unlimited domain license. Anyone know of something like this?
I've noticed that Google uses JavaScript to pass information to their servers for processing. I can only imagine they're passing back the HTTP request of the current request to pull the data from to track sessions, page views, time spent, etc. Does anyone have an idea of how they're actually doing this?
so I figured I can track one page of the private website (intranet) through Google Analytics. The way I do this is by creating a page on a public website with just GA code, then putting a 1px x 1px iframe on the private website.
I have a form that captures users email addresses when they sign up for a enewsletter. I want to add this form submission into my google analytics and from what I have read the best way to do this is by tracking an event? I have added some jquery that I mashed together and I just want to know will this work? I added it today and I can only find out if it has truely worked by waiting 24 hours. I downloaded a program called fiddler (recommended in dot net magazine) to see tracking requests in action instead of waiting 24 hours but I can't see any of the field names displaying like AMF signup?
I'm trying to serve static content from a cookieless subdomain s.mydomain.org.uk, so that image/css requests from pages at [URL] don't get sent with needless cookie data. The trouble is that Google Analytics insists on adding its cookies (_utma, _utmz) to those requests anyway!
My code is: <script src="[URL]" type="text/javascript"></script> <script type="text/javascript"> try { var pageTracker = _gat._getTracker("xxxx"); pageTracker._setDomainName("www.mydomain.org.uk"); pageTracker._trackPageview(); } catch (err) { } </script>