An Internet user who accesses and browses a Web site A visitor will create one 'hit' on a Web server for each single file they access, such as an HTML page, text file or image
A superior, or a person lawfully appointed for the purpose, who makes formal visits of inspection to a corporation or an institution
One person coming to your web site regardless of how many pages they visit creating multiple hits When analyzing the popularity of your web site, look at the visits or visitors, not the number of hits
Anyone who does not normally work within HSB, or who visits HSB less than 3 times a week
any individual that links to a TI web page via email issued from the Prime Response system
Any person temporarily on the worksite who is not regularly involved in the daily worksite activities This includes, but is not limited to, delivery personnel, invited guest, the general public, etc
A member of the teaching staff nominated by a School and appointed by the External and Collaborative Programmes Committee to oversee the staff, delivery and assessment procedures of a Partner Organisation involved in the delivery of a validated programme leading to an award of the University In the case of an accredited institution the Visitor may be known as a Subject consultant
Any person entering a cleared facility who is not an employee of that facility is a visitor A classified visitor is one who, in the national interest and in the performance of a classified contract or other approved program, requires access to classified information An unclassified visitor is one who has no access authorization status and/or need-to-know, but has a legitimate need to enter a facility
This is a person who visits your website They are also known as users One type is called a unique visitor This is a person who visits your website more then once within a specific time period There is a lot of software available to track unique visitors, since this is usually more in depth and more useful information then just tracking hits to a page (since hits do not differentiate between visitors) Unique visitors are calculated from obtaining the IP address from the person visiting
A person coming to the US for a temporary stay of limited duration See Non-Immigrant
A visitor is defined as a series of hits, with no idle time of 30 minutes or more between any two hits, from the same IP address Explanation: when a web surfer arrives at your site, he/she requests the files, such as GIFs and JPEGs, that make up that particular page Each request is a hit, and they are delivered in quick succession, with no more than few seconds between them (from the server's perspective) When Urchin detects a gap of more than 30 minutes between any two hits from the same IP address, it is assumed that it is a new visitor This is usually true, since most large ISPs, such as EarthLink, recycle idle IP addresses
cleric who makes periodic official visitations to secular and regular clergy in his diocese
A person who goes to a specific Web site Sites often define their traffic levels in terms of the number of visitors they've had in a given time period Top
any person visiting a country other than that in which he has his usual place of residence for any reason other than following an occupation remunerated from within the country visited
A person not involved in experimental programs at the NSLS, will be on-site for less than thirty (30) days, and will not be returning to the NSLS within one year Visitors are not registered in the NSLS Database unless they are foreign nationals from a sensitive country
An individual who interacts with a Web site I/PRO uses Unique IP Addresses with heuristic statistical modeling to identify a visitor This is one of the four methodologies approved by the IAB, and the only one that can be applied to all Web sites