Tuesday, September 11, 2018

The Most Powerful Tool for Analyzing your Website Data


Many website owners often wonder what their visitors would be doing once they arrive at their websites or blogs. Do they read an article or do they click on any links, navigation tabs, categories or ads? Would it not be great if the website owners could see how exactly the traffic is behaving when they visit the sites? It is not just a possibility today but a necessity and there are tools that are available to analyze the data on the website along with the behavior of the visitors. One of the most important among such tools is a website heatmap. Clickmaps Creators There are many companies who create a heatmap and clickmaps for your websites and blogs. One such company is https://www.seevolution.com/website-heatmaps. Clickmaps will track the clicks and will give results that highlight exactly where a website is excelling or falling apart in attracting the click-throughs. A heatmap can be easy to find using Google Analytics. A blog can be provided with a plugin to have access to this information. Clickmaps and Color Sliders Clickmaps use cell sizes and colors so that complex information can be displayed in a smart way. A heatmap is one of the most powerful tools for data analysis that are available for business. It is a feature that helps the website owners to visualize a presentation of multiple rows of information in a style that assigns different colors and sizes to the cells; each cell represents a row. A color slider at the bottom of the heatmap allows the user to spot all the highs and the lows quite easily. This would not be possible on a conventional bar chart to have such data represented. The result will be a clutter and it would not be practical. On a heatmap, you can have a cell assigned to each representation. The Clickmaps will be able to sort the data out by the size of the cells. Why are the Web Pages losing Searchers? Many businesses today are using clickmaps to test out new ideas on how to evolve effective landing pages. The big question is, “Why are the web pages losing searchers?” Is it because of the content which is poor and not engaging enough? The answer may be lying in a blend of certain variables that have to be potentially tested. You can begin with Clickmaps. They are a sure fire way of understanding where the website visitors or viewers are paying attention to. It allows the website owners to find out what their visitors tend to look at initially. The website owners can then try and rearrange their web pages in such a way that the most crucial content is displayed at the right places. Giving sufficient Time for a Website Heatmap to be Effective The data that is localized through a website heatmap can become useful for a web developer who will be in a position to modify the locations of where the check buttons can be placed. When you subscribe to a service provider, you will have to be clear about the number of web pages that you would like to get tracked to get the website heatmap process started. Once the data is entered, codes will be given to be inserted into the web pages so that user experience information can be gathered and preserved by the website and viewed through the heat maps. Enough time has to be provided for the tools to collect vital information. Accumulation of data for a period of three months is reasonable to make sure you have a fair idea of what is happening on your web pages before you think in terms of modifying them for achieving positive results.

The First Molecular Biologist of the World


THE FIRST MOLECULAR BIOLOGIST OF THE WORLD - THE GREATEST OF ALL PHILOSOPHERS AND SCIENTISTS OF ALL ERAS (IMAM ALI IBN E ABI TALIB as). “And at the very heart of life on earth - the proteins that control cell chemistry and the nucleic acid (DNA) that carry hereditary instructions - we find these molecules to be identical in all the plants and animals. An oak tree and I (Carl Sagan) are made of the same stuff. If you go far enough back, we have a common ancestor.” Cosmos:Carl Sagan,page 24. The above paragraph is taken form the best selling science book ‘Cosmos’ by a great science man and atheist: Carl Sagan, Director of Viking mission to mars at NASA. The main point of the above paragraph is that all living things are the same with respect to their fundamental ingredients. All the living things, from virus to human beings, have chromosomes for storing genetic information, the chromosomes are made of DNA just as a cloth or your shirt is made of fine continuous thread. And Carl Sagan’s conclusion on this phenomenon (similarity of all living things) is that it proves the common ancestry of all the living things. Now coming to another paragraph, but not from Carl Sagan's book, but from Nahjul Balagha, the paragraph is as follows, “If you tread on the path of your thinking and reach it's extremity it will not lead you anywhere except that the originator of the ant is the same as he who is the originator of the date palm, because everything has same delicacy and detail and every living being has little difference.” Nahjul Balagha: sermon.183, page 305. A thousand year old copy of Nahjul Balagha is still available at the library of Mosul, Iraq. The main point of the above paragraph of Imam Ali (a.s) is same as that of Carl Sagan's; that there is very little difference between-living-things. On analysis of the above mentioned paragraphs, it appears as if Carl Sagan and Imam Ali (a.s) are contemporaries, but everyone knows that Imam Ali (a.s) lived 1400 years before Carl Sagan. It is amazing that a man living in 700 AD in Arabia, the land of sand, ignorance, wars and scarce water should know that living things are made of the same stuff, and that there is very less difference between them. But amazingly Imam Ali (a.s) establishes a very different conclusion from the similarity among living things; that they have the same creator. Carl Sagan, a hardcore atheist and Imam Ali (a.s), a hardcore believer in God, as expected amazingly, reached the opposite conclusions about the same phenomenon (similarity of living things). A believer can accept both the conclusions and still have his faith intact, but if an atheist accepts Imam Ali’s (a.s) conclusion then he has to loose his atheism. DNA was discovered in 1950, and we know that all living things from virus, bacteria, and plants to human beings are made of DNA. So it is very correct to say that living things have little difference among them. At this stage the saying of the PROPHET (Pbuh) of Islam: ''I am the city of knowledge and Ali (a.s) is It’s gate, is realized in its greatness. ALL THE PRAISES ARE DUE TO ALLAH.

A cricketer who has left his stamp on the game


Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar was born in Bombay on 24th April 1973. He began his cricket career at Sharadashram Vidyamandir High School in Bombay under the coaching of Ramakant Achrekar. When he was 15 years and 232 days old, Sachin Tendulkar scored an unbeaten century in his debut first class match for Bombay against Gujarat on 11th December 1988, making him the youngest player to score a century on first class debut. He made his international debut for India, playing his first test match at 16 years 205 days, making him the third youngest player in the history of cricket to make a debut behind Hasan Raza (14 years 227 days) and Mushtaq Mohammad (15 years 124 days). He got his debut test century in England, making him then as the second youngest cricketer in history at 17 years 107 days behind Mushtaq Mohammad of Pakistan who made his century against India in 1961 at Delhi when he was 17 years 78 days old. Mohammad Ashraful of Bangladesh went on to become the youngest test centurion against Sri Lanka at Colombo in 2001 when he was 17 years 61 days old. Sachin Tendulkar, today, holds most if not all of the records that a batsman could endeavour to break. He has the highest number of appearances in test cricket as well as one day internationals. He has the highest number of test centuries (51), highest number of one day centuries (48), highest number of runs scored ever in tests (14692), highest number of runs scored ever in one day internationals (18111) and the highest individual score in one day internationals (200 not out). As far as Indian cricket representation goes, Sachin Tendulkar has contributed the greatest.

The Flying Sikh who has become a living Legend in India


Milkha Singh was born on 17th October 1935 in Lyallpur which has now become Faisalabad in Pakistan. He was not even twelve years old when his parents were killed right in front of his own eyes during the partition riots in Pakistan. He was heartbroken and escaped, literally running for his life, crossing the border by hanging on to the under carriage of a train that was bound for Delhi. The train was packed with refugees that were escaping to India. Once he reached Delhi, he turned to the army for his bread and butter. The Services were responsible for giving him a life support system. His Commanding Officer saw his potential as an athlete and encouraged him to take up athletics on a full time basis. The Services nurtured his dream. He had a dream and an obsession for running in track events that dominated Asian athletics to such an extent that he was respected in Manila and Tokyo during his important years on the track as a `Flying Sikh’. It is because of his determination that he showed in these early years that made the sport of athletics as his salvation and turned him into a living legend of Indian sport. During his career, he represented India in two Asian Games, two Commonwealth Games and three Olympics. He came into the limelight at the National Games in Patiala in 1956. Then he went on in the subsequent years to set a record in the 200 metres as well as the 400 metres races at Cuttack. Milkha Singh made his Olympic debut at Melbourne in 1956. It was an uneventful participation for him as he did not make a mark in any event but learnt much from the advice of an American Charles Jenkins who won the 400 metres event there. This turned out to be the turning point in Milkha Singh’s career. He trained so violently at times that he would end up vomiting blood. In the 1958 Asiad at Tokyo, he beat Pakistan’s Abdul Khan in the 200 metres race and also won the 400 metres race that became his favourite event in the future. He became a celebrity in the Asian sporting circle. In the same year at the Commonwealth Games at Cardiff that were known as the Empire Games then, he won the 400 metres race in 46.6 seconds beating the South African, Malcolm Spence. He peaked well for the Rome Olympics in 1960. He qualified for the finals. Everyone was expecting him to get a medal but the final round was tough with the best qualifiers from the world and he was pipped at the post by the same South African Malcolm Spence by a fraction of 0.01 second to come fourth even though he finished at a record 45.7 seconds from Indian standards. An Olympic medal eluded him. He went on to win the 400 metre events gold at Manila and Jakarta in the later years. Throughout India’s entire sporting history, there was not a single person who could dominate in athletics on an international level. India does not have much of a tradition in the field of sports like men’s track and field events. It is very hard to swallow the fact that a nation of over a billion people could not create heroes in track and field events in the Olympics. Yet, Milkha Singh was that first lone athlete to reach an Olympics final and almost picked up a bronze medal for India in Rome. His track record speaks highly of him. He has won 77 of the 80 races he ran during his career. After Tenzing Norgay Sherpa, he is perhaps the greatest sportsman for India. He was awarded the Padma Shri in 1958. He has become Director of Sports in the Punjab Government. His son, Jeev Milkha Singh, has kept his father’s head high by becoming the first Indian golfer to become a member of the European Tour.