Elixium Posted April 21, 2013 Share Posted April 21, 2013 Hi all. I'm looking for some stats in particular.. which day(s) usually have the highest peak of concurrent logins over say.. the past year+ and also between which hours SLT does peak logins usually occur?This is the closest thing I've found so far.. http://dwellonit.taterunino.net/sl-statistical-charts/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Amethyst Jetaime Posted April 21, 2013 Share Posted April 21, 2013 This may help http://gridsurvey.com/index.php?r=d Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Daniel Voyager Posted May 2, 2013 Share Posted May 2, 2013 For all SL metrics visit my blog http://danielvoyager.wordpress.com/sl-metrics/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Perrie Juran Posted May 2, 2013 Share Posted May 2, 2013 Daniel Voyager wrote: For all SL metrics visit my blog http://danielvoyager.wordpress.com/sl-metrics/ Nice way to drive traffic to your site. Especially considering it links me back to Tyche Shepard's Grid Survey which Amethyst already posted above. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmm. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tyche Shepherd Posted May 3, 2013 Share Posted May 3, 2013 Based on past 12 months to yesterday Saturdays and Sundays have higher concurrency then the rest of the week (this is significant at the 95% confidence level) 13:00 and 14:00 SLT (1 - 2 pm) are the busiest hours - again this is a statistically significant finding at the 95 confidence level These charts illustrate the mean concurrency over day of week and hour of day. This analysis is based on sampling SL concurrency at 5 minute intervals over the past year. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kantbe Thursday Posted May 20, 2015 Share Posted May 20, 2015 Are there any current SL usage statistics still being reported, particularly relative to time of day and day of week concurrency? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ZoeTick Posted May 20, 2015 Share Posted May 20, 2015 Who cares? It's like taking the temperature of someone who has swallowed a fatal dose of cyanide. It might tell you something, but it wouldn't be very useful and it certainly wouldn't change what was going to happen. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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