San Francisco-based startup Andromedia has a new system to ease the pain
of extracting useful visitor information from large Web sites with lots
of traffic.
Aria is designed to obtain real-time data about individual and
overall activity. Rather than throwing a log file into a relational
database, the Aria system captures the data as it comes in. Its monitor
component sits alongside the Web server, capturing all the information
that passes between it and the browser. The system issues cookies
to track individual users. The recorder processes the data into an
object database, and a reporter module delivers customizable reports.
You can also access the six main objects (visitor, visitor aggregate,
content, content aggregate, server and content category), via an API
for specialized applications.
Aria runs on Solaris and works with Netscape servers. A Windows NT version,
which works with the Apache server and Microsoft's IIS server, is in the
works, and a Java-based reporter module is scheduled for early 1997.
Pricing runs from $1,800 to $35,000, based on the scale of your Web
operation.