Hi Brian, awesome :-) I particularly found the engagement stats to be quite impressive, that's really showing how the community is involved. For the future, I'd like to suggest that showing how the page-edits are spread across users, and how big the edits are would make it even more interesting. Also, the number and size of code-checkins are one obvious addition that would be great to see. btw, I'm not familiar with Google Analytics so I don't how much its giving you that wasn't shown, but we found Piwik to be a very nice tool, particularly because of the exit statistics, and the goal tracking. With the latter, one can define "goal pages", differentiating them from index pages such as /wiki/. Check out http://piwik.org/docs/tracking-goals-web-analytics/ and http://demo.piwik.org/ Its more geared towards a site-improvement look than pure statistics, but does both very well. keep up the good work :-) cheers, Ingo On Mon, Aug 22, 2011 at 10:29 PM, Brian Gerkey wrote: > hi, > > The first ROS Community Metrics Report is available: >  http://www.ros.org/wiki/Metrics > > The goal of this report is to provide an objective, quantitative > snapshot of the size and activity of the community.  We want to get a > sense of how the community is growing and changing, and what we can > all do to have even more impact with our work. > > This report is our first attempt at measuring the community, and > there's a lot of room for improvement.  Please help us make it better! > >        brian. > > -- > http://brian.gerkey.org > _______________________________________________ > ros-users mailing list > ros-users@code.ros.org > https://code.ros.org/mailman/listinfo/ros-users > -- Ingo Lütkebohle Bielefeld University http://www.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de/~iluetkeb/ PGP Fingerprint 3187 4DEC 47E6 1B1E 6F4F  57D4 CD90 C164 34AD CE5B