The information and help page.
The first section is in reply to the comment from the guest page, by Geoff Phillips.
I do not see the guest page being used in this manner, there are other ways to put your point across, but for this exercise, I will allow it to remain in the guestbook
1. The counter used on this site is a programmable script, which allows individual page counts.
2. It is not just counter, it is a statistical tool. The total hits on the home page is just that, for the home page, this is the page, that the search engines seek out, and thus enters the site.
3. It does not add up the individual page hits and then adds them to the total visitors, what it does, is allow the webmaster to identify the most popular pages, it also allows each page to exhibit the total visitors to that page, if the webmaster so wishes.
4. This can be seen on the guest page, it can also be seen on the canny crack page, you will note there are more visitors to the guest page. This helps the webmaster to decide what works best, or what his visitors like the best.
5. There is also a independent statistical table provided by the server, for which I have no control.
you can see from the graphic provided by supanames just how popular this site is
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This table is provided by
supanames the server provider for mymarras. note: This is just for one month alone |
Want more proof, then find it here. From an independent ratings web site look at the traffic rank(ratings) for mymarras
Related Info for mymarras.co.uk-
I hope that clears up Mr. Phillips comments.

Another tool a webmaster can use is, the browser identifier, very useful, you will be amazed the difference one web page can look in different browsers. I can identify what browsers are used, what is the most popular, and then design a web page to suit.
How do I know which one you are using now?, well it all works because your computer sends a signature to other computers. It tells them want your operating system is: what is your browser; what version and so on. Yours is shown below; is it right?
//--> You are using the following: [an error occurred while processing this directive]