Recently a URL was posted on Ask Different that looked like this:
http://music.stackexchange.com/?as=1
Why does it have the "?as=1" at the end of it? I understand that it is part of the workings of the website, but what is its purpose?
|
Recently a URL was posted on Ask Different that looked like this: Why does it have the "?as=1" at the end of it? I understand that it is part of the workings of the website, but what is its purpose? |
|||||||
|
|
I've been exploring since yesterday in response to this comment and have found the following so far:
|
||||
|
|
We slap slugs onto links in places where we're looking for hard numbers about usage. Click through rates, visitors per share, that sort of thing. It's a decidedly low tech approach that has a couple of benefits.
Offhand, I know we're looking at newsletter links, the site drop down, the hot question drop down, and shared links (Twitter, Facebook, Google+). The data we collect can be used for figuring out whether certain features are worth keeping around or promoting. Sometimes it's just trying to measure the effectiveness of changes. |
|||||||||
|
|
Actually, Kevin is correct. It's just to let Stack Exchange's staff know how are things going. All sites in the dropdown menu have |
|||||||||
|