"2022","9","9","2"
>>
>> "/wikipedia/commons/c/ca/Wiki_Loves_Monuments_Logo_notext.svg","image","svg","682088336","168655","image_0_199","user","en.wikipedia","2022-09-09T22
ents_Logo_notext.svg","image","svg","682088336","168655","image_0_199","user","en.wikipedia","2022-09-09T22:00:00Z","2022","9","9","22"
>
> Can you do some poking around to see i
quot;2022-09-09T22:00:00Z","2022","9","9","22"
Can you do some poking around to see if there's a size in bytes that would
be a good threshold, or a standard transcoding that is most used on
articles, or anything that would allow us to filter to only the
across different
linguistic versions
Best
Michele
From: Dan Andreescu
Date: Friday, 4 November 2022 at 15:17
To: Michele Mauri
Cc: A mailing list for the Analytics Team at WMF and everybody who has an
interest in Wikipedia and analytics.
Subject: [Analytics] Re: Mediacounts fields
I see. In
I see. In practice, the mediaviewer instrumentation also had some
inaccuracies. For example, the code pre-fetched certain images when
opening a gallery even if the viewer never ended up looking at them. I
think they adjusted the instrumentation to account for that, but I don't
remember the detai
Thanks. My goal is to understand which are the most viewed images on Commons
through Wikipedia. By reading the mediacount description, it is possible to get
the number of transfers. But if I got it well it counts all the images
transferred to the user, making difficult to understand which have b
We don't have any public data on media viewer interactions specifically.
We used to have instrumentation on that feature but we haven't tracked it
since last year. To get access to some of the old sanitized data that was
retained for research purposes, you'd have to file a formal research
proposal