The latest rankings

Published: 11 December 1999 y., Saturday
Online retailer Amazon.com increased its buyers by 50 percent over the last month, according to the latest rankings released by PC Data Online. Amazon.com hosted an estimated 1.8 million home-based buyers in November, ahead of Buy.com and eToys.com, both of which saw significant gains. The top Web drug store sites also held fast to their positions, suggesting that drug store products, especially health and beauty items, may be solidifying their position among top e-commerce circles. PC Data Online estimates the purchase rate based on the number of unique home-based Web users who visit a transaction-related page within each site. The information is gathered through a proprietary software tool that tracks "unique visitors" on each Web site. Every visitor or buyer is counted once, regardless of how many times the individual visits a site or buys from a site.
Šaltinis: Cyberatlas
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

ZyXEL teams with France Telecom

ZyXEL's Award-Winning Prestige 100IH Allows French more »

Clinton administration releases crypto export rules

The Clinton administration released long-awaited export rules ondata-scrambling technology, quickly winning support from software industry groups that had criticized earlier proposals. more »

Making East Meet West

Internet Company Brings American Products to Japan more »

Welsh IT firm wins internet awards

The firm_s product has implications for jobs in Wales. more »

Phone carriers get call surges, not Y2K glitches

AT&T processed 1.5 million calls in the first five minutes of 2000 on the East Coast in a traffic surge experienced by most of the major telephone carriers. more »

Meeting the 2000 technology challenge

U.S. "pleasantly surprised" by Y2K bug_s scarcity. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Clinton Seeks More Spending for Computer Security

President Clinton proposed boosting government spending on computer security by some $280 million as part of a long-term plan to guard against threats ranging from hackers to terrorists. more »

Finland: Where the Wireless Are

While the world waits for wireless applications, the Finns are rolling them out to the home market. more »

Macworld hardware report

The serious and the wacky. more »