Google lighthouse law suite in Europe issue - lighthouse

I'm going to use the Google Lighthouse, but afraid that there might be an issue with Google Lighthouse is that Google lost a law suite in Europe due to the fact that the lighthouse is storing some PII in Google US Data center.
Is there some configuration in Lighthouse that allows to choose the Data Center location for storing PII?
Is it possible to choose any of Google data center within EU?

Related

Can google adwords conversion tracking be implemented with a backend integration?

We're setting up adwords tracking at the moment, but one of the requirements is that we let adwords optimise based on our net earnings figures, which only our backend is aware of. For google analytics, we send these figures via the data measurement protocol. Is there something similar to use for adwords? Or what is the approach given those requirements?
https://developers.google.com/adwords/api/docs/guides/conversion-tracking
I've seen there's offline conversion tracking here: https://support.google.com/google-ads/answer/2998031?hl=en
But if my understanding is correct, this will require some manual work. Is there a way to achieve the same thing in an automated way?

Uber api number of nearby drivers

I was wondering if the current api can tell the number of drivers near a given location. It would be more interesting if i can see how close they are to location.
We currently don't expose this granularity of data through the Rides API. The closest to this feature would be the estimates related to Uber products. For instance, you can get the ETA (in seconds) for available Uber products, which is an indicator of how close driver partners are to the given location.
Thanks for raising the question and expressing your interest in such a feature. It helps us to understand what the community is looking for so we can prioritize what gets built and released in the future!
Keep an eye on the Uber Developers blog for news around current and upcoming APIs.

Mobile iOS usage tracking

I'm currently looking for a way to track basic user data for mobile iOS application:
how many times the app was launched
what was the average/by session time spent in total while using app
what was the average/by session time spent on particular screen
Additionally, I'd like the solution to:
display a heatmaps or click/tap/maps (clickstreams), to show how users tried to interact with the interface
generate visit graphs (user started from this screen, then went to this screen, etc.)
The most important requirement is that this is for internal application testing (nothing malicious), and we want to categorize data by user logged in (so that we can gather data per user, not some general average).
Can anyone recommend a suitable tool? Price or paid, doesn't matter. Is Google Analytics up for the job, or do we need something else?
Youve got several options to track the user behavior in the app. You can use frameworks like :
Flurry (http://www.flurry.com/)
Mixpanel (http://mixpanel.com/)
Localytics (http://www.localytics.com/)
Google analytics
Im pretty sure there are more. Flurry is free (for now but you have some special paid features) and it´s broadly used. It´s the framework I use the most for my apps in these moments but it will depend of the client and the information you want to track. You can track events, events with information, see the stats of use, how the user has used the application, find dead holes in your app and broadly speaking, have a general idea about how your application has been used. The other frameworks are not free and you have to pay for the services but you can always use a trial version to see if this is what you want or not. Ive used localytics and its nice.
Ive tried all of them, and there are pros and cons, but to get a general idea about your application, everyone serves. Regarding heatmaps, Im not sure about that, I mean if some of the frameworks offer a solution like that, but you can always build your reports with the provided information (I know it´s not a straightforward thing or a 5 minutes thing).
Take a look, compare and decide which one can fit the best for you.
Well these days app analysis is very important and are of great help. There are large number of analytics tools available. Some of them are free some of them are paid.
below are some of them
Flurry
Google Analytics
Heatmaps
These are few which are used most. For most list visit this link
Hope this will help you. happy coding :)

Is there any way to "backdate" requests to google server-side analytics?

I have an iOS app which can be used offline. I need to do anonymous page view tracking, so our customers can tell which pages people are most interested in (to drive future investments). So when the user is offline, we save a timestamped page view list, and if the user happens to be online when they use the app, we send these historic records up, and also do real-time tracking.
I'm keeping some summary statistics in my GAE app, so I can report the page views with historic accuracy. However, I'm also feeding these views into google analytics, using some python code I ported from google's server-side samples.
That all works great (except for language tracking, which I may have solved thanks to a separate question here on SO). However, I'd love for google analytics to be able to understand the historical hits in context. Right now, if I connect up after looking at several pages offline, GA thinks I just popped through a bunch of pages over the course of a couple seconds.
There is no documented utm variable for timestamping. The google analytics SDK for iOS (which I'm not using) has this ominous note:
Known Issues
Possible inaccurate timestamps: timestamps are recorded at the time the application dispatches to Google Analytics, so if a user experiences long periods of offline use, the timestamps may not be 100% accurate.
That seems like a bit of an understatement. Wouldn't offline timestamps be 100% inaccurate?
Anyway, the fact that the SDK doesn't handle this right makes me think I'm not going to be able to solve this. But I figured some SO wizard might have an idea...
In fact, timestamp is a "relative" (client side) information used by Analytics to compute things like "time on page".
When the page is view in "absolute" (date and time) is always the time you send the request.

currency rates from yahoo finance limitations

I'm trying to write a script that would download currency rates from yahoo finance. The problem is ... i can't find any information on the limitations of this service. Especially i'm interested in how often i can query yahoo finance to access the quotes.csv file. Would yahoo kill my script if i executed it periodically every minute or so? Does anyone know where i could find some official yahoo information of things like that? I've been searching for hours, but it's either well hidden or it's just hiding in plain sight and i don't see it...
Usually its against the TOS of the website. However if you want to collect data that way on a small scale it is fairly trivial. I have mined yahoo finance in the past and have never been turned off. Don't hammer the site...space out your requests. If you want to be even more clever about it script a web browser to do it for you. The page requests will then look identical.

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