I know about the graphs on the file management page, but I am not concerned with those. I am talking about the statistics on the Scan2 home page, the column headed "Typ" is supposed to show how many pages I have transcribed, but it counts a double page scan as 1 page not 2 the same goes for the columns headed "All" and "56 day". The second is on my allocations page there is a link called "Individual Graphs" this page has Rankings!! and the figures are based on "Total Pages Transcribed" and "Total Pages Transcribed in the last 4 weeks", therefore if some pages have more or less entries than others, what is the point? When I have just slogged through a double page scan (and I really don't like them, they seem never ending) it doesn't do much for moral. Lucille -------Original Message------- From: Philip Powell Date: 16 November 2003 17:15:23 In message <001c01c3ac56$8e72f7d0$023d1dac@dickhome>, Dick Bond <dick@bonds.plus.com> writes >Having just completed my first 2 Page Scan and submitted it, I note >that it only appears to be included in the statistics of completed >pages as a single page. I know that 'it is not a competition', but >should it not be registered as a submission of 2 pages? If you look on the FreeBMD file management page you will find that the details are recorded as uploaded files rather than pages and you can also see how many actual entries you have uploaded. Actual entries make more sense than pages [or files] because the latter vary in size. Typically, typeset pages have 375 entries whereas as handwritten pages have only 40. Of course, you won't be able to see yours until the next database update - which I'd guess will be starting in the next few days. >If it is worth compiling statistics, then it is also worth having them >correct. (Or should we be recording 'submissions' rather than 'pages') Once your files have been entered into the database you will see that that is the case - though they are referred to as "entries" rather than "submissions" and are additional to the list of actual files. -- Philip Powell Looking north across the Derwent Valley and Northumberland to The Cheviot .