Clockify Saved Reports for Half Month - clockify

Is there anyway to save reports in Clockify for a half-month period (i.e. 1-15th of the month and 16th-end)? We pay twice monthly and ideally can save off a report that can be used for a half month period.
UPDATE
Choosing a 15 day range 1st-15th and then scrolling does not work as Clockfy maintains the range size (15 days) rather than the concept of half month.
UPDATE2
Perhaps the question can better be phrased as: "does Clockify have any sort of semantic period of time for 'half-month' (aka semimonthly) that will be maintained when advancing time periods?"

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Get routes with historical LIVE data

I would like to retrieve historical travel times from HERE API.
Following the API documentation for 'Calculate Route', I requested travel times for a fixed route at a fixed departure time for different days in the past, using mode=fastest;car;traffic:enabled.
The result is the same route every day and a weekday pattern (i.e., same travel time each Monday) for travel times. This obviously does not include actual traffic conditions on the specified day.
From the documentation, I would have expected to get specific travel times for each day in the past (up to one year).
Did I miss something or is this just not possible?
Thanks a lot for any help!
It is not possible to get the exact route for a past date. For any date other than NOW(current time), the route is calculated with the accumulated historical data taking into consideration the week day, time of the day, any construction work etc.

Google Analytics: How to compare real-time vs yesterday?

In the REAL-TIME / Overview page, you can see how much people are currently browsing your site. Although, how do you know if this current value is good or bad? I would like to know how much people were browsing my site the same time the day before, so I would know if I have 5% more or less people.
Also, how would I know if the site is doing it better or worse than 1, 2 or 5 hours before? The REAL-TIME shows the last 30 minutes of per minute page-views, but how do I know if the site is going down or up compared to a few hours before? 30 minutes is not enough.
Is there any add-on to add, custom modification to make, or free/paid service to complement?
You want to use the standard ("core") reporting. The dimensions that will help you are (UI / API):
Hour / ga:hour: A two-digit hour of the day ranging from 00-23 in the timezone configured for the account. This value is also corrected for daylight savings time. If the timezone follows daylight savings time, there will be an apparent bump in the number of sessions during the changeover hour (e.g., between 1:00 and 2:00) for the day per year when that hour repeats. A corresponding hour with zero sessions will occur at the opposite changeover. (Google Analytics does not track user time more precisely than hours.)
Hour of day / ga:dateHour: Combined values of ga:date and ga:hour formated as YYYYMMDDHH
Date Hour and Minute / ga:dateHourMinute: Combined values of ga:date, ga:hour and ga:minute formated as YYYYMMDDHHMM
Hour Index / ga:nthHour: The index for each hour in the specified date range. The index for the first hour of the first day (i.e., start-date) in the date range is 0, for the next hour 1, and so on
With the UI you can add a secondary dimension to reports or build custom reports, with the API you can need to build your requests from scratch (try the explorer, official API doc).

Searching a range of events in a time graph

I'm trying to implement the graph from this blog post: http://blog.neo4j.org/2012/02/modeling-multilevel-index-in-neoj4.html
Inside the blogpost is a schematic of the graph and a query on how to find a range of events. However in my use case i don't have a set consecutive days. So for example the current state of the graph could be that i have day nodes from 12-7-2013 (12 july 2013) to 12-8-2013 (12 august 2013). Then when adding an event on 12-7-2014 i'm missing all the inbetween days for a whole year!
First problem is if i start to write queries that generate those days it might become very slow (application needs to be responsive). Second problem is i end up with days on which no event could be taken place, and so have unneeded data in my database.
So my question is: How can i get a range of events without using the NEXT relation between days?

Counting occurances outside the range of my report

In Crystal Reports XI I am writing a report that displays all companies that have been sent legal referals in the past week. I want to add a fiel to the report that can count how many times (if any) each company that has been refered this week has been refered in the past. I am not sure how to execute this since I need to use two different date parameters. One for the main report (1 week) and one for the past count (3 years).

Confusion over Google Analytics (GA) Absolute Unique Visitors data

GA Unique Visitors data isn't making sense to me. From the GA FAQ we get the following definition for 'Visits vs. Visitors'
"The initial session by a user during any given date range is considered to be an additional visit and an additional visitor. Any future sessions from the same user during the selected time period are counted as additional visits, but not as additional visitors. "
The part that I can't resolve with the GA graph is "Any future sessions from the same user during the selected time period are counted as additional visits, but not as additional visitors". For the graph below covering a 30-day period, I would understand the GA definition to mean that the data represents uniqueness across all 30 days, right? But if you look at the screen shot below, you see a regular pattern for each week over the 30-day period the report covers. From that, it seems the numbers we are seeing associated with each of the days of the graph (e.g. 3.92% (4142) for Tuesday, September 8) is a count of unique visitors just in the context of that one day - i.e. without correlating their uniqueness to the rest of the days in the 30-day period. If the graph actually showed uniqueness across the 30-day period, I would expect the daily numbers to start high in the early days of the period and decrease over the 30-day period as the number of already-seen visitors (i.e. returning visitors) increases, no?
What am I missing here?
UPDATE
Helpful clue from Jonathan S. below got me on the right track.
I think I understand now what the daily bar graph values mean, but it's a little counter-intuitive and I'd bet not what some others might be assuming as well. The reports states "39,822 Absolute Unique Visitors" at the top, which means just that: over the 30-day period we saw this many uniques. Fair enough. The confusing part is that the daily (or weekly) bar values in the graph below are not mutually exclusive uniques as I had assumed, but are values relative only to the 39,822 total - i.e. there is overlap between the unique visitor counts across any group of days. This means the sum of the daily % values > 100% and the sum of the daily count values > 39,822. The algorithm is: when you visit for the first time in the 30-day period, call that "today", you add 1 to the total (39,822) and 1 to the "today" bar value. When you show up again "tomorrow", you are NOT counted again in the total, but ARE counted as 1 in the "tomorrow" bar value.
alt text http://img.skitch.com/20090922-djti81ejj5gqn575ibf8cj1e8x.jpg
I believe it's just an issue of grouping. The top right of the graph has 3 icons to group by day, week, or month. It's currently grouping by day. So if I visit your site today and come back tomorrow, I'll be counted once for each day.
I tried looking at the month view for one of my sites but it didn't give me much meaningful data. I believe the above should answer your original confusion though.
Is it possible that you're searching for something what isn't existing anymore? Unique Visitors/Visits is old terminology. Check: https://www.seroundtable.com/google-analytics-sessions-users-18424.html
Then check how sessions and users are defined:
Sessions ("ex-visits", it's very detailed): https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/2731565?hl=en&ref_topic=1012046
Users in Google Analytics reporting are defined as "Users who have initiated at least one session during the date range". So IMHO it's not about 30 days, it's about the SELECTED date range.
I hope this helps.

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