You can see them now! With fancy graphs, or the raw data -- you want "newbyday". (With the caveat that newbyday doesn't reflect how many people created accounts, just how many accounts were created; it counts the pseudo-accounts that are created as part of the import in that number, so one person creating an account and then importing their journal might be responsible for dozens or hundreds of "new accounts" if they had a lot of commenters who hadn't also commented in a journal someone had already imported. Like, if someone imports a journal I'd commented on with my LJ account, that wouldn't include an extra "account created", because the pseudo-account for my LJ account was created ages ago, but if someone imports a journal that has a comment by susiefromlj, and their journal is the only place susiefromlj ever commented, that would.)
no subject
You can see them now! With fancy graphs, or the raw data -- you want "newbyday". (With the caveat that newbyday doesn't reflect how many people created accounts, just how many accounts were created; it counts the pseudo-accounts that are created as part of the import in that number, so one person creating an account and then importing their journal might be responsible for dozens or hundreds of "new accounts" if they had a lot of commenters who hadn't also commented in a journal someone had already imported. Like, if someone imports a journal I'd commented on with my LJ account, that wouldn't include an extra "account created", because the pseudo-account for my LJ account was created ages ago, but if someone imports a journal that has a comment by susiefromlj, and their journal is the only place susiefromlj ever commented, that would.)
IT IS A LITTLE BUSY, YES.