Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-28 Thread Randy Pratt
On Thu, 28 Sep 2006 18:27:10 -0400
Kris Kennaway <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> On Thu, Sep 28, 2006 at 09:09:33AM +0200, Oliver Fromme wrote:
> 
> > By the way (apropos default policies):  Guess why OpenBSD
> > has gotten ahead of FreeBSD in the statistics?  It has been
> > growing at a much higer rate all the time, and will continue
> > to do so.  Soon the statistics will "prove" that OpenBSD's
> > user base is ten times larger than FreeBSD's, because we
> > won't have a bsdstats option in sysinstall in 6.2-Release.
> > I'd be willing to submit a patch (I'm somewhat familiar
> > with the sysinstall code), but I assume it's too late
> > because we're already in code freeze, and sysinstall is
> > a particularly critical piece of code.  Apart from that,
> > such a patch will probably be shredded to pieces by
> > bike shed discussions.
> 
> Just submit it...if it is too late for 6.2 (not guaranteed) then it
> would be in time for 6.3.  The surest way to make sure it never gets
> into sysinstall is for nobody to ever submit a patch.

Perhaps there could be a message added to /etc/motd as an
alternative for 6.2-R if its too late to be included in sysinstall.
Modification of a text file should be of less concern.

Using the motd might also bring it to the attention to those who
will just upgrade and never see sysinstall (as well as those who
almost never read mailing lists).

Just a thought.

Randy


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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-28 Thread Kris Kennaway
On Thu, Sep 28, 2006 at 09:09:33AM +0200, Oliver Fromme wrote:

> By the way (apropos default policies):  Guess why OpenBSD
> has gotten ahead of FreeBSD in the statistics?  It has been
> growing at a much higer rate all the time, and will continue
> to do so.  Soon the statistics will "prove" that OpenBSD's
> user base is ten times larger than FreeBSD's, because we
> won't have a bsdstats option in sysinstall in 6.2-Release.
> I'd be willing to submit a patch (I'm somewhat familiar
> with the sysinstall code), but I assume it's too late
> because we're already in code freeze, and sysinstall is
> a particularly critical piece of code.  Apart from that,
> such a patch will probably be shredded to pieces by
> bike shed discussions.

Just submit it...if it is too late for 6.2 (not guaranteed) then it
would be in time for 6.3.  The surest way to make sure it never gets
into sysinstall is for nobody to ever submit a patch.

Kris

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Description: PGP signature


Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-28 Thread Marc G. Fournier

On Thu, 28 Sep 2006, Oliver Fromme wrote:



Marc G. Fournier wrote:
> Oliver Fromme wrote:
> > By the way, I've got a small question.  Does the database
> > throw all entries away at the end of each month, and start
> > all over again with zero entries?  Or is each entry expired
> > after a certain time has elapsed (31 days or whatever)?
>
> Neither ... the month that the report was submitted for has one entry for
> host ... we'll be able to graph stuff like growht in # of reporting hosts
> and such ...

I'm not sure that will work well ...  Lets see what happens
when October begins.  At the beginning of September, the
statistics were all reset to zero.


That is correct ... this is one of my hosts:

  id  |unique_key | country_code |   first_connect 
-+---+--+

  235 | cdd6a5011ac543400bcaafb413ae577d  | PA   | 2006-08-15 
06:53:50.077533

And this is what its reported for so far:

  id  | operating_system |   release   | architecture |report_month 
-+--+-+--+

  235 | FreeBSD  | 4.11-STABLE | i386 | 2006-08-15 
07:08:50.694954
  235 | FreeBSD  | 4.11-STABLE | i386 | 2006-09-01 
08:30:06.198988
(2 rows)

One for August, one for September ... start of October, a third entry will 
be added ...


Sorry, I was a bit unclear ...  I didn't mean to say that you shouldn't 
collect the numbers for each OS sub-variant (or lets call it 
"distribution") separately.  But I think it would make sense to group 
them together for the "Big 4" on the front page (main page) at 
bsdstats.org.


Except those that are working hard on the various 'sub-variants' are proud 
to see the fact that the work they are doing is being used, plus, it helps 
to advertise those sub-variants, so that ppl know they are out there ...


By the way, I think you cannot tell much from those numbers, because 
they don't really show any real-world usage of the various BSD variants. 
Not now, and not in a year from now. The reason for that is that the 
different BSD projects have very different policies for enabling the 
bsdstats script by default during installation or during update.


The thing is, we're not looking at producing a "this is all the BSD hosts 
that are out there" sort of number ... we are trying to produce a "see, 
there *is* a BSD market" ... what does some place like Adaptec consider a 
"market", that I don't know ... 100k hosts?  500k hosts?  I don't know 
that, each manufacturer (both software and hardware) will have different 
thresholds ... the point is that we now have *some* marketing numbers that 
aren't "purely guesswork" ...


Hell, even looking at the numbers now ... 10,328 hosts, 42.2% of which are 
OpenBSD ... 4 362 hosts doesn't sound like alot, but those are 4 362 hosts 
that will *never* see an Adaptec controller because of Adaptec's 
closed-doc policy ... what's the average price of an Adaptec controller 
nowadays?  Looking at there site, their SAS RAID controller is SRP: $995 
... that is $4 340 190 in potential revenu *if* everyone bought that card 
... even if average price was $100, that is $436 200 in potential revenue 
that can't be tap'd ... and that number is probably not even 1/10th of the 
actual # of hosts out there ...


And ya, I know, not everyone would by Adaptec even if they had open docs 
... that isn't the point ... the point is that Adaptec is getting *zero* 
right now from the OpenBSD market, since they are closed docs ...


By the way (apropos default policies):  Guess why OpenBSD has gotten 
ahead of FreeBSD in the statistics?  It has been growing at a much higer 
rate all the time, and will continue to do so.  Soon the statistics will 
"prove" that OpenBSD's user base is ten times larger than FreeBSD's, 
because we won't have a bsdstats option in sysinstall in 6.2-Release. 
I'd be willing to submit a patch (I'm somewhat familiar with the 
sysinstall code), but I assume it's too late because we're already in 
code freeze, and sysinstall is a particularly critical piece of code. 
Apart from that, such a patch will probably be shredded to pieces by 
bike shed discussions.


Of course, not submitting the patch ASAP will ensure that not only do it 
not getting into 6.2-RELEASE, but it won't get into subsequent releases, 
or -CURRENT, or ... :)


*sigh* I'm sorry, what I wrote isn't really constructive, but rather 
bellyaching about the whole situation.  Maybe I should better shut up 
now.  :-)


I got tired of bellyaching, and created bsdstats.org ... *shrug*


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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-28 Thread Oliver Fromme

Marc G. Fournier wrote:
 > Oliver Fromme wrote:
 > > By the way, I've got a small question.  Does the database
 > > throw all entries away at the end of each month, and start
 > > all over again with zero entries?  Or is each entry expired
 > > after a certain time has elapsed (31 days or whatever)?
 > 
 > Neither ... the month that the report was submitted for has one entry for 
 > host ... we'll be able to graph stuff like growht in # of reporting hosts 
 > and such ...

I'm not sure that will work well ...  Lets see what happens
when October begins.  At the beginning of September, the
statistics were all reset to zero.

 > > I just noticed that "PC-BSD" is mentioned as separate OS in the 
 > > statistics now.  I think it would be better to count it for FreeBSD 
 > > instead, because PC-BSD (similar to FreeSBIE) is just a standard FreeBSD 
 > > kernel + userland, plus some gadgets on top (GUI installer or live FS, 
 > > respectively).
 > 
 > The 'plus some gadgets on top' is, IMHO, important ... it shows ppl are 
 > adopting BSD, but that, for them, those 'gadgets' are important for the 
 > deployment ...

Sorry, I was a bit unclear ...  I didn't mean to say that
you shouldn't collect the numbers for each OS sub-variant
(or lets call it "distribution") separately.  But I think
it would make sense to group them together for the "Big 4"
on the front page (main page) at bsdstats.org.

By the way, I think you cannot tell much from those numbers,
because they don't really show any real-world usage of the
various BSD variants.  Not now, and not in a year from now.
The reason for that is that the different BSD projects have
very different policies for enabling the bsdstats script by
default during installation or during update.

By the way (apropos default policies):  Guess why OpenBSD
has gotten ahead of FreeBSD in the statistics?  It has been
growing at a much higer rate all the time, and will continue
to do so.  Soon the statistics will "prove" that OpenBSD's
user base is ten times larger than FreeBSD's, because we
won't have a bsdstats option in sysinstall in 6.2-Release.
I'd be willing to submit a patch (I'm somewhat familiar
with the sysinstall code), but I assume it's too late
because we're already in code freeze, and sysinstall is
a particularly critical piece of code.  Apart from that,
such a patch will probably be shredded to pieces by
bike shed discussions.

*sigh*  I'm sorry, what I wrote isn't really constructive,
but rather bellyaching about the whole situation.  Maybe
I should better shut up now.  :-)

Best regards
   Oliver


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and may not necessarily reflect the opinions of secnetix in any way.

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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-19 Thread Marc G. Fournier

On Fri, 15 Sep 2006, Oliver Fromme wrote:


Marc G. Fournier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At only 5000 hosts, I wouldn't be basing any decisions anyway ... I'd like
> to see 10x that number, and consistently, every month before reading *too*
> much into them ...
>
> Its only been running about 30 days so far, so @ 5k hosts so far, and most
> of those *since* Sept 1st, it shouldn't take us too long ...

By the way, I've got a small question.  Does the database
throw all entries away at the end of each month, and start
all over again with zero entries?  Or is each entry expired
after a certain time has elapsed (31 days or whatever)?


Neither ... the month that the report was submitted for has one entry for 
host ... we'll be able to graph stuff like growht in # of reporting hosts 
and such ...


I just noticed that "PC-BSD" is mentioned as separate OS in the 
statistics now.  I think it would be better to count it for FreeBSD 
instead, because PC-BSD (similar to FreeSBIE) is just a standard FreeBSD 
kernel + userland, plus some gadgets on top (GUI installer or live FS, 
respectively).


The 'plus some gadgets on top' is, IMHO, important ... it shows ppl are 
adopting BSD, but that, for them, those 'gadgets' are important for the 
deployment ...



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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-15 Thread Ivan Voras

Oliver Fromme wrote:


In fact, I think that mentioning too many different BSD
variants is counter-productive against the goals of the
project.  The main goal is to provide numbers to vendors
and manufacturers, in order to get better support.
However, mentioning a dozen different BSD variants will
likely turn them away.

Therefore I propose that only the "big four" are mentioned
explicitely on the homepage, and all the rest be counted
as "others" or similar.


Yes, this is likely to be much better than the current state of things.

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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-15 Thread Oliver Fromme
Marc G. Fournier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
 > At only 5000 hosts, I wouldn't be basing any decisions anyway ... I'd like 
 > to see 10x that number, and consistently, every month before reading *too* 
 > much into them ...
 > 
 > Its only been running about 30 days so far, so @ 5k hosts so far, and most 
 > of those *since* Sept 1st, it shouldn't take us too long ...

By the way, I've got a small question.  Does the database
throw all entries away at the end of each month, and start
all over again with zero entries?  Or is each entry expired
after a certain time has elapsed (31 days or whatever)?

I just noticed that "PC-BSD" is mentioned as separate OS in
the statistics now.  I think it would be better to count it
for FreeBSD instead, because PC-BSD (similar to FreeSBIE)
is just a standard FreeBSD kernel + userland, plus some
gadgets on top (GUI installer or live FS, respectively).

In fact, I think that mentioning too many different BSD
variants is counter-productive against the goals of the
project.  The main goal is to provide numbers to vendors
and manufacturers, in order to get better support.
However, mentioning a dozen different BSD variants will
likely turn them away.

Therefore I propose that only the "big four" are mentioned
explicitely on the homepage, and all the rest be counted
as "others" or similar.

Just my 2 Euro cents.

Best regards
   Oliver

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Any opinions expressed in this message may be personal to the author
and may not necessarily reflect the opinions of secnetix in any way.

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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-14 Thread Liontaur
Bah, good point. But if the mirrors were never directly linked but 
instead were always called from the FreeBSD site, kind of like how VLC 
does their downloads for example?


Mark

Julian Stacey wrote:

Reference:
  

From: Liontaur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thu, 14 Sep 2006 08:35:18 -0700
Message-id:   <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



Liontaur wrote:
  

*Perhaps it would be possible to get the FreeBSD site to keep track of downloa


ds?
 
I don't think so: Too many mirrors.


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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-14 Thread Marc G. Fournier

On Thu, 14 Sep 2006, Roger 'Rocky' Vetterberg wrote:


Olivier Nicole wrote:

Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to push
the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes reporting
from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then OpenBSD ...


6 days later: Thailand jumped from 12 machines to 110... ahead of
France and Australia.


This is a long shot, but couldn't it just be that a portal or
usergroup of some kind started promoting bsdstats?
Lets say a BSD usergroup in Thailand posted a notice on the first
page about bsdstats. The usergroup has 200 visitors a day and half
of them decides to follow the advice and install bsdstats. That
would explain the sudden burst of 100 machines.

Another plausible explanation is that an administrator of some
network with 100 or so workstations or servers decided to push out
bsdstats as a nightly upgrade or similar.

It does not seem totally impossible to me, alltough I would not base
any major decision on those figures without checking them first.


At only 5000 hosts, I wouldn't be basing any decisions anyway ... I'd like 
to see 10x that number, and consistently, every month before reading *too* 
much into them ...


Its only been running about 30 days so far, so @ 5k hosts so far, and most 
of those *since* Sept 1st, it shouldn't take us too long ...



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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-14 Thread Julian Stacey
Reference:
> From: Liontaur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: Thu, 14 Sep 2006 08:35:18 -0700
> Message-id:   <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Liontaur wrote:
> *Perhaps it would be possible to get the FreeBSD site to keep track of downloa
ds?
 
I don't think so: Too many mirrors.

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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-14 Thread Liontaur

*Perhaps it would be possible to get the FreeBSD site to keep track of 
downloads? I know that this isn't an ideal solution since not everyone will get 
FreeBSD from the site, plus it doesn't take into account all of the people who 
already have FreeBSD unless the site has been tracking downloads for awhile 
now. But at least it would be a start of some sort too.

Mark


Date: * Thu, 14 Sep 2006 11:57:35 +0200 (CEST)
*From: * Oliver Fromme <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
*To: *   freebsd-advocacy@FreeBSD.ORG, [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*Subject: *  Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?
*Message-ID: * <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <http://docs.freebsd.org/cgi/mid.cgi?db=irt&[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]>>
*In-Reply-To: *<[EMAIL PROTECTED] <http://docs.freebsd.org/cgi/mid.cgi?db=mid&[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]>>

Statistics are _never_ accurate.  In this particular case
they're especially inaccurate, because the bsdstats project
has started just recently, and only few people are using it
(5000 is probably nothing compared to the total amount of
BSD machines in the world).  Therefore the current numbers
are hardly representative, they're skewed by regional
fluctuations in the spreading of the bsdstats script.

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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-14 Thread Oliver Fromme
[-questions removed from recipient list.]

Olivier Nicole <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
 > [...]
 > > Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to push 
 > > the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes reporting 
 > > from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then OpenBSD ...
 > 
 > 6 days later: Thailand jumped from 12 machines to 110... ahead of
 > France and Australia.
 > 
 > Only thing that the figures say is that they are far from being
 > accurate.

Statistics are _never_ accurate.  In this particular case
they're especially inaccurate, because the bsdstats project
has started just recently, and only few people are using it
(5000 is probably nothing compared to the total amount of
BSD machines in the world).  Therefore the current numbers
are hardly representative, they're skewed by regional
fluctuations in the spreading of the bsdstats script.

That affects not only the country distribution, but also
the BSD type distribution.  For example, currently debian/
kFreeBSD is at 6 while MirBSD is at 3, but I do not believe
that the former is only twice as often in use as the
latter.

 > And that people should be reminded to register from time to time.

Once the periodic script is enabled, it will take care of
that (at least on FreeBSD).  However, there's a problem
with machines that aren't running 24 hours per day (like
home or office PCs).  Many machines are off at the time
when the monthly script would normally run.  AFAIK Marc
is aware of that problem and working on a solution.

In fact it's a more general problem, because other
periodic scripts won't run either in such cases, e.g.
the update of the locate database and other things.

Personally I have solved the problem by creating a small
script in /usr/local/etc/rc.d/.  At each boot it checks
when the periodic scripts have been run for the last time,
and runs them if necessary, recording the time.  But that's
only a hack that I made myself.  FreeBSD needs a more
general solution to the problem.

Best regards
   Oliver

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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-14 Thread Roger 'Rocky' Vetterberg
Olivier Nicole wrote:
>> Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to push 
>> the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes reporting 
>> from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then OpenBSD ...
> 
> 6 days later: Thailand jumped from 12 machines to 110... ahead of
> France and Australia.

This is a long shot, but couldn't it just be that a portal or
usergroup of some kind started promoting bsdstats?
Lets say a BSD usergroup in Thailand posted a notice on the first
page about bsdstats. The usergroup has 200 visitors a day and half
of them decides to follow the advice and install bsdstats. That
would explain the sudden burst of 100 machines.

Another plausible explanation is that an administrator of some
network with 100 or so workstations or servers decided to push out
bsdstats as a nightly upgrade or similar.

It does not seem totally impossible to me, alltough I would not base
any major decision on those figures without checking them first.

--
R

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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-14 Thread Olivier Nicole
> Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to push 
> the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes reporting 
> from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then OpenBSD ...

6 days later: Thailand jumped from 12 machines to 110... ahead of
France and Australia.

Only thing that the figures say is that they are far from being
accurate.

And that people should be reminded to register from time to time.

Bests,

Olivier
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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-09 Thread Hye-Shik Chang

On 9/9/06, Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


On Sep 8, 2006, at 7:02 PM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:

>
> Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to
> push the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes
> reporting from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then
> OpenBSD ...
>
> Are there *really* no Korean FreeBSD hosts out there ... ?


There are some portal enterprises using FreeBSD such Yahoo! Korea,
Dreamwiz and Neowiz.  They each have more than 1000 hosts at least.


Or maybe the FreeBSD users in Korea use their systems for real work
and don't read this list or play these sorts of games...  The Open/
Net/DFly users are hobbyists who like to play these games.


Many of Korean BSDers doesn't read the mailing lists at all.  Some of them
don't read even manpages.  So there's no need to be surprised at the
no-show on stats.  :-)

I just advertised bsdstats to the local BSD community.  So there will few
responses soon.

Hye-Shik
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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-09 Thread Marc G. Fournier

On Sat, 9 Sep 2006, Kris Kennaway wrote:


On Fri, Sep 08, 2006 at 10:02:45PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:


Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to push
the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes reporting
from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then OpenBSD ...

Are there *really* no Korean FreeBSD hosts out there ... ?


So which korean freebsd mailing lists did you advertise bsdstats on?


There are korean maillng lists? :)

And, I've been talking to Matt @ DragonFlyBSD, and he believes that the 
reports from Korea/China are bogus ... there is no AMD64 port of DragonFly 
...



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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-09 Thread Antony Mawer

On 8/09/2006 3:02 PM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:


Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to push 
the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes reporting 
from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then OpenBSD ...


Are there *really* no Korean FreeBSD hosts out there ... ?


Are you sure they weren't just hit by the same timezone issue affecting 
us Aussies...? :-) After all, DFly/Open/Net didn't start coming on board 
until after the monthly rollover that affected us in .au ...


(For those wondering what all that means: the BSDstats server counted 
.au and nearby timezones into August's results, rather than September, 
because the BSDStats server's time was still in August when our machines 
started doing our monthly periodic run for September...)


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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-09 Thread Kris Kennaway
On Fri, Sep 08, 2006 at 10:02:45PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
> 
> Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to push 
> the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes reporting 
> from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then OpenBSD ...
> 
> Are there *really* no Korean FreeBSD hosts out there ... ?

So which korean freebsd mailing lists did you advertise bsdstats on?

Kris


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Description: PGP signature


Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-08 Thread Chris
Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC wrote:
> 
> On Sep 8, 2006, at 7:02 PM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
> 
>>
>> Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to
>> push the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes
>> reporting from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then
>> OpenBSD ...
>>
>> Are there *really* no Korean FreeBSD hosts out there ... ?
> 
> Or maybe the FreeBSD users in Korea use their systems for real work and
> don't read this list or play these sorts of games...  The Open/Net/DFly
> users are hobbyists who like to play these games.
> 
> I am not knocking the bsdstats effort -- just that lots of serious users
> with machines in production won't report back (I know I am not).  Your
> sample is probably statistically invalid.
> 
> best regards
> Chad
> 
> ---
> Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC
> Your Web App and Email hosting provider
> chad at shire.net
> 
> 
> 
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> 

Not to mention how many are vmwared. Does that count? Could it count?
Would it count?

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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-08 Thread Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC


On Sep 8, 2006, at 7:02 PM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:



Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to  
push the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes  
reporting from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then  
OpenBSD ...


Are there *really* no Korean FreeBSD hosts out there ... ?


Or maybe the FreeBSD users in Korea use their systems for real work  
and don't read this list or play these sorts of games...  The Open/ 
Net/DFly users are hobbyists who like to play these games.


I am not knocking the bsdstats effort -- just that lots of serious  
users with machines in production won't report back (I know I am  
not).  Your sample is probably statistically invalid.


best regards
Chad

---
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Your Web App and Email hosting provider
chad at shire.net



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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-08 Thread Marc G. Fournier

On Fri, 8 Sep 2006, Chris wrote:

It seemed to coincidental that all 3 OS's were accelerating within the 
same time frame and all within a relatively close margin from one 
another.


245 of the Korean hits came from the same IP, which would be within the 
realm of a NATd box ... and, looking at the logs, each system is reporting 
how/as I'd expect it ...


It could be one of the schools in Korea?

As I said, looking at the data itself, if it is someone playing games, 
they've gone to alot of effort to "mask" it ... including mix-n-matching 
Operating Systems with Architectures, so that they aren't all reporting 
the exact same thing ... even the user agents are coming through "as 
expected" for each of hte operating systems reported ...



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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-08 Thread Chris
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
> On Fri, 8 Sep 2006, Chris wrote:
> 
>> Marc G. Fournier wrote:
>>>
>>> Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to push
>>> the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes reporting
>>> from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then OpenBSD ...
>>>
>>> Are there *really* no Korean FreeBSD hosts out there ... ?
>>>
>>> 
>>> Marc G. Fournier   Hub.Org Networking Services
>>> (http://www.hub.org)
>>> Email . [EMAIL PROTECTED]  MSN .
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>> Yahoo . yscrappy   Skype: hub.orgICQ . 7615664
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>>> http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
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>>> "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
>>>
>>>
>>
>> I think someone is playing games. I saw Korea put up 40 plus boxen in
>> under 10 mins.  And between Net, Open and DF, there are only a few...
> 
> Are you sure?  And if so, based on what ... ?
> 
> 
> Marc G. Fournier   Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
> Email . [EMAIL PROTECTED]  MSN . [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Yahoo . yscrappy   Skype: hub.orgICQ . 7615664
> 
> 

It seemed to coincidental that all 3 OS's were accelerating within the
same time frame and all within a relatively close margin from one another.

Just a hunch

-- 
Best regards,
Chris

The most important item in an order will no longer
be available.
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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-08 Thread Marc G. Fournier

On Fri, 8 Sep 2006, Chris wrote:


Marc G. Fournier wrote:


Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to push
the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes reporting
from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then OpenBSD ...

Are there *really* no Korean FreeBSD hosts out there ... ?


Marc G. Fournier   Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
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I think someone is playing games. I saw Korea put up 40 plus boxen in
under 10 mins.  And between Net, Open and DF, there are only a few...


Are you sure?  And if so, based on what ... ?


Marc G. Fournier   Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
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Re: FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-08 Thread Chris
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
> 
> Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to push
> the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes reporting
> from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then OpenBSD ...
> 
> Are there *really* no Korean FreeBSD hosts out there ... ?
> 
> 
> Marc G. Fournier   Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
> Email . [EMAIL PROTECTED]  MSN . [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Yahoo . yscrappy   Skype: hub.orgICQ . 7615664
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> "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
> 
> 

I think someone is playing games. I saw Korea put up 40 plus boxen in
under 10 mins.  And between Net, Open and DF, there are only a few...

Kinda makes ya go H.

-- 
Best regards,
Chris

Show me a person who's never made a mistake and I'll
show you somebody who's never achieved much.
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FreeBSD not popular in Asia?

2006-09-08 Thread Marc G. Fournier


Check out http://www.bsdstats.org ... Republic of Korea is about to push 
the US out of first place, but there are *zero* FreeBSD boxes reporting 
from there ... DragonFly is first, then NetBSD and then OpenBSD ...


Are there *really* no Korean FreeBSD hosts out there ... ?


Marc G. Fournier   Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
Email . [EMAIL PROTECTED]  MSN . [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Yahoo . yscrappy   Skype: hub.orgICQ . 7615664
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