To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
I admin 30+ Linux servers plus 200+ VM's. None of them even have a browser installed let alone go out onto the internet. In fact, none of them can as their access out to the internet is block by three firewalls.
I know that I'm not alone here.
None of these systems has ever seen a .deb file. They are all RHEL or CentOS. They work. no fuss, no bother. Day in, day out they do the job they were built for.
I can deploy another VM inside 20 minutes. All updates are applied from a local repository.
Where do these appear on any of the stat counter systems? Nowhere.
Statistics, statistics and damm lies.
I'm currently working with an HPC with 65000+ nodes (it's in the TOP 500, well TOP 100 actually). It's running RHEL 5. I have 12 years experience in IT and all I have seen is RHEL, RHEL, RHEL and CentOS (same as RHEL). I've seen some Oracle Linux (still same as RHEL) here and there. Some small businesses use Debian (mainly for web servers) and I've seen some Suse in large companies, which they are replacing with RHEL.
Statistics, statistics and damm lies.
No one gives a damn about server stats when they are looking at client stats.
Files can be served off an Amiga or a C-64 for all that it matters to their users.
Users with no access to the outside world might as well be based on Mars.





Member since:
2006-05-15
Hits per day are hardly a good representation of a distribution's popularity. Something like this Wikimedia's requests are much more reliable http://stats.wikimedia.org/wikimedia/squids/SquidReportOperatingSys...
Note in those Wikimedia statistics Linux mint is on 12.5 Million requests, where as Ubuntu's are 990 Million.