On Sat, 17 Dec 2011 17:14:46 -0800
Jonathan Marsden wrote:
> On 12/17/2011 04:19 PM, Jean-Pierre Vidal Piesset wrote:
>
> > 2011/12/17 Gabriel Salles
>
>
> >> Companies, universities, etc. will have a local repo or cache and
> >> only download the update once for thousands of machines. Even
Le 12/18/2011 03:03 AM, Jonathan Marsden a écrit :
> Will whatever new survey you are proposing clearly do better than this?
> Would enhancing popularity-contest and its associated infrastructure so
> it *does* distinguish between the various flavours of Ubuntu be as
> useful, or more useful, than
Le 12/17/2011 04:32 PM, Gabriel Salles a écrit :
> I don't know if it is possible, but is there a way of Canonical count
> how many IPs does an update? Maybe some specific update, like
> software-center, lxterminal... I know that some computers still
> doesn't use internet, but most of them use.
It
On 12/17/2011 04:36 PM, Philip wrote:
> Would it be possible to include something like a voluntary survey
> with a round of updates? That would be better than raw numbers, and
> the users who care enough to fill it out would probably provide the
> best data.
Would this definitely be "better than
On 12/17/2011 04:19 PM, Jean-Pierre Vidal Piesset wrote:
> 2011/12/17 Gabriel Salles
>> Companies, universities, etc. will have a local repo or cache and
>> only download the update once for thousands of machines. Even some
>> home users do this if they have few machines.
> Off topic, but j
Let me clarify with an example. I don't use any of the penguin games
that come with Lubuntu. I'm assuming most of you don't either. If
you had data that said virtually no Lubuntu users used the games, you
could take that into consideration when trying to balance out what to
include in the next v
2011/12/17 Gabriel Salles
> Companies, universities, etc. will have a local repo or cache and only
> download the update once for thousands of machines. Even some home users
> do this if they have few machines.
>
Off topic, but just to know, can you point me on how to do that?
_
> That won't give an accurate figure either. Companies, universities, etc.
> will have a local repo or cache and only download the update once for
> thousands of machines. Even some home users do this if they have few
> machines.
>
>
> --
> Yorvyk
Yes, I know. But I can't think in a best way.
On Sat, 17 Dec 2011 13:32:48 -0200
Gabriel Salles wrote:
> Hi all
>
> I don't know if it is possible, but is there a way of Canonical count
> how many IPs does an update? Maybe some specific update, like
> software-center, lxterminal... I know that some computers still
> doesn't use internet, bu
Hi all
I don't know if it is possible, but is there a way of Canonical count
how many IPs does an update? Maybe some specific update, like
software-center, lxterminal... I know that some computers still
doesn't use internet, but most of them use.
Att,
Gabriel Salles
Le 12/17/2011 03:08 AM, Philip a écrit :
> A few weeks ago on this list, a question was raised about the current
> number of Lubuntu users. I was a little surprised that no one had a
> clear idea, and that estimates varied widely. It seems a little
> dangerous from a development standpoint to hav
On Fri, 16 Dec 2011 21:08:57 -0500
Philip wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> First, let me say thank you to everyone on the Lubuntu team. I have
> been using Lubuntu for over a year now, and it is quite possibly the
> fastest, most efficient operating system I have ever used (and I have
> used many). Keep u
Hi all,
First, let me say thank you to everyone on the Lubuntu team. I have
been using Lubuntu for over a year now, and it is quite possibly the
fastest, most efficient operating system I have ever used (and I have
used many). Keep up the extraordinary work.
A few weeks ago on this list, a ques
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