Operating System Figures
On Ashley's recent post about Linux figures, some people have asked for more detail on the information that the 91Èȱ¬ gathers about the operating systems which are used by visitors to its websites. There was particular interest in whether the statistics for the web servers which host the 91Èȱ¬'s and content were any different to the statistics for the whole of the 91Èȱ¬.
I posted the output from our reporting system to the which Martin Belam has conveniently .
There is some difference between Journalism and the rest of the 91Èȱ¬ which may be explained, as Martin suggests, by the different usage patterns for the News site, although I don't know whether all the differences are statistically significant or could be explained by sampling error. (Compared to the rest of the 91Èȱ¬, more people visit the from an office computer, during the day. We have data from independent sources which confirms this).
All of the 91Èȱ¬'s regular reporting mechanisms use to make inferences about the client operating system. In a follow-up post I should be able to give you information about how many User Agent strings are classified as "operating system unknown", and about the split between visitors from the UK and from outside the UK.
We will publish this data regularly on both the Backstage archive and this blog.
Kevin Hinde is Head of Software Development, Journalism, 91Èȱ¬ Future Media & Technology.
Comments
Thank you for your clarification, Kevin. One thing must be added though: "operating system unknown" will not give the full story about the user, because many users will have taken advantage of their browser's client identification feature to fake a Windows user-agent string. We are forced to do this because of some idiotic web-sites which still try to prevent non-Windows users from accessing them, because they have been written so badly that they have only been designed to work with (perhaps one particular version of!) Microsoft Internet Explorer.
Microsoft's battle to undermine open standards in order to perpetuate its monopoly scores again, in the shape of distorted web usage statistics. You need to be aware of this and never rely on such flawed measurements.
The 91Èȱ¬ data for this will still be skewed in favour of operating systems that the 91Èȱ¬ supports.
The 91Èȱ¬ herds Linux users *away* from the 91Èȱ¬ website by making it incompatible with Linux, and then claims there isn't many Linux users around.
The UK needs a new public broadcaster.
Sorry but James Foster's "won't someone think of the children" style post made me have to respond.
The 91Èȱ¬ is making it's content available in more ways than any other broadcaster in the UK(possibly in the world). iPlayer, for instance, isn't Linux friendly. Last I checked it wasn't Vista friendly either but I suspect the Linux community couldn't care less about that in their battle for cross-platform usage.
The Linux community has to accept it's role in world priorities. Linux is still a niche operating system and as such gains a niche priority. Would they rather the Beeb waited until a solution was developed for every conceivable platform before delivering anything?
Before Linux users get out of their prams about what are, at the end of the day, probably the best open source efforts in broadcasting. They should look at the games industry to see the lavel of native Linux support the market thinks is appropriate and they should reconsider (if they really have to bleat so much) the CHOICE THAT THEY MADE to use Linux.
Sorry but James Foster's "won't someone think of the children" style post made me have to respond.
The 91Èȱ¬ is making it's content available in more ways than any other broadcaster in the UK(possibly in the world). iPlayer, for instance, isn't Linux friendly. Last I checked it wasn't Vista friendly either but I suspect the Linux community couldn't care less about that in their battle for cross-platform usage.
The Linux community has to accept it's role in world priorities. Linux is still a niche operating system and as such gains a niche priority. Would they rather the Beeb waited until a solution was developed for every conceivable platform before delivering anything?
Before Linux users get out of their prams about what are, at the end of the day, probably the best open source efforts in broadcasting. They should look at the games industry to see the lavel of native Linux support the market thinks is appropriate and they should reconsider (if they really have to bleat so much) the CHOICE THAT THEY MADE to use Linux.
Sorry, Paul, but you're wrong here on several counts.
This isn't about Linux at all. It's all about the 91Èȱ¬ deciding not to use open, transparent standards, that everyone can access without the penalty of having to use proprietary, lock-in solutions. Given that the 91Èȱ¬ is publicly funded by licence fee payers, this is contradictory. especially as it says so in their Royal Charter that they would support openness and tranparency. You might be able to argue this angle if the 91Èȱ¬ were a for-profit commercial organisation, but it is not. We paid for that content the 91Èȱ¬ want to show; they have no right to restrict it to a certain platform.
Moreover, the 91Èȱ¬'s decision to use all this DRM is illogical, since they transmit all their content unencrypted anyway, and I could capture this signal (with the appropriate hardware) for later viewing, anytime I want. So wehy are the 91Èȱ¬ so insistent their this same content, delivered over the internet rather than broadast, be locked in to a DRM ridden, proprietary format?
Secondly, Linux is most certainly not a 'niche' operating system. Heck, its parent, UNIX system V, has been around since the early seventies - Take the TCP/IP stack, for instance, on which all the internet depends. It's an open standard that any operating system can use. UNIX has had this incorporated into its core since 1983, before windows was even born.
Clearly 2/3rds of the world's web servers run some form of Linux, including the 91Èȱ¬ itself. It also runs on mobile phones, Tivos, and is also being rolled out on the One Laptop Per Child(OLPC) project for the developing world.
As for games, there are thousands available, both natively, or the windows versions can be run using a program called WINE
Sorry, Paul, but you're wrong here on several counts.
This isn't about Linux at all. It's all about the 91Èȱ¬ deciding not to use open, transparent standards, that everyone can access without the penalty of having to use proprietary, lock-in solutions. Given that the 91Èȱ¬ is publicly funded by licence fee payers, this is contradictory. especially as it says so in their Royal Charter that they would support openness and tranparency. You might be able to argue this angle if the 91Èȱ¬ were a for-profit commercial organisation, but it is not. We paid for that content the 91Èȱ¬ want to show; they have no right to restrict it to a certain platform.
Moreover, the 91Èȱ¬'s decision to use all this DRM is illogical, since they transmit all their content unencrypted anyway, and I could capture this signal (with the appropriate hardware) for later viewing, anytime I want. So wehy are the 91Èȱ¬ so insistent their this same content, delivered over the internet rather than broadast, be locked in to a DRM ridden, proprietary format?
Secondly, Linux is most certainly not a 'niche' operating system. Heck, its parent, UNIX system V, has been around since the early seventies - Take the TCP/IP stack, for instance, on which all the internet depends. It's an open standard that any operating system can use. UNIX has had this incorporated into its core since 1983, before windows was even born.
Clearly 2/3rds of the world's web servers run some form of Linux, including the 91Èȱ¬ itself. It also runs on mobile phones, Tivos, and is also being rolled out on the One Laptop Per Child(OLPC) project for the developing world.
As for games, there are thousands available, both natively, or the windows versions can be run using a program called WINE
The currybet breakdown doesn't list what User-Agents are regarded as which operating system. That would be the interesting bit, to let people see whether they were classified correctly.
But, as someone wrote elsewhere, Windows v MacOS v Linux is missing the point a bit. The 91Èȱ¬ should not be doing the modern equivalent of "you must buy a Samsung TV to watch us". The 91Èȱ¬ should be using open standards and be involved in developing them where appropriate. It's done this many times before (DVB and Ceefax to name two of my favourites) and still gets a lot of praise for those past successes.