Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Linux Software

Vorsprung durch Pinguin (Linux Top In .de-domains) 144

A reader writes " According to the German Heise Newsticker Linux is the top server for .de-domains both in terms of IP addresses and domain names hosted. The survey carried out by the company iKu Netzwerklösungen surveyed all of almost 2.5 million connected .de-domains distributed over 205.540 IP addresses with the port scanner nmap. 44 percent of IP addresses surveyed were hosted by Linux, 30 percent by Windows. In terms of domain names hosted Linux has an even greater lead, with over 1.1 million domaines. Solaris follows with about 850,000 names, of which 180,000 are hosted on just two Solaris boxes belonging to Germany's biggest webspace provider Strato. Windows follows in 3rd place with just 10%. " Check out the fish if you don't jive deutsch.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Vorsprung durch Pinguin (Linux Top In .de-domains)

Comments Filter:
  • Ayn Rand has been bitchslapped. What a wonderful day to be on Slashdot.
  • Heck, I keep my plain but interesting-looking watch on not only because I like the way it looks, but because I've had dozens of people come up to me and ask, "Does that thing tell time?"

    You, sir, deserve to bitch-slapped for posting that link!!! :->

    When enough people use a product or service, it instantly becomes lame to use it

    Kinda like Slashdot...

    --
    You think being a MIB is all voodoo mind control? You should see the paperwork!
  • Let's assume all your facts are correct--I have no way of (or interest in) verifying them. Your reasoning is so ridiculous it actually made me laugh out loud:

    First of all, high costs forcing a company to save money internally isn't an example of socialism, it's an example of capitalism.

    Second, companies switching to a better and cheaper OS is not proof that XYZ doesn't work. It's proof that XYZ does work--something good happened.
    --
  • #disclaimer -- I don't like MS, but I believe in every OS having a place.

    Such as WinNT for "mission critical appliacations"?

    Having spent the last three years of my life coding website for the MS platform, that idea leaves me completely baffled...
  • Well, it's about the same here in Germany considering desktop OS's.
    There is only one computer magazine in Germany that doesn't orgasm when a new flavor of Windows is out. Besides the "c't", which is the magazine belonging to Heise and their News-Ticker", all the others seem to get paid to foam at their mouths about how the newest Windows version is the best thing since sliced bread.
  • maybe one reason linux does so well in this survey is that puretec (germanys second biggest provider) which hosts about 800.000 domains recently switched to linux.
  • by Hairy_Potter ( 219096 ) on Monday August 21, 2000 @05:32AM (#840437) Homepage
    If it wasn't for the high cost of doing business in Europe due to the Socialist policies.

    Of course, I'm referring to the BMW and Mercedes [buchanan.org] plants that were built in the US to avoid confiscatory German/Socialist policies. When manufacturing jobs are migrating to the US you know something is wrong.

    And you're always reading about the inability of German firms to get enough technical IT workers. It's partly due to the IT boom, but also do to the oppressive employment policies of German businesses making full time, direct hire prohibitively expensive. Enter the guest worker, does anyone know if MS is running MCSE boot camps in Turkey? They should.

    Thankfully, dubya is leading in the polls in the states, with a Replublican majority in the house they might be able to reverse American's socialist decline.
  • "A useful comparison might be to compare what the majority of Linux servers are used for compared to Solaris and Windows servers. Are the Linux servers running e-commerce sites? Or are they running the standard Apache home page because httpd was in the default init script?"

    "Linux is used by many hobbyists - how many of those boxes where just boxes set up for personal use? I dunno how cheap broadband is in Germany, but it's a possibility."

    So then should we discount Microsoft Windows market share on the desktop because most of the home users, after buying their computers, have it collecting dust in the corner somewhere after the novelty wears off?

  • Translation for us non-english speakers:

    "Some eyeballa' scribbles " Accordin' t' da damn German Heise Newsticka' Linux
    be da damn top serva' 4 .de-domains bot' in terms o' I-P addresses an' domain
    names hosted. Da survey carried out by da company Iku Netzwerklösungen
    surveyed all o' mos' 2.5 million connected .de-domains distributed ova' 205.540
    I-P addresses wit' da damn port scanna' nmap. 44 puh'cent o' I-P addresses
    surveyed wuz hosted by Linux, 30 puh'cent by Windows. In terms o' domain names
    hosted Linux has some even greata' laid, wit' ova' 1.1 million domaines.
    Solaris follows wit' about 850,000 names, o' which 180,000 be hosted on plum
    deuce Solaris boxes belongin' t' Germany's biggest webspace provida' Strato.
    Windows follows in 3rd place wit' plum 10%. " Check out da damn fish if yo' ass
    duzn't jive deutsch. Sheeeiit. "
  • Yeah, the content is all there, but the design is laughable. For example, the front page has two frames, but the links all open in the full window. This breaks compatibility with non-frames-compliant browsers. Textured backgrounds are so three years ago, too.

    The only useful content on that site, like homework and school-specific information, takes a good deal of clicking. A casual visitor to the site wouldn't even know that such resources exist, and that the site is actually useful.

    But I'm just bitter, I guess, because my past experiences [weill.org] with the technologically backward staff there. At least the district saved money by hiring a couple of high school kids and paying them in independent study credits for their HTML coding.
  • Here I cannot help but imagine decent administration and power conditioning and backups can prevent things such as this...
  • It's also interest that a full 7% of the domains refused to respond. I'm not an expert here, does anybody know why that would be so high?

    I am actually bothered that only 7% have really tight Firewalls.
  • Actually, it's not. Strato's SUN boxen fall over and lie around on their back shells waving their little arms and legs like turtles every few days. They're not only Germany's largest domain provider, but also the most despised one (despised from those in the know, that is).
  • by rob1imo ( 196470 )
    When people found out that a secretive company was scanning the net [slashdot.org], they threw a fit. You would think that an even nosier scan of every IP in Germany would be cause for even greater alarm. Ah, but it's further "proof" that Linux is better than Windows, so who cares?

    --

  • Don't worry. When Linux gets very popular, we'll start to see more exploits and shell-script viruses (RUN TH!S @S R00T F0R FR33 PR0N) and people will complain how it's all the sell-out commercial Linux vendors' fault for including support for such horrible features. Then everyone will switch to FreeBSD, complain that there aren't enough good apps out for it, rejoice when buggy ports of obsolete applications are released, and proclaim it as the Next Big Thing.

    There are enough niche OS's out there to make sure that the true geek never uses a popular, "conformist" OS, and always gets to stand out from the crowd.
  • Indeed, corporations are double-taxed... at least in the U.S.

    That's one of the disadvantages of incorporating. The corporation pays corporate income taxes, and the employees and shareholders pay individual income taxes. Then the consumers pay taxes on purchases from the corporation.

    There are many advantages to incorporating though... making it foolish not to in many cases.

    --
  • Like a recent commentator said, sheer volumn of IP associated with PC*nix isn't everything if most all of them are useless vanity pages - how about important industries like this [netcraft.com]
  • A little from column A and a little from column B
  • The only truly American TLD is .us

    Um... I think that .gov, .mil and .edu are equally "truly American".

  • This is a sad day indeed. It seems BSD isn't getting enough German support in web servers.
  • One of their comments said it all.

    Our of 800,000 Domains on Solaris Machines, 180,000 are one TWO machines!!

    Where as the million something are on who knows how many Linux boxen

    Jeremy
  • nmap can be used to scan a single port. Just tell it to do an OS id on port 80 and you're almost guaranteed to get through the firewall (iirc, nmap just sends an invalid packet to the port and examines the bit settings on the return packet).

    Bill - aka taniwha
    --

  • what are the stats for american domain names? has anyone dont something similar for american domain names?
  • I've seen several arragant ignorant "that's wrong" posts correcting "flaws" in the main story, followed by the typical avalanche of corrections explaining how the commentor has it wrong instead.

    I don't know the nationality of those involved, but if I were to guess, I'd say the arrogant ignorant ones were Americans. Maybe it's a failing of the schools, or a common misperception that the world follows all of America's "isms."

    For the record,

    • America writes +1.0e6 as 1,000,000.00 whereas in many other countries, they use the notation 1.000.000,00 (side note: those digit symbols are Arabic in origin).
    • In English, we say "Germany." In German, they say "Deutcheland." The language is "german" or "deutche," accordingly. This reasoning is why German domains end in .de, Dutch sites are in .nl (Nederlands), Croatia ends in .hr (Hrvatska), and so on.
    • America writes "color" but the Queen's English is "colour". This is true of a lot of words with an -or ending. I'm not sure why the Colonials decided to be unique on that point, it often causes rancour among the uninformed.
    • Use of idiom is completely different between different countries, even with the same "language." For example, if a Brit says he'll knock her up, he intends to pay a respectable visit in person. If an American says that, it's a bit more intimate (and crass).

    I wish more Americans would learn how they fit into the world, in history and society. It's cultural Ptolemism, and it's embarassing to be an American amongst such examples of ignorance.

  • Unfortunately, consumers rarely act as a collective group to get prices lowered to a reasonable level. Most figure that since the economy here in the States is doing reasonably well, who cares if stuff costs a bit more then maybe it should? Seems folks have forgotten the power of boycotting.

    -={(Astynax)}=-
  • what are the stats for american domain names?

    The stats for American domains are: Americans pick the most inane domain names. Americans are never content to pick a single inane domain name, they must have several and even bitch that there arent enough inane tld suffixes. Americans think domain names actually matter for traffic.
  • by Nexx ( 75873 ) on Monday August 21, 2000 @05:45AM (#840457)

    Of course, I'm referring to the BMW and Mercedes plants that were built in the US to avoid confiscatory German/Socialist policies. When manufacturing jobs are migrating
    to the US you know something is wrong.

    of course, this could also be a result of exclusionary and protective tarrifs that the US enacts to all automotive imports. Due to these tarrifs that are imposed on Asian and European imports, many such automotive companies are setting up shop in Mexico (where labour costs are cheaper than the US), or in the US itself, to avoid protectionist tarrifs.

    If BMW and Daimler-Chrysler were to avoid "German Taxes", then they would move their entire operations elsewhere, not just their manufacturing plants.


    --
  • I guess with proven systems like this, it'll be harder than ever to use the age-old argument that Linux doesn't scale to large systems. With this out of the way, it'll be exciting to see what Microsoft et al comes up with next! ;)
    --
  • Is this Germany's subnet? Wait a minute, 540 isn't a valid octet. Is that how they got 2.5 million hosts in a class C address space?

    --
  • That's right, I guess I didn't. But Slashdot has certified that my opinions are worth their weight in gold, whereas your opinions don't even deserve to be seen unless specifically requested. Shouldn't you be downloading the daily security patch for your excellent people's-choice-because-they-have-no-alternative OS today?

    Everyone uses Windows, so it has to be good. Everyone used AT&T and Standard Oil, who provided excellent service for most of their customers but shut out competition. Why don't you let people choose what they want, instead of telling them what they want?
  • What if a stat was yelled out in the middle of a forest... and nobody cared?
  • Wow. That is so close to being relevant.
  • all of almost 2.5 million connected .de-domains distributed over 205.540 IP addresses

    wow! I want an ip in that network! 205.540.1.1 sounds nice...
  • Let me change that to "Linux takeover of SERVER operating systems".
    You'll find that the most abundant business desktop OS in Germany is Windows NT in it's various service pack flavours.

    No, I don't have any proof besides personal experience.
  • I would imagine this extends to the rest of Western Europe as well, because despite the language differences, the cultures and economies were quite similar. The fact that their economies are doing quite as well will also make them a little less wasteful and linux is an excellent way to do that.

    I'm in Norway, and a friend of mine who is doing projects for the suits said that whenever IT people gets the last word, it's very seldom Windoze. I really have no other clues, I have the impression that suits prefer to use Windoze, but as long as they don't need to interact with Linux, they might not care. I'm trying to kick the suits I know abit, though, like: "you're not using Excel for statistics, are you? You are? Uh-oh, go and read Journal of Computational Statistics and Data Analysis, volume 31, issue 1, 28 July 1999 [woodleyside.co.uk]."

    I bet for one, most of the governments over there use Linux because they would rather not give money to some American company. Atleast with linux they can argue there are Germans who have had a hand in making it and they aren't spending money.

    Nah, they're often hysterical about being business-like. It's coming, though, however slow. Some argue that Linux should be used in schools. I think that is going more slowly than use in web hosting though.

  • I don't remember all of them, but at least one was caused by a stupid technician killing the UPS, the long outage was caused by a rather severe storm which blew the air conditioner off the roof, one was caused by a dodgy CPU, one was caused by a burnt out centerplane... (at a time when all the sites ran off one box...) IMHO it was just bad luck.

    Regards, Ulli

  • I gained a large degree of respect for German programmers, back when I downloaded demos for my Amiga. Certainly a few figured out how everything worked and then did some pretty amazing things. Assuming the same level of enthusiasms graduated to Operating Systems, I'd not be surprised.

    Another factor may simply be price. Buy Windows for a premium (prices are considerably higher for pretty much everything in Europe) or dl Linux for free and dig in.

    Necessity can be quite a mother...

    Vote [dragonswest.com] Naked 2000
  • It's not so much corporate taxes that drive companies away from Germany. Rather it's the cost of personnel and land for the sites that's too high in the manufacturing business. So they relocate the manufacturing plants somewhere where it's cheaper. Remember, Germany is really small, so land prices are ridiculously high.

    With technical IT workers, it's the other way around. They are not paid enough to actually stay at a company. There is actually a surplus of IT people here, who wouldn't touch those low-wage jobs with a ten-foot-pole and rather go to a place (USA) where their skills are correctly valued. Although almost all IT positions require an academic education, IT personnel are paid far less than other comparable academics.
    THIS is why we import low-cost workers from India. The plan seems to be to cart them here, let them do their work, pay them a trifle and send them back before they consider staying here.

    Colonialism is back again with a vengeance. It's not military colonialism any more, but enconomical colonialism.
  • Such as WinNT for "mission critical appliacations"?

    I didn't say I would deploy NT for anything mission-critical, just that NT is probably the current "OS of choice" in the industry.

    However, it is hard to find (and keep, unless you have lots of cash) good Linux people, so I can understand why many companies are still choosing NT in mission critical situations -- Linux has less 3rd party support than they would like to see, while MSCE's and MS-based consulting firms are plentiful.

    --

  • Nice try. What you state is an ideal situation. Companies still set the prices, but through factoring in the market demand/supply, and exclusionary contracts. Mind you, only a small number of companies would be silly enough to set prices without doing some sort of market research, but silliness of companies never fail to am[ua]se me.


    --
  • Ok, so you probably won't mind my "arragant" (or was that arrogant?) correction of your misspelling:

    Germany -> Deutschland (not Deutcheland)

    German -> Deutsch (not deutche)

    ... Ah nitpicking ;)
  • the story said linux was the top server in germany.

    you are counting "windows boxes for home use, which dial up and connect to the internet" as servers?

    i would think it's an incredibly reasonable assumption on the part of the people doing the survey to assume that only machines with permanent connections should be counted as servers.

    it also doesnt appear to be about numbers of boxes, but about number of sites served from the os. (otherwise solaris would have been last since most solaris sites are being served from 2 boxes)

    I cant read the German article either. i'm basing my understanding on the same information yours is based on.

  • Hey, I know, even if you don't read the freaking article, how about reading the damn exerpt of what you are responding to??

    "In terms of domain names hosted Linux has an even greater lead, with over 1.1 million domaines. Solaris follows with about 850,000 names, of which 180,000 are hosted on just two Solaris boxes"

    If anything is "proved" it's that Solaris is the one that scales to large systems.

    idiot
  • 1 quadrillion = 1E15

    Nobody uses that name, though.

    Not until the national debt gets up there.

    --
    Michael Sims-michael at slashdot.org
  • My old university was toronto.edu, and last time I checked that was in Canada.

    I think that .mil and .gov are only in the US though.
  • I hadn't thought of that. However, just taking government, military, and educational sites into consideration still wouldn't provide a good cross-section of the US web market. And .com, .net, and .org domains are still free for the taking by anyone who ponies up the cash.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    But... but... but... Fred Moody sez Linux sucks [go.com]! So how can this be?!?! Could Fred Moody be wrong? Or maybe Germans haven't been reading Fred Moody's columns? I don't understand!
  • I bet for one, most of the governments over there use Linux because they would rather not give money to some American company.

    Actually and unfortunately, no. The standard OS for governments is Windows (even 98 in many cases!). This is changing slowly, since they do begin to feel uncomfortable about not having the source of the software that handles all their precious data.

  • I offered, but they refused. When I was in school, any computer-savvy student that wasn't sleeping with the head of the "educational technology" department was considered a dangerous hacker, unfit to do anything useful. And they spit out a web site that originally was written in mostly day-glo blue with a hideous black-and-red texture background. I've seen haxx0r pages on Geocities that looked better. Eventually they roped some kids looking for independent study credit into hacking out some new HTML, and finding a better layout for the blurry distant photos they took of the schools. The layout is far from consistent, and barely usable. Some pages appear helpful or well-designed, but are filled with "Under Construction," "coming soon," or "we have not yet moved in" links under their snazzy JavaScript facades.

    But enough ranting.
  • Relax, man. I'm just counter-trolling. It's one of the more entertaining ways to burn karma and have fun while doing it.
  • So then should we discount Microsoft Windows market share on the desktop because most of the home users, after buying their computers, have it collecting dust in the corner somewhere after the novelty wears off?

    I think I understand what you mean - that those computers are indeed valid in the context of boxes running x OS based on IP. However, it's not valid considering that we're supposed to assume that they all are servers - I wonder how many are boxes left running so the user can SSH in to gain access to his or her files?

    Once you have your statistics, you can draw so many conclusions based on them - the fact that this was posted to what amounts to a Linux advocacy site suggests that Hemos believes that these figures prove something about Linux. (As does the telling the-penguins-wins-the- dept.)

    Useful statistics in determining the "best" OS for something might be the OSes that e-commerce sites with 24/7 uptime, sustained for a year, use. But that won't tell anything about which OS is actually "best," it only says that a certain OS is good for the circumstances. I wouldn't run a mission-critical website on Windows. I also wouldn't run it on Linux - I'd use something like OpenVMS (only one that comes to mind right now).

    Solaris has its place, Linux does too. These statistics don't really say anything about Linux, other than it's used on boxes that are connected to the Internet long enough to be port-scanned. So what? It doesn't really suggest anything about Linux - other than it's being used in Germany.

  • If they used the euro period for thousands in 205540, why did they not use the comma for 2.5 million?
  • I don't think the ecomomic model is the cause for many people being hostile towards their government - even here in Germany there are many who don't like theirs.
    And, I think the question is not whether or not the state should support its people, but to what extent it should do.

    But to come back to the topic: Linux is quite widely used in Germany. A main cause for that may be the distributor SuSE who develops one of the major Linux distributions.

    And, unlike e.g. FreeBSD (and most other operating systems), Linux is a European product (from Findland), that is also a cause to choose it.

    Just my 0.02 Euro.
  • We are a German ISP and we try to use FreeBSD/OpenBSD instead of Linux, mainly because it provides a much cleaner solution - but in fact, there is no Cobalt-like thing which is BSD-based. Personally, I don't like Cobalts, but they have many advantages for people who aren't familiar with the Unix way of doing.
  • While I applaud Strato on using Solaris, Strato is also notorious for having hour-long shutdowns every few days for months now.

    I don't want to bash Solaris here. I'd rather think that this is due to the inability of Strato stuff to setup their servers correctly. Or maybe two servers is really a teensy-weensy-bit to weak to handle that load.

    Whatever the cause of those shutdowns is, it doesn't make Solaris look good in Germany, as we know the whole story about Strato. "180,000 domains on two boxen" may look good too you, but when you are aware of Strato's problems here, you're beginning to wonder.

    This is an excellent point for another company to spew FUD. "Hey, look, Strato is using Solaris to administrate it's domains. And guess what: Nothing works. For months now. So, dear customer, better forget about Solaris and buy our ultra-cool, mega-hyped, super-scalable OS."

    It's a shame, really.
  • It's not Heise that's doing those statistics. The statistics were done by iKu Netzwerklösungen. Heise is a computer magazine publisher and they have a /.-like weblog. There's no connection between these companies. Whyever they pinged you, it was not about that Linux statistic.


  • I know we should celebrate occasions like this one, when the Linux movement makes strides,but what really bothers me is the inevitable "Take THAT Microsoft!" kind of attitude that's
    displayed. Are we out to build a better world, or just to tear down Gates?

    Either works for me...

    Mojo
  • You could argue for Solaris. How do you argue
    for scalability of Linux? You could argue for
    it to be proven in mission critical environment
    (which hosting is a prime example of), or you
    could argue its flexibility, or market acceptance,
    but how do you figure scalability?
  • Go ahead. Moderate me down all day. That 82 karma of mine is frozen. You could moderate me down 94 times and I'd still have 94 more karma points than you do.

    You on the other hand...
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 21, 2000 @04:42AM (#840490)
    The Continential European style is to denote thousands with a '.' and use ',' as a decimal seperator.

    They do it just to annoy Americans and the English. :-)
  • by Proteus ( 1926 ) on Monday August 21, 2000 @05:01AM (#840491) Homepage Journal
    I think that the main point that can be gleaned from this survey is that many, many ISP's choose Linux as thier hosting OS. This makes sense because of low TCO (especially since ISP sysadmins usually have UNIX experience), and very short bugfix release timeframes.

    However, a survey like this cannot answer the question that PHB's and corporate Sysadmins everywhere want answered: What are successful companies using for mission-critical appliacations?

    At the moment, I don't think anyone can answer that directly, but I would like to see tech magazines survey businesses to see what they are using, and in what capacity. I would suspect that, at least for now, MS has the lead in medium-to-large corporations for mission-critical applications -- but the fact remains there is no data to back this up.

    #disclaimer -- I don't like MS, but I believe in every OS having a place.

    --

  • >> Let's assume all your facts are correct--I have no way of (or interest in) verifying them.

    > Of course not - it might challenge your small-minded view of the world and force you to accept that everything is not surrounded by a confortable glow.

    Challenged your libertarian sentiments did he? And all you can do is produce and ad hominem attack. I would say you just lost the arguement.
  • Germany? Socialism?

    Eeehm, you've got to watch the news sometime. We swallowed East Germany ten years ago. End of socialism. Start of the new government program: "Let's wipe the corporations' arses".

    Even the supposedly slightly socialistic Social-Democrats, who are in power now, have dropped their ideals and re-oriented themselves to the "new middle", i.e. ignoring the minorities' lobbys and catering to those with money.
  • That is 205540. It is the number of IP's, not the subnet.

  • "Let's assume all your facts are correct--I have no way of (or interest in) verifying them.

    Of course not - it might challenge your small-minded view of the world and force you to accept that everything is not surrounded by a confortable glow."


    Actually, I was referring to high taxes in Germany, not any supposed "Revealing Truths About Socialism" which I've heard a million times.

    "It is almost a definition of socialism that taxes are high."

    And it IS a definition of capitalism that if some costs (which taxes are) rise but final price must stay constant then some other cost must fall--in this case OS platform.

    "Second, companies switching to a better and cheaper OS is not proof that XYZ doesn't work."

    "When did I say that Solaris didn't work? Please read and think before posting next time. It makes you look like less of an idiot."


    When did I say you said Solaris didn't work? I'm talking about socialism. You said that companies moving to Linux proved that socialism didn't work. I'm saying that companies moving to Linux ("a better and cheaper OS") proves that "socialism" (actually capitalism as shown above) does work.
    --
  • I'm sick of /. being full of these gnomes chanting, "Linux is the uber-OS! M$ SUCKS!!!" I run Windows 2000, and I've been contemplating changing my browser string to "MozillaSucks/NT5's bigone."

    I remember that I did stumble upon a site with the layout of /. but about Win2k. I'd like to find it again. Because of the lack of intelligence at /. I've been forced to seek alternative newsfeeds (the Onion, for one; the constant GNU-Bickering at /. makes me sad)

  • If I were a linux distribution company I would love to see numbers like this (or percentages in this case). They don't care that much about how the companies are using them, just if they are buying them.

    Even the samurai
    have teddy bears,
    and even the teddy bears

  • <sarcasm>
    Well, America is the greatest country anyway... you should be happy that they don't nuke your ass out of this world!
    </sarcasm>

    Actually, I kinda agree - I'm fairly often pretty pissed off after reading American peoples opinions on things happening over here in Europe (simply because it's often obvious that they don't really know anything about what they're talking about)...
    But I think it's tiny bit late to teach the Americans English (as in British English) spelling ;)

    --
  • side note: those digit symbols are Arabic in origin).

    No, they are not. It was the Indians who invented the decimal number system. The Arabs who traded with the Indians were the ones who brought that over to Europe. That's why they are called Arabic numerals. They are not Arabic in origin, though.

  • In most countries to the East from Germany, Apache is running on more than 70% of the internet hosts, as ISPs here are somewhat more price-conscious and MS is even less popular than in the West. Though it's much more interesting that non-commercial OSes and web servers are so popular in Germany, where the only possible explanation of this success is the security, manageability and reliability of Linux, not the free code.
  • Yes, Americans can be ignorant/arrogant, but so can the rest of the world. It's just that Americans, for whatever reason, are currently the world's Political/Economical/Military (and perhaps cultural...scary thought ;) hegemonic power, so American flaws are expsosed to more people and easier to to see.

    The Romans faced the same problem when they took over "Graeco-Roman" culture.
  • Linux: We're the "dot" in .de!

    Axel

  • Yes, use spaces to separate groups of numbers, or use underscores like Perl (and Ada IIRC). For example,

    good: 12345 or 12 345 or 12_345

    bad: 12,345 or 12.345

  • This has already been put into practice in Cambodia. I do not think anyone will try that again.

    Mojo
  • Yeah .. but these machines are horrible. They had more than 6 total crashes in this year. Each with a downtime of more than 6 hours !. (one was nearly one day. Imagine! 180.000 Domains gone ! ;)
    (Although that provider states, that there are 1.000.000 Domains on that machine.)

    Also they run the web-service for the domains on one, and use the other for e-mail and database. Both are Sun E6500 ...

    (I just happen to have a domain right there. It sucks. I should have used the other big one, it uses linux-cluster ;)

    --
    Samba Information HQ
  • I like "We're de dot in .de"
  • The world isn't america. Microsoft doesn't rule the world, as much as it would like to think it does.
  • broadband almost everywhere in europe is darn expensive.
  • Companies can set whatever prices they like, but it is the consumers who decide whether they are willing to pay them.

    I'm not sure what you mean in the part about exclusionary contracts.

    --
  • If the moneyhungry companies didn't take such enormous prices for their products the taxes wouldn't be so high either. The fun thing here is that Linux (considered socialist) is there to help the companies.

    1) Companies don't set prices - markets do. High prices - and high profit margins - are signs of inefficiency in the marketplace due to over-regulation or lack of access to information.

    2) I don't think of Linux as being socialist - i think it's the free-market's response to Microsoft's grip on the desktop. It certainly is very collectivist, but it all takes place within a context of free and voluntary association, which is very free-market/libertarian.



    --
  • Oh wow, you're right. After IHBT many times on this thread, I've now been nicked two points. Oh well, it's been fun abusing the +1 bonus, but all good things must come to an end.
  • You didn't phrase a question. You made a bunch of (quite ridiculous) statements.
  • Obscure software makes you l33t because of the uniqueness factor. I've leaned over people's shoulders in computer clusters and asked them, "Wow, how did you get that l33t transparent terminal / window manager / melty clock / ICQ client?" Usually, they'll tell me (aterm, E over remote X, xdaliclock, ICQ for Java). It works the same way for the OS, or even the gadgets you carry around.

    Heck, I keep my plain but interesting-looking watch [timebydesign.com] on not only because I like the way it looks, but because I've had dozens of people come up to me and ask, "Does that thing tell time?" Serves them right for trying to crane their neck around and find the time out from my watch without asking. :)

    When enough people use a product or service, it instantly becomes lame to use it, and l33t to use something more obscure. See: Winamp vs. Sonique; Internet Explorer/Netscape vs. Opera, iCab, and the list goes on; mIRC vs. any other IRC client; Windows vs. Linux (vs. FreeBSD?); and of course AOL vs. any other ISP in existence. You can hype the competition's features all you like, but people usually stick to what they know. Using what people don't know is l33t beyond all comprehension.

    Optimistically, I'd say that Linux has a couple more years to go, just as long as Microsoft keeps its appeals process running. Pessimistically, and I hate to side with obvious trolls [slashdot.org], Linux still has a ways to go before it overcomes its UI limitations and can truly be fit for the masses.
  • Does this not strike anyone as an incredibly inconsiderate thing to do? I can almost see the stream of alerts flying off of IDSs around Germany...
  • deutsch:
    1 Million = 1E6
    1 Milliarde = 1E9
    1 Billion = 1E12
    1 Billiarde = 1E15

    english:
    1 million = 1E6
    1 billion = 1E9
    1 trillion = 1E12
    1 ? = 1E15


    © Copyright 2000 Kristian Köhntopp
  • by Hammer ( 14284 ) on Monday August 21, 2000 @05:11AM (#840516) Journal
    Why are you interested in stats on the *.us domains? Wouldn't .com, .net, .org be more interesting?

    No not really. There is no saying where a site is located based on the TLD. A .us or .ca may indicate that it is located in the US or in Canada. The .com, .net etc TLD's are now truly global. I work for a Canadian company with a .com address, read Swedish newspapers with .com addresses.

    The internet is truly global and every attempt at pinning down physical location based on simple TLD filters is bound to fail.
  • NO!!! really??? are you sure???????
    of course i know, it's just that it took me a few seconds to realize that the german hadn't figured out a way to add another few bits to ip addresses and this was actually a number. the headline's kinda confusing (at least for me!)
  • by msouth ( 10321 ) on Monday August 21, 2000 @04:12AM (#840519) Homepage Journal
    They just don't seem to get the "Microsoft, everywhere, all the time" dogma. It's a wonder anything works over there.


    --
  • by generic-man ( 33649 ) on Monday August 21, 2000 @04:15AM (#840521) Homepage Journal
    You can muck around on Netcraft all day compiling lists of .com, .net, and .org domains, but there's no guarantee that they're all American domains. The only truly American TLD is .us, which is used chiefly for government-entity web sites, such as The State of New York [state.ny.us] and my school district's pathetic attempt at a web page [k12.ny.us]. Due to its modular nature, the difficulty in getting even a response from the .us domain people (took me several months last time I tried) and the overall ugliness of the resultant URL's, .us is a very unpopular domain.

    On the other hand, just about every web site in .de is a German organization.
  • 6 hours was probably the ammount of time it took to fsck the disk array. Sounds like poor design methodology (no duh, 1,000,000 virtual websites on one box?!) rather than bad platform choice.

    Crack must be real cheap in .de
  • There is an AC post which explains it, but I lack moderator points at the moment... 205.540 is read in Europe like 205,504 would be read here. The '.' is a clarity-delimiter separating thousands, millions, etc. while the ',' is a radix. (Decimal point in base10, for those not familiar with multiple-base math). Hope that helps... and hope someone mods that AC up -- [s]he was first...

    --
  • by _xeno_ ( 155264 ) on Monday August 21, 2000 @04:59AM (#840536) Homepage Journal
    This isn't really supposed to be a troll, so I'll try and provide rational arguments, but... who cares about the number of Linux servers being higher than anything else?

    The number of Linux servers compared to Solaris servers is largely meaningless because a Sparc can handle more of a load than a simple x86. Yes, Linux is available on a Sparc. But why bother? If you're going to get a UltraSparc 10, why get another OS when you can get Solaris 8 supported as part of the package? If you can afford $8000 for the machine, Solaris is a viable and usually more useful option than Linux. (Mostly because you can also get a support contract.)

    A useful comparison might be to compare what the majority of Linux servers are used for compared to Solaris and Windows servers. Are the Linux servers running e-commerce sites? Or are they running the standard Apache home page because httpd was in the default init script?

    Linux is used by many hobbyists - how many of those boxes where just boxes set up for personal use? I dunno how cheap broadband is in Germany, but it's a possibility.

    Like all statistics, take these with a grain of salt - the fact that the cheapest method of serving a web server is the most widely used really doesn't mean anything. I'd expect a survey of college students who run their own web pages to come up with a large collection of Linux, followed by Windows, and then maybe the free-as-in-beer Solaris offerings.

  • by KFury ( 19522 ) on Monday August 21, 2000 @04:59AM (#840538) Homepage
    That's funny. I go portscanning entire domains and my ISP gets mad. they do it and they get a post on ./ .

    Not to play devil's advocate, but how accurate are these numbers when you consider that firewalls can easily spoof or block portscan attempts?

    Kevin Fox
  • english:
    1 million = 1E6
    1 billion = 1E9
    1 trillion = 1E12
    1 ? = 1E15

    Actually, that's actually "American" not English. 1E15 turns out to be quadrillion in America, and confusingly enough, one-thousand billion in the British system. You can learn FMTYNTK about the names of big numbers [m-w.com] courtesy of Merriam-Webster [m-w.com].

  • It's the short comment penalty. One-word comments are automagically moderated down a point to prevent people from flooding the system with tiny comments (although repeatedly pasting things in circumvents this quite nicely).
  • by mcolin ( 14379 ) on Monday August 21, 2000 @05:24AM (#840560)
    Nope.
    Deutsch/German is spoken in .de
    Holländisch/Dutch is spoken in .nl
  • There are lies, damn lies, and statistics.

    (Score:0) Troll
    Godamn stupid moderator. Its not a troll. Its a quote, its a witticism, and its a truism. I didn't think it was nessesery to explain, and no one had pointed out, that this kind of reporting by statisistic is quite flawed, and should be taken with a pinch of salt. But of course, out of context even the Meta Moderators are going to agree...

    Thad

  • by 'This is false.' ( 223588 ) on Monday August 21, 2000 @04:25AM (#840573)
    I would imagine this extends to the rest of Western Europe as well, because despite the language differences, the cultures and economies were quite similar. The fact that their economies are doing quite as well will also make them a little less wasteful and linux is an excellent way to do that.

    I bet for one, most of the governments over there use Linux because they would rather not give money to some American company. Atleast with linux they can argue there are Germans who have had a hand in making it and they aren't spending money.

    It's also interest that a full 7% of the domains refused to respond. I'm not an expert here, does anybody know why that would be so high?
  • While this is changing sometime in the near future, IIRC one of the prerequisites for obtaining a .ca domain is that you be an organization with offices in more than one province.

    The .ca domain has not yet been deregulated like the .com, .net, and .org TLDs have. Therefore, a .ca domain would be a pretty good indicator that the site is in fact based in Canada. Of course, there are exceptions, like www.yahoo.ca

    --

C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas l'Informatique. -- Bosquet [on seeing the IBM 4341]

Working...