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posted by martyb on Sunday June 24 2018, @08:05PM   Printer-friendly
from the show-me-the-numbers dept.

The Ubuntu blog has a report on installation metrics:

We first announced our intention to ask users to provide basic, not-personally-identifiable system data back in February.  Since then we have built the Ubuntu Report tool and integrated it in to the Ubuntu 18.04 LTS initial setup tool.  You can see an example of the data being collected on the Ubuntu Report Github page.

At first login users are asked if they would like to send the information gathered and can preview that data if they wish.

One thing to point out is that this data is entirely from Ubuntu Desktop installs only and does not include users of Ubuntu Server, Ubuntu Core, our cloud images, or any of the Ubuntu derivatives that do not include the ubuntu-report software in their installer.

For example, the average install took 18 minutes, but some systems were able to install in less than 8 minutes. Available RAM was most frequently reported at 4GB followed closely by 8GB, but there were systems reporting in with as little as 1GB and as much as 128GB.

How do your system(s) compare?


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 25 2018, @11:37AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 25 2018, @11:37AM (#698081)

    PCLinuxOS, on the whole, for my general purpose desktop machines, just works, and works consistently across disparate hardware out of the box without tweaking.
    I will say that the only real issues I've had with it recently is the borking of the nvidia drivers (no, nouveau isn't a serious option..finding it lurking in the initrd was a bit of a pain), and their separation of the libreoffice updater from the main synaptic package update mechanism is a bit weird and can lead to breakages which need the offline installer to be run to fix.

    As I said, ok for general purpose desktops, code development? apart from the occasional install of stuff from source that isn't in the PCLinuxOS repos, I still do all serious code friggery on Devuan, Slackware and BSD boxes.