From: | damien clochard <damien(at)dalibo(dot)info> |
---|---|
To: | Gabriele Bartolini <gabriele(dot)bartolini(at)2ndQuadrant(dot)it> |
Cc: | PostgreSQL Advocacy <pgsql-advocacy(at)postgresql(dot)org> |
Subject: | Re: Rough estimate of number of downloads per year/month/day? |
Date: | 2012-11-29 09:38:32 |
Message-ID: | 50B72D18.5090809@dalibo.info |
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Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-advocacy |
>
> I thinks we need to define new metrics to monitor the evolution of the
> project in the industry. It's not easy but there must some way to mesure
> that. For example, the job trends or ML traffic could be more
> informative that the download numbers...
>
> http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=postgres%2C++oracle&l=&relative=1
> http://markmail.blogspot.fr/2008/02/postgresql-more-traffic-than-mysql-and.html
>
I should have thought about it earlier... The numbers are pretty low and
they're quite debian-specific (8.4 is dominant because of Squeeze). but
my guess is that the trends may be the same for other distributions. I
don't know if there's similar stats for other distributions, if you have
similar links for Ubuntu, Arch or CentOS please share :)
Anyway to go back to the good-old mysql-vs-pgsql battle, the graph below
shows clearly that the gap is still big and that it keeps growing
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