Open Source Survey: Open Census updates
Updates from the Open Source Census, the survey launched in April by OpenLogic to collect quantitative data on the use of open source software.
Up today 2,181 machines have been scanned with OSS Discovery, discovering over 767 unique open source packages and nearly 300,000 open source package inm   stallations. founding on average 57 unique packages per enterprise.
Stormy Peters, now Executive Director of The GNOME Foundation, in the press release talking about how open source software compares across different operating systems says:
 As expected, Linux (an open source operating system) had the most with an average of 87 instances of open source found per scanned system. FreeBSD (also open source) was a close second at 81, but Mac wasn’t far behind with 75. Judging by the large number of Macs seen at open source conferences like OSCON and LinuxWorld, there are probably a lot of Mac users who are open source fans.
Windows, although not open source, still had a respectable amount of installed open source software, with an average of 39 instances per scanned system.
I suspect that the average Mac user is not an open source enthusiast, likely respondents belong to the OSCON and Linuxworld crowds. I would definitely be more interested in reading surveys run in broader audiences, though.
Register anonymously to the census, if interested.
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