Hey guys! Remember that survey we took quite a while back?
[https://programming.dev/post/15491554] Well, I didnt find the time to do the
results earlier, so… here are they! For those who didn’t take part, here was the
survey
[https://pad.tchncs.de/form/#/2/form/view/tLOujVUneepM10SiqMmTr3sIFDY865YdiHbSsDAS7pQ/embed/].
You can still write silly stuff there! But I will probably not read it. I still
have no idea how to share the results, so here is the HTML bundle downloaded
with SingleFile.
[https://github.com/boredsquirrel/lemmy-surveys/tree/main/Linux]. This Table,
which should also be on Github as .csv, offers all answers of every user
[https://pad.tchncs.de/sheet/#/2/sheet/view/MuzJOa7vHRZXUI-eS2N9V4hnghWyy2cXqry27owr61w/embed/]
which you can play with. All users are completely anonymized. — ## Results I
will pick some random funny things. ### Usage & Experience The majority uses
Linux since over 3 years. Most have used a few distros. A lot of people give
unpaid support for friends and family, which is great! Thats… what we are here
for, right? Most of you devs are not engineering systems, which makes sense, but
I guess contributions from your companies could help? We have quite some admins
and people working with Linux, which is cool! Let me hear your experiences and
coolest moments in your job? ### Gender & Representation Screenshot showing the
results
[https://slrpnk.net/pictrs/image/6bbe0685-7c97-4a16-9d9e-69563b231d1d.png] Well,
that is crazy! Interesting for sure. We are a huge majority male, together with
about 5% women, 5% nonbinary people, a few agender people or some that dont feel
in these categories. The question about representation didnt resonate a lot with
most, so there is low participation and many wrote it made no sense. I dont
think so, cough hyprland, but well, the majority feels represented, which
specifically for this question is worth nothing XD We have 25 people in the
survey that dont feel represented! I think we should work on that, and of course
feel free to post ideas on this. ### Improvements to the Linux community 1. We
need to be friendly, inclusive and welcoming to newbies and each other. No
elietism and separation among each other. Our goal is to free the world
together, isn’t it? 2. Again, working together. 3. Help very early newbies with
onboarding, easy docs and tools 4. More specialists on software, less duplicated
efforts 5. Use open platforms, not Discord \1. and 3. got a ton of votes. So
yes, if our goal is to spread the word, the first steps to the bright side need
to be as easy and welcoming as possible! ### Origin screenshot of origin survey
[https://slrpnk.net/pictrs/image/dbf092c2-d2b2-4542-88b8-a8d3ba7d8062.png] We
have more europeans than nothern americans! poorly, veery few from all the rest,
especially low in India, which was unexpected. I dont know how, but I think this
could be improved. The english-only communities may be an issue? ### Age
[https://slrpnk.net/pictrs/image/fca9f2fb-48fb-4088-9a2f-6fffc9102c26.jpeg] That
one surprised be a ton, as I am way below average. ### Income
[https://slrpnk.net/pictrs/image/bed2c145-527a-412a-a5d9-404bcb065e4a.jpeg]
Linux is free software, so our goal should be to empower poor people. We seem to
kinda be able to do that? ### Neurodivergence I have ADHD and I have the feeling
a ton of y’all cat ears are neurodivergent too. Seems like I was right, ADHD and
Autism are pretty common here. ### Why did you start using Linux? - Windows
annoyed me - privacy - tweaking the system very few switched from macOS or
ChromeOS, which is interesting but probably expected. ### Contributions
[https://slrpnk.net/pictrs/image/84e2a837-8b3a-4f38-81a9-2b76a5f8ce94.jpeg]
Well… everyone can translate, support others on dedicated forums (or here) and
donate a few cents! Come on guys! We can improve here. ### Multiple systems Way
more people use multiple Linux systems than I thought. A lot run Windows and
macOS in parallel too, we even have some ChromeOS users! Only very few use Linux
(as in “not Android” only!) For the reasons, companies, schools, unis are just
as much at fault as… gaming. I had no idea this was such a big deal! Also, not
many use multiple systems for testing stuff (like me), but actually daily drive
them! ### Why do you use Linux? 1. Freedom 2. Privacy 3. Fun 4. No costs ###
Hardware Most of you have hardware supported by Windows 11, which is
interesting. The “pile of awesome Linux machines” didnt arrive yet! ### Security
More people have unencrypted disks than encrypted ones. A few people dont even
know what disk encryption is! Of course I highly advise those people to learn a
bit about that, I wouldnt want an unencrypted laptop. For the reasons for
encrypted systems - security - privacy quite a few also have it as a
school/uni/work requirement, which is great! Having an unencrypted company
laptop… well no. ### Distros Well, Arch. A ton of people use Debian too, then
come Ubuntu and Fedora as base. 2 Slackers too! And… the NixOS community here is
bigger than OpenSUSE. So, what distro did you use first? - Ubuntu - Debian
Obvious, but still worth asking. ### Switching distros Nobody switched away from
NixOS, that one person starting on it is still rocking! Many switched from
OpenSUSE because they found something better. From Arch, because… other? And for
some it broke. RedHat is the biggest reason why people switched from Fedora…
which is a bit silly… but again “other” is the biggest reason, what happened
guys?? Debian had too old packages, I feel you. “other” again huge, just as with
Ubuntu, which scared people away with Snaps, GNOME, privacy issues and a whole
lot of “other”! ### Distro type A third of you use small distros, most dont. Not
many use a small variant from a bigger distro (like Fedora Kinoite etc), which
surprised me. ### Distro optimizations Many people simply want a better user
experience. Again, gaming is a huge factor too, while privacy and security
hardening is significant but not for many. ### Modifications People uninstall
way less than they add additional stuff. Theming is less important than I
thought. Privacy and security tweaks are again pretty low, I encourage you to
take a look! ### Hardware Even, which is again really surprising. It may
correlate with the quite old user base? Only a few of you got that Android runs
Linux ;D Or those all run PostmarketOS or something. We have quite a few running
hardware with official Linux support, which is cool! And even though most is not
officially supported, you still dont really have big issues, or none at all. ###
Coreboot Only a tiny fraction you uses coreboot! While a huuuge majority trusts
some random proprietary code running at highest priority. I can encourage you to
look into coreboot! Of the ones using coreboot, a majority bought hardware with
it. For the ones looking, here a small list: - System76 - Starlabs - 3mdeb,
Novacustom - Nitrokey - A ton of Chromebooks with MrChromeBox coreboot - A few
pretty old Thinkpads And… nobody uses the Heads firmware! Which is a shame, as
it is really cool and the only good measured boot implementation, outside of
Google Pixels with GrapheneOS. ### DE or Window Manager A big majority uses KDE,
followed by GNOME and then the Window Manager guys. Cinnamon also has a
reasonable user base. Users of smaller desktops often didnt switch because they
didnt like the direction of others (mostly GNOME) but simply because they are
easy to use, lightweight… and then there are the Mint users. 34 Window Manager
users have no hobbies, I feel you. The main reason pro KDE is customization,
while the traditional UI is also very important. A ton of users switched from
GNOME to KDE, which should be a hint for Fedora and others. ### Virtual Desktops
A majority uses them, which is crazy! ### Wayland or X11 Many dont even know
what they use, while Wayland is luckily the majority. Reasons to stay on X11 are
- missing features - software issues - the Mint users Many people have
considered changing the WM to a wayland-native one. A lot say they will probably
switch soon, while there are a few that dont consider this. ### Packages,
Source, Flatpaks, … Most get their apps from the system repos, followed by
native packages from 3rd party repos. Flatpak is even below those 3rd party
native packages, which have full control over your system! But they are close.
Appimages are used more than native packages that dont come from a repo, while
both methods are pretty insecure and I hope you are careful with them! Snaps
have not many friends, which I can understand. ### Immutable or not? SteamOS has
a ton of fans here, and more use NixOS than Fedora Atomic. Android stays the
most used immutable/composed/atomic system out there. Not many are using new
distros like VanillaOS, BlendOS etc. ### Proprietary software Beware, a rant. A
ton of people runs whatever they need or want, even if it is proprietary! Also a
lot more people use non-flatpakked proprietary software, which can be a pretty
big security risk, as those can do whatever they want. ### Flatpaks A lot of
people like official maintenance of packages, the store and ease of use.
Security through bubblewrap sandboxing is a high point too. Many tell that
sandboxing breaks their use case, which I would respond to with: This is not the
intended behavior, they should work by default, please file bug reports! Desktop
integration is also an issue, which must be theming as other things normally
just work. Many people prefer distro packages and fear bloat through extra
libraries. Snaps are also a big cause for not liking them, which is a shame
really. Very few have actual hardware limitations to run the apps like that.
[https://slrpnk.net/pictrs/image/21c23c97-cac6-40dc-8105-5fdc23bf92b3.jpeg] I
dont know what to say to this, the result surprised me a lot. There seems to be
huge emotional bias towards Flatpaks, or ignorance towards the security mess
that running proprietary unsandboxed software is. — Anyways, those where not all
answers, have a read through them! Here is the link to the survey results
[https://pad.tchncs.de/form/#/1/view/AoaAudqSo866GUFQvZxnVA/RQviAtAa79X-RNzZZ9n8EzGDmohkYE4wSCxw3gMVR78=/embed/auditor=VXA0bnY3Q3BRTHJHWERsQ1RUTWtQd3BPNkI3VEhRV2c=/]
if you have troubles with cut-off questions.
as a brazilian, i have a few ideas as to why latam participation in the survey was so low and i don’t think it has much to do with low linux usage
lemmy isn’t very popular in brazil yet, even inside the brazilian fediverse. my current instance is a few months old and it is one of the first brazilian lemmy instances
unlike europeans, the overwhelming majority of brazilians is monolingual. only 5% of brazilians have any level of english knowledge and 1% are proficient. even if lemmy was popular in brazil, most people wouldn’t even see the survey anyway
i don’t know for sure about the rest of latam (and the global south for that matter), but I’m willing to bet both of these points apply
i think i know what happened: the text looks different depending on the client/interface. i first read it on thunder and it looked fine, but i’m now on lemmy web using the vanilla theme and it looks like this: