Number of People Involved in Your Linux Distro?
MerlinTheGreen asks: "I read a recent interview with Microsoft's Nick McGrath in which he claimed, 'There a myth in the market that there are hundreds of thousands of people writing code for the Linux kernel. This is not the case; the number is hundreds, not thousands.' This annoyed me a little as it perpetuates the idea it is Linux rather than the distribution that, in Microsoft-speak, would represent the value proposition. Recognizing that it's the distro that really counts, I wondered how many people were involved in mine. My answer is that, for FC3, I found 16921 unique e-mail address just by running a simple script over /usr/share/doc. What other estimates are there for the number of people who are involved in your distribution, and what method did you use to come up with that number?"
I haven't contibuted at all, if that helps with your calculations.
1.
and what method did you use to come up with that number?
Just created a new fork for a distro that will REALLY succeed on the desktop this time, and haven't told anyone else about it until right now.
Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
If (and that's a huge if) Microsoft were right that it's only a few hundred people working on Linux / distribution / favourite app of your choice, then they should be thoroughly ashamed of themselves. Linux is serious competition to Windows in every space. They are having their lunch eaten for them.
If they want to say that there multi-thousand employee empire is being kicked about by a few geeks with spare time at the weekend, then who are we to argue?
Carpe Daemon
My question is : WHO CARES ? I mean, what the hell, why would I want to know how many people were involved in the fabrication of my fridge ?
As I said this is not intended as a flame, but I fail to see the interest.