BBC Backpedals On Linux Audience Figures 330
6031769 writes "After recently claiming that only 400 to 600 Linux users visit the BBC website, the BBC's Ashley Highfield has now admitted that they got their numbers wrong. The new estimate is between 36,600 and 97,600 according to his blog post. He stops short of describing how Auntie arrives at these two widely different sets of numbers and how their initial estimate is two orders of magnitude out."
Hit Bots (Score:2)
Re:Hit Bots (Score:5, Funny)
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Are other Linux estimates wrong? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Are other Linux estimates wrong? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Are other Linux estimates wrong? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Go on any website and ask "Who uses Linux?" "Nobody!" "That's funny, the Linux folder has the most activity." "Well, of COURSE it does! THIS site draws a disproportionately large number of specialized geeks who would be more likely to run Linux!"
I've had this exact same conversation on Slashdot, Digg, Reddit, Fark, Netscape, NeoWin, DZone... "nobody uses Linux", but wherever you go, there's these thousands of Linux users with you, and it's always dismissed as a statistical f
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For the Linux count to be off by a factor of 100 due to not counting Firefox, Firefox would need 99% market share among Linux users. A quick and dirty analysis of a very small sample of the logs from MagPortal.com [magportal.com] gives the breakdown (unique IP addresses with "linux" in the user-agent string [case insensitive]):
FireFox: 53%
Gecko (FireFox + Seamonkey +
ah (Score:5, Funny)
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.. which came complimentary with their Microsoft site license (both Excel and the figures!).
I'm so hurt. All this time I trusted the BBC as a veritable, reliable news service. I feel so.. so.. violated!
...not!
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It could have been angry nerds protesting and visiting bbc.co.uk sites from their linux boxes to boost the market share stats. Or maybe a bunch of BBC stories have been posted to slashdot recently (e.g. this one).
Or... the guy could have pulled a random number out of his backside that he felt sounded right. The BBC have been dragging their feet and have been called on the concept of their iPlayer being Windows and IE only. Now they have yet another embarrassing incident to explain.
I've been using the BBC site for years, and I frequently watch streamed media, search for information and look up websites of various programs there. And I do the same on my Linux PC now I'm using it predominantly. The BBC website is link
Sounds like good news to for the Linux community (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Sounds like good news to for the Linux communit (Score:2, Insightful)
I still don't think that makes non Windows/MacOS support a priority for them. Do you?
Re:Sounds like good news to for the Linux communit (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, given the Linux-unfriendly nature of the BBC's site, how many Linux users either don't visit it purely because of the Linux-unfriendly nature of the site, or set their user-agent to look like Windows?
Don't be such a dick... (Score:2, Insightful)
He got it wrong, he was man enough to admit that he got it wrong. Why do you have to make such a big deal out of it?
And, sorry, but we have to agree that, statistically, it's still a tiny fraction of the user base. If I was developing a cross-platform application or service, commercial or otherwise, then I'd still plan on putting out the
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He got it wrong, he was man enough to admit that he got it wrong. Why do you have to make such a big deal out of it?
He didn't just "get it wrong", he got it wrong by three orders of magnitude. It was so wrong that anyone with even the faintest clue what they were talking about should have realised that the figures were wildly inaccurate.
Having been so wrong, why should we trust the revised figure? There is absolutely no reason to believe that this figure has been produced in a more reliable manner. It happens to be a plausible figure, but that doesn't prove it to be correct. It could still be out by an order of magnitud
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And, in case you're forgetting, we're still talking about a very small minority of the BBC website's user base. As others have said, we're arguing about some small fraction of a percentage point here, so in the grand scheme of things it's not like he's radically out of touch with his customers, is it?
Just why are yo
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So in response to his one possibly personal attack (which I took as a joke) and his one statement that you've misinterpreted as a personal attack, you're making two even-more-personal attacks? Is this really the best way to get the mote out of his eye? I'm not sure whether calling someone clueless in a random Slashdot comment makes the
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I'm reminded that in the early days of Firefox, people mouthed that same implicit argument. Too small a minority to redesign all those IE-only websites
Now, of course, the argument is that a business owner would be an idiot to write off 10% of their customer base. More important, the grander issues of healthy competition, accessibility, the destructive effe
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Which is made worse by the fact that the BBC receives pretty heavy funding from the tax payer. The BBC should be providing services that commercial entities don't. Every time they make a decision like this, they're just providing another reason why they should no longer exist. EastEnders was a pretty decent argument in itself.
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Re:Sounds like good news to for the Linux communit (Score:5, Insightful)
As a few people point out on the BBC site discussion, no one is asking the BBC to support Linux. What we are asking is that they don't lock us out by selecting a closed protocol, especially one from a company openly hostile to free software.
We're quite happy to organise our own support, thank you. All we ask is that the beeb picks a format where we can do so legally. I really don't see how they can justify any other course of action.
Do you?
Re:Sounds like good news to for the Linux communit (Score:4, Insightful)
I dunno... how about the Andrew Gilligan/David Kelly flap? Or the recent hoo-hah over phone-in lines. Hell, right now, BBC production staff can't even override a poll to choose the name of a kitten without heads having to roll. And that's just off the top of my head.
I don't see any way in which the commercial channels are accountable to me or any other member of the public. If I don't like some decision by ITV, the answer is going to be, "you're not an advertiser, so we don't care". At least the BBC are supposed to be accountable to the British public.
Which of course is why the debate is happening at all, as opposed to us just being told to get lost, which is what would happen if this was a commercial broadcaster.
Did Micro$oft have anything to do with it? (Score:5, Interesting)
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So how do they count their visitors when only the ones who can view the content are the only ones that return?
How many Zune and Zen users have iTunes accounts? I wonder if they would claim less than 1% of the visitors to the iTunes store do not have an iPod so all other potential visi
Re:Did Micro$oft have anything to do with it? (Score:4, Informative)
This is nothing like non-iPod owners using or not using iTMS (although I own an ageing iRiver and still use iTMS from time to time...). The vast majority of the content on the bbc.co.uk domain works just fine with Linux, as it's plain old HTML web pages.
Media companies will attemt to suppress Linux (Score:5, Interesting)
I have a theory that even if Linux users outnumbered Windows users, Game companies and Media companies would continue to do whatever they could to make Games and Media incompatible making the majority of people criminals so that they could stay in control of their content no matter what.
Despite all the trolling that everyone says how horrible Linux is because companies produce broken hardware that don't support it, plays musical chairs with chip sets, Linux is turning into one of the greatest OSes the world has ever seen. Lets make sure 2008 is not the last year of Linux. Lets make sure Linux does not go quietly into the night,
Re:Media companies will attemt to suppress Linux (Score:5, Funny)
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I think that media companies are going to fight until the bitter end to supress Linux users because so much of their DRM technology just doesn't work. Microsoft will play ball with DRM Media companies, Linux users are much more likely to fight.
DRM should follow the rules of good crypto. No secrecy in the algorithm, but all secrecy contained in keys. That way all DRM technology can be open sourced and implemented on Linux with no isseus. However, most DRM schemes are so broken that they rely on secrecy.
Re:Media companies will attemt to suppress Linux (Score:4, Insightful)
Thing is that DRM is unworkable on any platform. It's especially pointless in the BBC case, since all the material in question has previously been broadcast (to all of the UK together with parts of Eire, France, Belgium and The Netherlands).
Different sets of numbers? (Score:5, Funny)
English to metric conversion?
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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So his job is to look good.
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Re:Different sets of numbers? (Score:5, Informative)
In what other country can you buy a litre of petrol, drive a mile down the road at 30mph, under a 1.3m high bridge to buy a pint?
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Bollocks. Britons use metric in many more situations than USians (can't speak for the other countries in America, since I haven't lived, or even visited them).
For example, I can't recall ever hearing anyone in the US use Celcius for temperature, while it's the other way around in the UK.
Notable exceptions are
1) beer - always in pints
2) personal weight - always stones/lbs.
3) distance/speed - always miles/mph.
4) penis/tv size - always inches.
I can't thi
Astronomy Related? (Score:4, Funny)
300-600 Linux flavours? (Score:3, Funny)
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slashdotted perhapsity? (Score:5, Funny)
Simple, one is before being slashdotted, and one is after.
But what we really want to know is (Score:3, Funny)
Running BBC on Linux (Score:2, Interesting)
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The streaming media is straight unencrypted WMV or RealAudio, which is why you can play it.
iPlayer is a VB wrapper around Windows Media Player and requires the DRM functionality offered by WMP.
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On a 32bit XP machine with all the required WMP and DRM it still refuses to work, because you're using firefox. That's what you get for hiring ex MS employees to write something.
Between 36,600 and 97,600? (Score:2)
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Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:just be compliant to open and published standar (Score:2)
Well, the BBC is more or less obliged at this point in time to use DRM because practically everything they produce is a labyrinth of licensing and contracts - contracts with the writer, record labels for background music, actors, directors.
So, exactly what openly published industry standard which implements DRM would you propose they choose, hmmm?
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These are complex issues that we face, and pretending that they are simple to get rid off is not going to solve anything.
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The BBC is required, by it's charter, to have a significant proportion of its content produced by external providers.
These providers would charge vastly more for a lot of their product if the BBC was going to say "Hey, we're putting all your content on the web in non-protected forms.. okay?", especially those who want to sell their content to other broadcasters too. For content already in the BBC's vast archives the rules are even more difficult as we're talking contractual obligations sometimes going bac
Re:just be compliant to open and published standar (Score:2)
Someone needs to take a hammer to the BBC, and get it focussed on doing something useful. Too many parts seem to just ape what the commercial broadcasters are doing. i.e. do we need a tax funded broadcaster to air Beverly Hills Cop II? I reckon there are commercial broadcasters who are just as capable of showing us that masterpiece of world cinema.
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Adhere to the simple and straightforward standards of HTML rather than locking yourself into working with some forum/wiki software, and you're automatically compatible with viewers on any browser ;D
Linux, BBC, and RealPlayer (Score:2)
Whatever dark place they've pulled these stats from requires a thorough cleansing.
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anyone else?
Over-staffing at the BBC (Score:2)
Expect the number to keep climbing for some days yet, and then actually to go up and down like some strange ki
'Strategic Partnership' with Microsoft? (Score:3, Interesting)
The BBC was actually developing its own codec called DIRAC for the iPlayer project but its demise coincided with the hiring of former senior Microsoft executives to Future Media and Technology team (e.g. Erik Huggers, the MS director responsible for Windows Media Player in Europe).
This is a classic corporate 'coup d'état' by the Monopolist. A coup that has resulted in ~£100m (~$200m) of taxpayers money going to finance a media product that deliberately excludes large numbers of the UK public and is, as it happens, horribly broken.
All this is at a time that the BBC is shedding 12% of it workforce, cutting back of its world-renowned R&D efforts and selling off its landmark buildings in west London.
As the Free Software Foundation put it, the BBC now stands for "Bill's Corrupted Corporation".
It's not just about the Linux figures. (Score:4, Insightful)
Instead of doing this they engineered some bizarro Windows-only, IE-only, WMP-only solution consisting of server side sniffers, activex controls, 3rd party controls and proprietary JS & HTML which is not only horrifically complicated but doesn't even work properly from one Windows OS to the next, or one IE version to the next, or one WMP to the next. Use Vista? Screw you. Use XP with IE7? Screw you. Use XP with Firefox? Screw you.
Even DRM seems like a weak excuse for using WMP. Why not tie content to a TV licence by watermarking it? The user might have to register for the service and login but that's the only inconvenience. Afterwards let them do what they like with the content since its H264. It's not like the market for Eastenders episodes is massive anyway, and if by chance someone did abuse the service you can use the watermark to trace and prosecute them.
It seems like someone in the BBC is desperately trying to justify a very bad decision by marginalising the critics as unimportant. In reality the BBC ignored a great chance to develop a cross-platform solution and hopped in bed with Microsoft. Now they're wondering why nobody including the few people who got iPlayer to work are happy with piece of crap that produced.
Good interview with Ashley Highfield (Score:4, Informative)
Linked from TFA is a BBC produced podcast interview [bbc.co.uk] (available in Ogg Vorbis format, CC Attr-NC-SA) with Ashley Highfield which is extremely enlightening.
Rather than the very lightweight interviews I've read with him lately (I don't care if he has an iPod!), this is pretty in depth, and Mr Highfield comes across as having quite a lot of clue. It's well worth listening to.
To make a few of the points from the interview:
All in all, a very interesting listen.
Re:Nothing is solved, though (Score:5, Interesting)
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Just because you can run something in an emulator/translator (see WINE), doesn't make a native application.
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Re:Nothing is solved, though (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Nothing is solved, though (Score:4, Interesting)
No, I hadn't. Thanks for the info. Now what we need is a Flash Professional (you know, the Flash editor/maker) equivalent for Linux.
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Look at Flex Builder [adobe.com]. Built on the same technologies as Flash, but with the focus on application-style GUIs rather than animations.
Used the Windows-based freely available Flex 2 SDK (Not the Builder) to write an in-house media viewer here and was rather pleased by it, all told.
Not that I'd expect this to run on Gnash though as Gnash is based on a version of Flash (SWF 7) which wouldn't support all these cool toys.
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http://swfdec.freedesktop.org/wiki/ [freedesktop.org]
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Re:Nothing is solved, though (Score:5, Funny)
> Gaa! Move the quote mark one word to the left.
What? "Install 'the flashplugin-nonfree package'"?
That doesn't work either.
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Why would I read 'non-smartphone' instead of 'cellphone'? Why not just write 'non-smartphone' since they are indeed cellphones?
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If you're looking at something from 2+ years ago, then yeah they didn't do it. 4 years ago they didn't even have HTML.
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Unfortunately, Flash 9 on Linux has been the number 1 instability on any version of Ubuntu I have tried it on. Flash is the reason Firefox needs the Force Quit function all the time. Maybe someday they will get it right. In the meantime, how about something that just works?
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Re:Nothing is solved, though (Score:5, Funny)
What about the BLINK tag. Just as annoying as flash, carries just as much useful content as most flash but less resource intensive all around.
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The BLINK tag wasn't universally supported. If my memory serves me correctly, BLINK was only supported on Netscape (or Netscape based, like Firefox...) browsers.
Idiot (Score:2)
You sir, are an idiot. Flash is the antithesis of cross-platform solutions.
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Of course flash isn't standard at all, yet CSS is... and he is saying to use Flash over CSS. Gotta catch that one.
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I'm curious...which smart phones, exactly, do flash *video*?
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And after all it's not as if you couldn't buy Windows (tm) in any computer shop in the planet.
So it's a non issue after all.
Isn't it ?
Re:Nothing is solved, though (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's see: Flash does not allow text-based browsers to access the site. Or search engines. Or WAP phones. Or text-reading browsers for the blind. And that has nothing to do with the goodwill of the browser makers.
The ONLY way to get a truly cross-platform site is to start by a plain text site, then add layers of gracefully degrading markup, or even gracefully degrading Javascript on top of it, making sure the site never depends on any additional layer of functionality on top of it, making sure only to use the standards that *are* properly supported.
And let's not forget that *any* web application depends on standards: TCP/IP for starters, then HTTP, then HTML. If the browser manufacturers fail to adhere to these standards and the sites break because of it, those manufacturers should get their act together and fix that. But going for some obscure third-party technology is hardly a solution, especially when that 'solution' causes more problems than it solves. As someone who also does professional web development, though, I think the BBC also should get their act together and hire some designers that *do* know how to make the site accessible regardless of browser or platform. It is possible to do that- the standards in vigor are actually quite well-designed. And fortunately, there are workarounds for most of the problems that certain browsers cause by not following those standards.
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No way!
BBC might be slanted but compared to CNN or Fox, the BBC is a goddamn breath of fresh air.
(Also, I don't care as long as they keep letting Jeremy Clarkson make fun of Wales and America.)
Re:BBC is hopelessly biased... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:BBC is hopelessly biased... (Score:4, Insightful)
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"That's the BBC's business you know. They are not a public service"
Heh! So very true. ;-)