On Mon, Dec 05, 2016 at 08:51:35AM -0500, Matthew Miller wrote: > into it, and it's in the middle of his priorities somewhere between > "actual urgent work" and "other actual important work"), but > preliminary stats show a big drop in i686 mirror connections over the > last year — like, about cut in half. I'm not sure if this is a glitch > or representative of a real move — or whether it's because of perceived > or actual changes we've made, or just because people's old hardware is > hitting an end-of-life wall. For previous years, the percentage of hits to the mirror server (one IP counted per day) looks like this: 2007 - 85.3% 2008 - 80.6% 2009 - 76.9% 2010 - 71.5% 2011 - 65.4% 2012 - 56.2% 2013 - 46.0% 2014 - 35.7% 2015 - 22.1% So, roughly 5 percentage points lost the each year until 2012, and 10 points a year after that. The average so far of 2016 is 17.9%, but that's a little deceptive because of the big drop I mentioned above — it's in the 20s at the beginning of the year, but around summer dropped to 15% or so and is now around 12% - so looks like the drop-10 pattern will hold again. We'll see if it goes to 2% in 2017, though! (In case you're wondering, non-Intel architectures are around 1.7%, with ARM comprising the lion's share of that.) -- Matthew Miller <mattdm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Fedora Project Leader _______________________________________________ devel mailing list -- devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to devel-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx