Manjaro tops Distrowatch hits: Since I'm very involved with Linux, I visit the Distrowatch page often. The page is an online directory of Linux distributions. So you can search for the distribution you are interested in and find out if it meets your needs. THE by clicking here it is updated daily with new versions of distributions and applications open Source.
Hit Ranking now using Distrowatch is a method of evaluating interest in the distributions hosted on the website. Essentially, the service counts the clicks that each distribution receives, highlighting those that interest most users.
This feature of the page, has occasionally made the apple dispute between large distributors claiming the first places as it is just a clicks counter of the page of each distribution. The page displays data per year, month, 30 days, week, etc.
Although there are many who consider DistroWatch to be an unbiased source for the popularity of Linux projects, what cannot be disputed is the site's age and comprehensiveness. The page has been aimed at Linux fans for years, features almost every distro released and adds after requests of developers every new distribution that is released.
This means that the majority of clicks come from Linux geeks, so the ranks are probably not so unrepresentative.
So I'm not referring to Hit Ranking as a reliable method of evaluating each distribution, but more as a "counter" of traffic to a page that only deals with Linux.
If you are trying to find other ranking results, a good source is Alexa.
But let's see what happened to Distrowatch last space. For a very long time (since 2011) the Mint distribution holds the first place in the DW Hit Ranking. But for some time now Manjaro, a fork of Arch Linux continues to climb the rankings. So since yesterday for the first time the distribution managed to pass Mint:
So overall results for the last 6 months 2017-2018 are as follows:
Note that 8 out of 12 distributions are LTS (provide long-term support), and 1 in 12 has (and) has a Rolling Release. Of course we are talking about openSUSE Tumbleweed. Two of the 12 have only Rolling Releases (Manjaro and Antergos). The Solus distribution is semi-rolling and the Fedora distribution which is a cutting edge distribution but is not rolling.
OpenSUSE also has a LTS version called Leap.
Finally the TrueOS distribution is based on FreeBSD (Unix).
But let's talk about Manjaro.
For those who do not know the operating system, Manjaro is based on Arch Linux and its goal is to make things easier for novice Linux users.
Manjaro's installation is simple and can be done with two different graphical applications but also traditional via the terminal.
In general, Manjaro Linux deserves your attention and leaves a lot of promise for the future.
The myth we found while working with distribution is that rolling releases can be stable and offer reliability.
Manjaro Linux automates many processes that you have to do manually in Arch, which makes distribution quite affordable even for novice users.
This of course has not gone unnoticed by Linux friends, as we see in the Distrowatch ranking the distribution has now reached second place, chasing Mint Linux, which has long been at the top.
But let's look at the rank that Alexa gives. This rank now concerns the global ranking of each website project, και είναι μια μέθοδος που χρησιμοποιείται ως μετρικό system traffic. So we can talk about metrics that show the popularity of a website in relation to the others on a global level, and no longer among geeks.
So in the pictures below you can see Alexa ranking in the distributions that are first in the Distrowatch ranking: Debian, Manjato and Mint.
The ranking is very different, with Mint clearly ahead of Debian and Manjaro. On the other hand, we notice a decrease in the traffic of the Debian page (pay attention to the graphic), but also the return of traffic to the Manjaro page.
The drop in Debian traffic does not mean that the distribution has ceased to be the favorite of the majority, as this distribution is used as a basis by many other top distributions (Ubuntu, Mint, MX Linux, antiX, Sparky and many others)
After all the above, it's probably enough safe let's just say that Mint rightly holds the top spot globally, and that Manjaro seems to be favored by geeks, as it appears to be rising in Distrowatch's special ranking.
The rise of Manjaro in the Distrowatch list, compared to other stable distributions (Ubuntu, Debian, elementary) shows a tendency to adopt the rolling operating system.
Rolling distributions offer per moment software and new cutting edge system updates i.e. the latest update released.
Debian again has not stopped occupying the interested parties with its stability, although many times it is "served" with many different brand names.
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