lifeafter2am wrote:I will post results here as I start to come across them! (maps too!)
bump
Don't do that. https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Fo … te#Bumping
]]>I will post results here as I start to come across them! (maps too!)
bump
]]>Survey is now closed. A HUGE thanks to the Arch community for their showing on this!!! Arch accounted for almost 60% of the 900 responses!!
I will post results here as I start to come across them! (maps too!)
Only 60%? So much for world domination
]]>I will post results here as I start to come across them! (maps too!)
]]>So, this is odd. We launched a new website at work last month, and like the bunch of geeks we are, we sat staring at a map of the world watching pings from the varying countries hitting the site. I explicitly recall seeing a a ping in this same area. I know that there's islands just off the coast of the armpit of africa, but this map makes it appear like the ping came due south of ghana, where there's nothing. How are these locations being captured? Geolocation via IP? Would be interested to what the actual location is supposed to be...
Yes, this is done via Geolocation via IP. I know there are a few places where the data didn't come through, and this may be one of them. I think that might be the 0,0 line and that is where the program drops the datapoint when it doesn't have a GEO location.
]]>So, this is odd. We launched a new website at work last month, and like the bunch of geeks we are, we sat staring at a map of the world watching pings from the varying countries hitting the site. I explicitly recall seeing a a ping in this same area. I know that there's islands just off the coast of the armpit of africa, but this map makes it appear like the ping came due south of ghana, where there's nothing. How are these locations being captured? Geolocation via IP? Would be interested to what the actual location is supposed to be...
]]>Too bad that the survey is in English only, that precludes most areas in the world where English isn't spoken as first or second language.
You may translate it to another language.
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