Mail Archives: geda-user/2015/10/07/23:56:33
On Thu, 8 Oct 2015, Kai-Martin Knaak wrote:
> Peter Stuge (peter AT stuge DOT se) [via geda-user-
> Ht4Cp5ncgjRBDgjK7y7TUQ AT public DOT gmane DOT org] wrote:
>
>> Evan Foss (evanfoss AT gmail DOT com) [via
>> geda-user AT delorie DOT com] wrote:
>
>>>> Remember that the mailing list will only ever represent a very
>>>> small subset of the full userbase.
>
> That's what we like to believe. But what if the full user base is not
> that much larger than the subscriber list of the mailing list? Partly
> serious. Are there any hints to realistic estimates?
I have the same impression.
We either have a lot of users installing from distribution packages
without trying to seek _any_ contact with us. Or there are really only a
handful of power users and probably a cuple of dozens "casual" users out
there (judging subjectively from the mailing list traffic).
Well, I know one user who is using geda (gschem, pcb, but not the
simulation flows; he used to be on the list, is still using the tools
weekly, but stuck with an old version). This suggests there might be such
a "mass" of hidden users.
It's pure speculation, but:
- gschem did not have up to date windows binaries for some time and IIRC
we didn't have windows installers;
- in the same time major distros kept on having geda/gaf and pcb available
as packages - not sure about BSD
I'd guess those hidden users are more likely to be Linux (or BSD?) users
than windows users.
>
>
>>> Yes but it involves a lot of the more serious users.
>>
>> I don't believe that at all.
>>
>> Many on the list are big users, but all big users are not on the
>> list.
>
> It is the classical "silent majority" conundrum. There is no way to
> know what the silent majority is up to. Any argument which refers to
> what the silent majority wants or does not want is inherently weak.
I agree and I think it'd be nice to somehow reach at least a portion of
those users and query them. If my above speculation is right, the only way
to them is through distro packages, which makes this harder.
Lately I found a Ruby packaging problem in Debian; I used debbugs to
report it. I really liked how the whole thing just worked - it was driving
me through the process, and I did not have to register in some web service
for a one-time bugreport and it collected a lot of mechanical info (e.g.
software versions) automatically. Maybe a similar mechanism in gschem
and pcb (as a GUI menu item or CLI or whatever) could help.
Regards,
Igor2
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