June Netcraft Survey 34
Andy Cheung writes "http://www.netcraft.com/survey/
The Netcraft Web Server Survey for June is out. Apache market share rises 3.46%; MS down -2.72". Scroll down past the graph on servers and check out the information on current exploits. It makes you wonder why "immediate death of the internet" has not happened.
The time is ripe to take over the Internet... (Score:1)
What would be more interesting... (Score:2)
How much comes from switching from another product?
How much comes from new domains starting up?
How much comes from existing domains adding servers?
Re:What would be more interesting... (Score:1)
Thats where they make most of their income.
Re:Here we go again... (Score:1)
you are wrong! (Score:2, Insightful)
Wrong? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wrong? (Score:2)
That number is the change (drop) in percent of publicly accessable Apache servers that are acutally hosting a page.
So the original posters point is actually in favor of Apache, since over 64% of Apache servers (acording to the survey) serve an actual site (as opposed to an "It Works!" type page), where IIS has just under 25%.
OTOH these numbers are skewed by the fact that there are oodles of "branded" Apache packages out there with custom "It Works!" pages, and undoubtably Netcraft gives Apache more credit than it deserves on this account. But we can't really be sure of anything without more info on their methodology.
-Peter
Re:Wrong? (Score:2)
-Peter
Hmmm (Score:1)
Well since the only people capable of bringing the world wide web to its knees are l33t Ub3rh4x0rs, it will be with us for quite some time.
Odd (Score:3, Insightful)
But I find it odd that when an expoit, worm or virus comes out for a certain webserver, that webserver rises in marketshare.
Like the rise of Microsoft IIS, after Code red, and now the rise of Apache.
Would it then be true that bad news is even better marketing then no news?
Is that why Microsoft Windows is even so successfull?
Re:Odd (Score:2)
I'll risk a guess that the exploit may wake up some percentage of admins or site managers, reminding them that they have let their site sit for months/years with just an "It works!" type page.
They update/upgrade to try and patch against the exploit and maybe spend a short while putting in some more personalized placeholder pages (Coming soon: Our Calendar!), before they back burner it again.
Just a guess, anyways.
-Sporktoast
Their exploitable server guess is a bit flawed... (Score:3, Informative)