GitHub's Annual Report Reveals This Year's Top Contributor: Microsoft (github.com) 67
These are among the facts released in GitHub's annual "State of the Octoverse" report -- a surprising number of which involve Microsoft.
- GitHub's top project this year, by contributor count, was Microsoft's Visual Studio Code (with 19,000 contributors), followed by Facebook's React Native (10,000), TensorFlow (9,300) and Angular CLI (8,800) -- as well as Angular (7,600) -- and the open source documentation for Microsoft Azure (7,800).
- Microsoft now has more employees contributing to open source projects than any other company or organization (7,700 employees), followed by Google (5,500), Red Hat (3,300), U.C. Berkeley (2,700), and Intel (2,200).
- The open source documentation for Microsoft Azure is GitHub's fastest-growing open source project, followed by PyTorch (an open source machine learning library for Python).
- Among the "Cool new open source projects" is an Electron app running Windows 95.
But more than 2.1 million organizations are now using GitHub (including public and private repositories) -- which is 40% more than last year -- and the report offers a fun glimpse into the minutiae of life in the coding community.
Read on for more details.
There's also some statistics on how contributors use GitHub:
- Contributors are most active -- creating issues, opening pull requests, or making comments -- between two and four in the afternoon.
- GitHub reports that its contributors are less active in private repositories on weekends, "And there's always one quiet day on GitHub, regardless of location: New Year's."
- GitHub's top trending topic was "hacktoberfest", followed by "pytorch".
- GitHub's top emoji is a yellow "thumbs-up" icon, which over the last year was used 3.5 million times. GitHub even reports which programming language communities were most likely to use the yellow thumbs-up icon -- Java, followed by TypeScript, Go, JavaScript, and Python. (The Ruby community, meanwhile, was the one most likely to use the red heart icon.)
And there's also statistics on where contributors are located.
- 80% of GitHub's users come from outside of the United States, with that percentage increasing year after year. But the U.S. still has the most contributors, followed by China, and India -- and the same three countries also had the most new signups this year.
- The countries with the next-most contributors were the U.K., Germany, Canada, and Brazil (which rose three ranks this year, from the #10 position to #7...)
- Overall, more open source projects have been created in Asia than any other part of the world.
"Developers from the Czech Republic are especially chatty in public and open source repositories," the report notes -- followed by Switzerland, Germany, the United States, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom.
Extend, Embrace, Enveigle, Extinguish (Score:1, Interesting)
It was said more than 20 years ago
We were warned
It's all just a little bit of history repeating
When will we ever learn...
You blew it up, Damn You All, Damn You All To Hell !!!
Re:Extend, Embrace, Enveigle, Extinguish (Score:5, Interesting)
How can you extinguish the fire of open source software by dousing it with gasoline? How hard is it for you conspiracy theorists to fork at the first sign of a future problem?
I don't like Microsoft but this crap is just a symptom of a demented mind.
Re: Extend, Embrace, Enveigle, Extinguish (Score:2)
2018 where most of the people responsible for that behaviour have left.
Re: Extend, Embrace, Enveigle, Extinguish (Score:2)
Or not.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
You can extinguish a fire with gasoline by smothering out all the oxygen. Microsoft's MO is cutting off "the oxygen supply".
Forking is easy. Getting substantial, unfractured backing is hard. Merging many diverse forks is hard. Without a core development team, you get the situation like DOSBox: no movement forward for years, plenty
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
There's no conspiracy theorizing about it; just recollection of past observed behavior on the part of the single most malignant and malfeasant actor in all of tech, and extrapolating said pattern of behavior to predict future actions.
Or perhaps you've forgotten their actions wrt/ Hotmail, Kerberos, Bungie, VirtualPC, Java, ActiveX, Office file format interoperability, Java, and so on; or the Halloween documents, or "Windows isn't done until Lotus doesn't run", or their "open source is a cancer" ideology?
But
Re: (Score:2)
How can you extinguish the fire of open source software by dousing it with gasoline?
Logical fallacy: argument from analogy. [wikipedia.org] It's not actually fire and not actually gasoline. In practical terms, you extinguish Github by making the top project be a topheavy text editor written in crappy javascript and the fastest growing project be documentation for a proprietary cloud service. Then you plant articles like this to ensure the drip drip of projects leaving Github turns into a mass exodus.
Top contributors Microsoft, outside USA (Score:1)
In other words Microsoft has a large outsourcing operation going.
Anyways the statistics says nothing about business value.
We know the business value (Score:1)
$7.5 bn dollars is what redmond paid for this outfit. No surprise they're using it; might as well with the price they paid.
Which makes this list of jubilant "statistics" even more meaningless than usual. It does tell us EditorDavid is a fanboi.
Re: (Score:2)
$7.5 bn dollars is what redmond paid for this outfit.
Didn't Microsoft also buy Hotmail and Nokia's phone division?
I used my toothbrush more than anyone else. (Score:5, Insightful)
mod parent up (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
Just a reminder (Score:3, Interesting)
You can use git without github.
There are also alternatives to github that provide issue tracking like github.
Microsoft: just say no.
Misleading (Score:3, Interesting)
> The open source documentation for Microsoft Azure is GitHub's fastest-growing open source project, followed by PyTorch (an open source machine learning library for Python).
Documentation is not code, it's writing and text. Microsoft Azure is closed-source, so this isn't inline documentation it's "how do I use this server infrastructure".
If Appel started using GitHub to track changes to their documentation on how to use an iPhone, iPad, Mac OSX, iTunes, App Store, iCloud, support questions and FAQs, etc, they would easily surpass Microsoft as "the biggest contributor to open source" as well.
Completely misleading.
One metric I didn't see in the summary (Score:5, Insightful)
the old reliable metric:
Lines of code.
Having thousands of "contributors" and pull requests don't really mean anything but pointless metrics. They seem more like metrics that can easily be gamed.
A shocking report. (Score:2)
Report by company purchased by larger company makes larger company look good
Hmm... it's almost like they have some sort of influence over these things. I'm glad I Got The Facts. -_-
Important, but missing, qualifier (Score:5, Insightful)
”Microsoft now has more employees contributing to [the] open source projects on GitHub (which they recently purchased) than any other company or organization (7,700 employees), followed by Google (5,500), Red Hat (3,300), U.C. Berkeley (2,700), and Intel (2,200).”
FTFY.
Given that Red Hat has well over 12000 employees, it’s apparent the original statement was inaccurately worded.
96 million repositories (Score:2)
96 million repositories, and has over 31 million contributors
More repositories than users? I guess that 96 million figure counts the forked repositories that we have to create in order to submit pull requests.