this post was submitted on 27 Feb 2025
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Edit: they edited their comment to add the 6 billion link, and it's super weird that VLC's website then lists 400 million. Nonetheless, that's not the actual point. They also edited their comment to spitball estimate the number of Linux servers. What they're plainly failing to account for is that 1) Android and an unfathomable amount of embedded devices are Linux, and much more importantly 2) those servers aren't just sitting there doing nothing. They're doing their job of serving to billions of people. Literally everyone directly uses Linux in some capacity unless you're part of some remote tribe. This isn't a debate; it's just a fact that Linux is 1) much more used (see below examples that are critical to modern society that don't even all represent servers), 2) used by more people, 3) more useful, and 4) much more irreplaceable. You have to genuinely have no idea how any modern technological infrastructure works on even the most basic level to think that VLC wins out in usage because of 6 billion downloads. Google alone received 3.5 billion search queries per day in 2024. Linux absolutely trounces VLC's usage by several orders of magnitude, and its usage is absolutely critical to modern society. If you're thinking exclusively of the Linux desktop and excluding things like embedded systems, servers, Android, etc., you don't know what Linux is.
I'm sorry, your argument is just patently nonsense. Linux is clearly vastly more important and vastly more used than VLC. In terms of the "greatest piece of FOSS software" as the prior comment discussed, Linux wins on amount of usage, importance of usage, number of users, irreplaceability, and technical complexity – hands-down in every category.