← Back to context Comment by goenning 2 years ago 100% if you exclude Microsoft’s cloud? :-) 4 comments goenning Reply Zobat 2 years ago "More than 60 percent of customer cores in Azure run Linux workloads"https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/products/virtual-machines/...So the Linux share would actually decrease if you exclude Azure ;) p4bl0 2 years ago > So the Linux share would actually decrease if you exclude Azure ;)I think it wouldn't, because that would imply 40+% of windows market share outside Azure, which I strongly doubt is even close to true.But your point that even on Azure, Linux has a large majority is still valid! fragmede 2 years ago Depends on if you want to file the servers running Office 365 under Azure, which Microsoft does to juice revenue to make Azure look bigger. smartmic 2 years ago Doesn't Azure Cloud also rely on Linux in the majority of its VMs?
Zobat 2 years ago "More than 60 percent of customer cores in Azure run Linux workloads"https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/products/virtual-machines/...So the Linux share would actually decrease if you exclude Azure ;) p4bl0 2 years ago > So the Linux share would actually decrease if you exclude Azure ;)I think it wouldn't, because that would imply 40+% of windows market share outside Azure, which I strongly doubt is even close to true.But your point that even on Azure, Linux has a large majority is still valid!
p4bl0 2 years ago > So the Linux share would actually decrease if you exclude Azure ;)I think it wouldn't, because that would imply 40+% of windows market share outside Azure, which I strongly doubt is even close to true.But your point that even on Azure, Linux has a large majority is still valid!
fragmede 2 years ago Depends on if you want to file the servers running Office 365 under Azure, which Microsoft does to juice revenue to make Azure look bigger.
"More than 60 percent of customer cores in Azure run Linux workloads"
https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/products/virtual-machines/...
So the Linux share would actually decrease if you exclude Azure ;)
> So the Linux share would actually decrease if you exclude Azure ;)
I think it wouldn't, because that would imply 40+% of windows market share outside Azure, which I strongly doubt is even close to true.
But your point that even on Azure, Linux has a large majority is still valid!
Depends on if you want to file the servers running Office 365 under Azure, which Microsoft does to juice revenue to make Azure look bigger.
Doesn't Azure Cloud also rely on Linux in the majority of its VMs?