• HouseWolf@pawb.social
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    74
    ·
    17 hours ago

    It’s due to how Valve conducts these surveys. Rather than pulling from the entire user pool at once, they rotate between different chunks of the userbase every month.

    You’ll notice this if you look at the system language stats, The Chinese speaking population jumps and falls by a rather large percent every month.

    This also could explain why Windows 10 had another jump in users this month, From what I hear internet cafes are still a popular way to game in China. and I doubt many of these places have updated all their machines to Windows 11 yet.

      • HouseWolf@pawb.social
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        10
        ·
        16 hours ago

        No clue, Think it’s one of those ‘Worked well enough in the past’ things they just never bothered to re-work.

        I personally wish they would update it to be more globally accurate but it’s Valve so.

      • BananaTrifleViolin@piefed.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        4
        arrow-down
        1
        ·
        edit-2
        13 hours ago

        Data has value and this data is particularly valuable to Valve and its competitors. So Valve share the raw data which has gross numbers but they don’t share the useful data. The useful data is the processed data - the corrected and weighted data based on the other information Valve has about its users and install base. That way can weight this months survey responses to expected proportions of the whole user base and see actual user wide figures and trends.

        What Valve shares is akin to a polling company sharing the raw data from the people who completed a polling survey. It’s relatively meaningless and even misleading until they correct the data to weight it to make it representative of the whole population.

        So this month there were 1.15% fewer linux users in the survey pool, not 1.15% fewer linux users overall. They will correct the data to see an actual proportion of Linux users. For example: they have data on every use of Proton and every install of Linux versions of software; and how many times each user installs a game (occasional vs heavy users). They don’t share that but they can use that to help correct the data and get much more accurate picture - one they don’t share as it gives them a commercial advantage.