Luckily there are a ton of clients and knowledgeable people on this forum who understand that overselling != diminished performance, unfortunately for every one of those there are thousands that don't understand that and thus why advertising the population of a node is not beneficial to a VPS provider who's business relies on sales from the general public where the vast majority aren't very technically inclined and will quickly judge a company based on the negatives of the virtualization use...
The bottom line is that the number of VPSs per node has no impact on anything and cannot be used to quantify anything performance-wise. All you have is a number out of context of anything and will mean different things for different providers. If the number was broken down to show you have much RAM and disk space each VPS got, then you could see how oversold a node is but even that doesn't give you a view point of the server's performance. Now if the number was broken down by CPU, RAM/swap, or disk IO usage, then you can get an idea of how over/underworked the server is...
Well I agree, but do take some slight issues with this.
OVZ only has industry traction based on offer price. Show me some mega cheap annuals for $5-10 on KVM/Xen/etc.? They are ALL OpenVZ, won't find the others. Someone wants to offer such on other virtualizations, they would likely do well. If they can manage oversell and implications in other virtualization.
A container count does speak to level a provider is going to monetize their server. There are reasonable loading levels and reasonable income per U numbers. Calling this optimizing resources is being borderline dishonest based on who I am conversing with and their actual knowledge level.
You get some of these container counts we have have seen 600-1600 on a server and I fail to see how such could perform even at an acceptable level. Only math at play there is scores of idle containers online, but sitting with no real use - only way such is viable as a loading stunt. Even those better be running on an E5 to make it believable.
When I see those numbers I think what an insane customer base; buyers that just idle. Those customer bases can only be one thing - extremely cheap, call it laughable cost annuals and very small plans at that.
I wonder how many companies charging $10GB of RAM or more are so heavily loading nodes to be embarrassed if such was made public? Those are the shops I worry about as people actually host business type stuff there (as where the el cheapo stuff is hobby sandboxing).
Arguably nothing can be used to quantify performance other than overall customer in container perception. It's counter productive to the industry and providers who actually understand the technology. Top level full server CPU, RAM/swap, disk IO, disk IOWAIT, etc. could give time in place snapshot view, but even that is flawed - need some graphing over long time periods to make sane sense and be believable. This I hope becomes the normal approach for companies claiming transparency and wanting to run a good shop.