Yes, I agree openbenchmarking got probably more devices/information etc. But it shows tests results. Whether something works, works partially or doesn't work.
Ubuntu site is for _certified_ hardware. What do they mean by that remains unknown to me, whether there is some formal test plan to announce a piece of HW certified (maybe it's mentioned somewhere, I'm not bothered to check). The idea is simply to check: ok, this HW is safe, I'm guaranteed it will work. With this approach it's obvious that canonical's list will be less comprehensive. It has to be, that's the point.
So you can't compare those two cause ideas standing behind them are completely different.
"Though not to serve as an advertisement for OpenBenchmarking.org"
Right now it looks like it may do a sufficient job for someone that just wants to know if an off-the-shelf PC will work with Ubuntu Linux, but for anyone else, it will fall short.
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