| Mechanical robustness against the external atmospheric pressure?
The most robust shape is a sphere, the least (assume smooth surface now) is flat panel. The curvature helps to make sure no part of the material is exposed to tension and no leverage amplifies any of the stresses. These lamps use rather long internal structures, so true ball becomes impractically big. The tubular has curvature only along one axis but becomes rather slim shape along the lamp working structures (the arctube with its frame and connection), elyptical across both direction, so it is stronger. Plus has its glass further away from the hottest part of the inner workings, so does not need to work at that high temperatures and that high temperature gradients.
On the other end the tubular means it could start from a tube - an easier format to make for a high volume production, which may make it cheaper even when eventually using a bit more material or requiring a bit more consistent structure. Elyptical requires more forming, which may make it more expensive for processing and more prone to defects that make it weaker.
At the end both are an engineering compromises, neither a "clear winner", their exact choice was dictated by the weaknesses and strengths of the particular plants and processes they originated from, but to big extend also the legacy - continue making what has been working and what people were used to in that area, e.g. also what the various fixtures became designed for (lamp anchoring mechanisms,...) and what the lamp engineers were familiar to work with (so they know what they can get away with and what not to do in their designs when using given shape, so avoid mistakes).
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