One Year Later: Windows 10 Now Runs On Over 21% of All Desktops (winbeta.org)
An anonymous reader writes: On June 29, Microsoft announced that Windows 10 was running on 350 million devices -- 50 million more devices than the previous milestone announced by Microsoft on May 5. While the company is expected to update the number of devices running the latest OS when it releases the Windows 10 Anniversary Update on August 2nd, NetMarketShare has decided to conduct some research on its own. According to its report, Windows 10 currently runs on a 21.13% desktop OS share. Meanwhile, Windows 7 continues to dominate the market with a 47.01% share, with Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 representing less than 10% of the PC market, and Windows XP representing 10.34%. While the market share of Windows 10 is all but certain to rise, it likely won't rise as fast as it did between May and June or June and July for example, as Windows 10 is no longer offered as a free upgrade for PCs running Windows 7 or Windows 8. Microsoft has even backtracked on its original statement that Windows 10 will hit one billion devices by mid-2018, saying last month that Windows 10 likely won't in fact make that deadline.
run it unwillingly.
Less one as of last night... :)
Someone's W7 became W10 against their will, and they asked me to install a Penguin instead.
More and more of these as the days roll on.
My bet is Satan Nutella only counts up, not down. Hopefully when they look again only 2.1% are fool enough to still be running Spyware 10.
You can't even give it away!
There's a little known 32-bit release of it that's supported by Microsoft through to 2019.
It's called Windows Embedded POSReady 2009. It's basically an updated version of Windows XP (I guess you could call it SP4?). It still receives security patches weekly via Windows Update. It doesn't require activation and it's not too hard to find on the internet. It comes as a DVD ISO with an updated installer that lets you partition the disks through the GUI and load additional storage drivers graphically (rather than via the text mode setup phase). A full installation is just over 900mb.
I'm running it on my aging T60p, and it works great. It's extremely small and very fast.
I suppose that Microsoft released these figures to continue their message that adoption of Windows 10 devices goes according to plan. But if we do an "equivalent comparison", what does the story look like?
So for example, what percentage of iOS devices (iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch) remain on older OS releases after a new edition is published?
Instinct [as opposed to quotable fact] suggests that the adoption of W10 is actually underwhelming.
And the biggest issue is most definitely the complete lack of trust that most reluctant upgraders have with Microsoft themselves. I guess owners of PCs like to think of their PC as something that works for them, as opposed to it being a device which turns them into a product by stealth.
I have the same feeling on any device or service I use.
Corporations want us to be consumers and slaves, nothing else. Much like the world of Max Headroom.
The data over at Stat Counter seems to agree:
http://gs.statcounter.com/#desktop-os-ww-monthly-201506-201606
Looks like MacOS and Linux share has remained roughly flat over the last year. Win8.1 use has declined 48.5% and Win7 by 23.1%. Hence Win10's adoption has been at the expense of Win8.1 and to a lesser extent Win7. Overall it seems Microsoft's free upgrade has largely been successful at retaining existing Windows users, but it hasn't won any converts from Apple, and it hasn't slowed down Android at all. They stopped the bleeding, but its not exactly the "threshold" that would return Windows to growth that Microsoft's upper management claimed it would be.
"...Windows 10 is no longer offered as a free upgrade for PCs running Windows 7 or Windows 8."
I think what the author meant to say was, "Windows 10 is no longer rammed down the throat any user too naive to treat anything coming from Microsoft as a malware attack."
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
if i recall correctly, october is when microsoft will quit allowing factory downgrade options from major oems like toshiba, hp, dell, lenovo. the customer, or even you as a var, can still do it yourself as permitted by the oem/dsp eula, but the systems will have to ship from the manufacturer with win 10 pro installed. i know at dell it's already slim-pickings for downgrades to 8.1 or 7 pro.
I wish Microsoft would just close up their shop and have other more trusted people make a popular operating system.
I am using Win 7, but I am not really happy with it.
It sort of feels like I don't own my own computer, and I don't like that. And to me anything Win 10 seems like the storefront for a police state.
Well if you run something made by Microsoft, Apple, Google, Blackberry etc you don't own your computer.
If you actually want to own what you paid for then you have to run Linux or BSD.
Lol, captcha = Autocrat...
By all accounts, Windows 10 has been forced upon unsuspecting and suspecting users alike, forcibly shoved down their throats no matter how vehemently against some may have been.
"The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
Wake me up when it's finished and usable instead of a total mess with two control panels and a requirement to search instead of navigate a menu.
Im not suprised... Took me a whole day to install it on one of my laptops. First obstacle was it newer started downloading it... After trying upgrade helper turns out i didint have 20 GB of space it required.... Why didint normal update tell me this was problem? Then there was incompatible HP security software... Manually unsinstall 7 sub components of it and then main security manager... Reboot system at every turn... When it finally starter installing it still took nearly 3 hours to complete... Im so glad im not running business, that would have been disaster to be down a day for damn upgrade... So i did finally take a plunge, not doing anything super secret with this one... But i definitely understand why people stay away from it. I have newer had to waste whole day to upgrade any Linux distribution to newer version. Fastest have been half an hour and reboot once.
Or do Microsoft mean all computing devices that are not tablets, smartphones or IoT devices?
We're back to lies, damn lies and statistics again as Microsoft try to pump up their failed Windows 10 push, that'll stall now the "free upgrade" window has passed.
In context, my "desktop" runs Win 7 and won't change until it dies. I've a laptop that I installed Win 10 over Win 8.1 on as an exercise, and an HP Stream 11 netbook that came with Win 10 pre-installed. The ex-Win 8.1 laptop will probably get Linux Mint next, but will still be counted as a Win 10 licence as far as Microsoft are concerned. The HP will eventually become irrelevant due to its own internal limitations as Microsoft automatically install more and more sludge onto it.
I can forsee the day when I don't run "Windows" on any computer I own.
There you go. Why does Microsoft insist on shooting itself in the feet?
"4/5ths of people refused a free upgrade to what was traditionally a very expensive piece of software, despite us trying to forcibly install it on their machines for months on end and making it difficult for anyone other than a techy to refuse it".
Amazing how you can change how something reads by just flipping it.
Using the word 'runs' makes me laugh: poetic license in extremis. I have 'upgraded' many of my machines to Windows 10. Let me tell you that it doesn't exactly run so much as crawls in agony until you put it out of its misery by either reinstalling Windows 7, or booting from a device with Ubuntu Studio on it. Then there is all that cortana crap which you can't fscking switch off. I mean, I'd much rather have a simple scriptable way to make menus. Really: I could make something more useful for me with bit of javascript and a host with a few API hooks. It would be quicker than waiting for cortana to wake from its slumber on an older laptop! If you just had a javascript environment with a couple of predefined objects (akin to the window and document objects in a web browser), you could do something perfectly functional, and hack in whatever clever logic you want. What you can't do with MS's bloated mess, however, is hack _out_ the logic and features you don't need.
I would say, as a caveat, that the Linux world still has far to go in making things as easy as they can be. The trouble is that we've inherited a philosophy of design from that of companies where building big opaque piles of incomprehensible and incompatible crap that just about worked happened to be excellent development models for software companies. Short, sweet, beautiful and elegant examples of software programming are rarer than diamonds, and some of those 'rarer than diamonds' are locked in vaults and jealously guarded by organisations whose only purpose on life is to make money.
John_Chalisque
Windows 10 probably will be the last version of Windows, but not the way Microsoft imagines it.
By continuing to nag, snoop, spam and lock-down its users, Microsoft is transforming its core offering - its OS - into the opposite of what it should be: an agent of the owner that compels the computer to obey the owner's intent.
Its the age-old agency problem. An agent with a large amount of power (network effects in Microsoft's case) tends to abuse it to the detriment of the principal (Microsoft users). Its same problem when powerful executives persuade their company to reward them richly without commensurate effort. Left uncorrected, the situation worsens (customers quit in disgust, company implodes, etc).
Another company may eventually do to the Microsoft desktop what Apple and Android did to them in mobile. Or Microsoft may wisen up and curb their worst excesses (as they did in the XBox One phone-home fiasco). But it'd be a hard sell to the MS board and would take a lot of imagination on their part to act more directly in favor of consumers, versus short-term shareholder rewards.
There are some people (most here) that will install an OS. They will have their reason for selecting the OS that is according to their needs. They will buy the hardware that supports that OS and those needs.
The rest will buy a PC and run whatever it runs. Microsoft and Apple know this. For a long time this was enough. People buy the PC and with it they get an OS. Times have changed. It is all about making money by renting out things. Instead of paying 1USD for something, they rather you pay 15 time 0.10$ because they make more money that way.
That means that things need to change. The OS needs to change. And that means pushing out the current OS as fast as possible.
Hardware also lasts longer. You can now easily do almost anything on a PC that is 5 years old. In the past you needed to upgrade every 2 years. So now they will concentrate on new machines and start killing off the service to the old ones.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
Woot! Next they will be paying people for their operating system.
Not even the tactics that MS used to push Windows 10 as an updates to earlier versions allowed them to beat Windows 7. Giving Windows 10 away was not enough to convince Windows 7 users to upgrade. This shows the OS is already a failure.
Many Windows users really did not like the user interface choices that MS made in Windows 8 and stuck with their preferred interface. Although Windows 10 rolled back some of those mistakes, it created many more to replace them and annoyed users by being sneaky about upgrades. MS has annoyed their customers with recent versions of Windows by no giving customers what they want or trying to turn customers into the product.
I am one of those that is sticking with Windows 7 and we never install the spyware/adware version of Windows that 10 has proven to be. I have already largely to moved to Linux so it will not be any great loss.
A new MS operating system "offering" a free upgrade from its predecessors, so every single user of a previous OS pretty much had to go out of their way to NOT get it, reaches 20% penetration (and I chose that word deliberately, for the way it tried to "convince" you to install it) after a year.
That is pretty much a declaration of bankruptcy.
The amount of "computer savvy" people isn't that high to warrant this number. It's not just "paranoid geeks" that saw the wiring under the board and didn't want to be infected. This number pretty much means that four out of five people using Win7 or Win8.1 fought tooth and nail to NOT upgrade.
And four out of five people aren't paranoid computer geeks. These are "normal" computer users. My hope is that this is the beginning of people getting a clue about their privacy being at stake.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
how are they managing that, MS no longer license win 7 Pro!
That is wrong. It is even mentioned in the f..ing article that Windows 7 Pro is available to OEMs until October 31, 2016.
80% refuse to use Windows 10 even when it is forcibly given away for free. That's the real story. Microsoft literally tried to force people to use the free upgrade to Windows 10 for a full year and 80% of the market avoided it.
Nice try, bitches. Fuck you!
This message composed and posted from a Linux desktop PC.
A win 8 or win 10 license can be downgraded.
79% of PC owners were able to block Windows 10 from being shoved down their throats.
Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
I'm wondering whether this will actually happen. Every business supplier we work with still assumes 7 by default for work machines, and that makes sense because almost everyone I know in business still wants 7. If MS try to strong-arm the likes of Dell and HP into not selling what their customers actually want, I don't know who's going to win, but sign me up for a ring-side seat.
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
Windows 10 has ~21% but I guess MS had to force upgrades to even get those numbers.
Nice to see Windows 7 holding steady at 42%
The funny thing is MS had a 20 years head start on mobile with WinCE and consumers STILL didn't want it. Apple and Google come along and they accomplish in less then 5 years (Android was released on Dec 6, 2010) what MS couldn't do in 20 years!! LOL
Microsoft still has a ways to go when 2 years ago Linux run on over 1 Billion Devices and 99.4% of the Top 500 supercomputers run Linux; hell even iOS had 800 million back then.
But keeping MS, because you're (slowly) becoming irrelevant.
Windows is stable & fast desktop OS and it's easy to write applications for it.
Though less than it used to be. Visual Studio is also full of online-connected junk these days. Why do I have to "sign in" to the free Community edition again? How many different privacy policies now apply having done so, and where does any of them say in black and white that Microsoft won't, for example, upload parts of my commercially sensitive source code to any of its online services along the way?
Say what you will about Ballmer, but Windows developers were treated with a lot more respect in his time.
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
That's not quite true. OEMs can still supply PCs with 7 preinstalled for a few more months.
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
1.46% Linux compared to all OS's, or 1.7% Mint compared to Linux
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Like many others, I went through the motions of obtaining a free Windows 10 upgrade license by installing a Windows 7 factory recovery DVD to a clean hard drive and then upgrading to Windows 10. After the process was complete, I reinstalled the original Windows 7 running hard drive back into the PC. I repeated this process for 2 additional machines. I just wanted the free license in case I ever wanted to use Windows 10.
I kept a copy of Windows 10 running on one test machine to play with and see if I liked it. After 6 months of use, I haven't found any compelling reason to migrate to Windows 10, but I have the free licenses in case I change my mind. I figure that by the time support stops for Windows 7, something better than Windows 10 will be available.
It's a big improvement over Win7. I don't understand the hate.
.
Of those 21% cited, I have to wonder how many actually wanted the upgrade? Of those who fought Microsoft's malware in order not be foreably upgraded, I wonder what percentage are looking to a different OS besides Windows for their next OS upgrade?
So... this is what Microsoft considers to be good news nowadays?
Microsoft decided one UI should work everywhere. WinCE was the Windows desktop put onto phones. Windows 7 was the pinnacle of Desktop UI for Microsoft. Windows 8 was a tablet release, as is Windows 10. No more desktop, they want to compete with the iPad and iPhone.
You know what? The tablet UI works well on a phone. It's great for casual web, email and games. Or really anything you run one at a time like the days of DOS. If you're switching apps or running multiple apps, like the typical office worker, it's not as good. The desktop UI is great there. For a software developer the tablet is going to be harder for most.
Even *Apple*, the one choice no upgrades everything sealed Steve Jobs knows best, offers 2 interfaces. macOS for desktops, iOS for handhelds.
Microsoft needs to stop thinking one size fits all or start offering their core Enterprise apps on other platforms. Outlook (not OWA!), Skype Business, Office and Sharepoint clients for Linux and macOS. Full AD client. If they don't, enterprises will migrate away from AD, Exchange, Sharepoint to something else with a UI that works for their users.
It's amazing what happens when you GIVE AWAY upgrades.... Shazam! Folks take you up on the offer and you get a larger market share for the thing you give away for free... Now if you make it an offer I cannot refuse, even if I wanted too....
Come to think of it, only 20% or so? Really? I would have expected that to be higher given the way they rolled out this "free" ("bet you can't stop us from installing") upgrade to windows 10..
"File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
Win 10 sucks, and the proof is that people actually took the time to sit down and write utilities that you could use to prevent it from installing itself.
That's a pretty clear sign of unpopularity by any measure.
Name me another OS that has had a free utility written to prevent it from installing. I'll wait.......
Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
Why wait !?
I'm already running Win 7, Linux (Ubuntu), and OSX (10.10).
They all suck. :-)
MSVC debugger is definitely a more user-friendly then GDB, but for general programming, I use the same Vim config across all three OS's, which makes Windows tolerable for the rest of the time.
This is the year of the Linux desktop.
Well, I've been using Mint Linux for years now. 17 is very good, 18 just came out. The only downside is the confusion of MATE or Cinnamon, a distinction that is lost on normal users.
I use OSX for work (surprisingly), I use Win 7 in passing, and Linux Mint 17 at home. Out of the three, Linux is the best, which I found to be surprising. I thought the panacea to Windows would have been OSX, but OSX consistently comes up short namely because it uses and inferior BSD kernel. This BSD kernel has trouble unmounting remote drives if the connection has dropped (and seemingly can't reestablish them), the multitasking is terrible. My Pandora will skip when I compile (and I'm on a magnetic disk, quad core i5, 8g). Finder only got "Rename" as a context menu option in El Capitan, the general interface paradigm of that menu at the top is broken. There is no "real" Inkscape for OSX. "Open with" is too damn slow.
Meanwhile on Windows, you don't own your computer anymore.
Linux suffers from the usual suspects: Top-end hardware is not very well supported, Adobe apps are noticeably missing. These are generally not a problem if you don't by state-of-the-art, and can find replacement apps, which isn't too hard to do these days.
As the ultimate test, I set my retired neighbor's laptop up with Mint 17. He knows nothing of computers apart from how to use the internet, which his kids taught him. I was fielding too many Windows questions from him, so I set him up with Mint and he loves it. Nothing changes. Meanwhile, I get a call about his Vista desktop every now and then. But the Mint laptop keeps on working. Not a single issue in 3 years. His GF (yeah, he has one after his wife passed many years ago) was able to connect the Mint laptop to her Wifi, with no questions to me about how.
Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
It may have been installed on that many computers, but I wonder how many were like me, tried it, said "My GOD but this OS sucks" and went back to W7, or how many PCs with W10 pre-installed now are running Linux or BSD?
Free Martian Whores!
It's pretty bad when there are approximately 150M new PCs sold (Gartner estimate) and you give free upgrades to existing Windows customers, that there are only 50M Windows 10 installations? Seems that the vast majority of those new PCs must have been sold with Windows 7 on them.
From talking with friends and clients, about a quarter to third of people who took advantage of the free Win 10 upgrade decided to roll back to their previous OS.
Not so much "runs" as "limps"...
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
Internet Explorer is STILL the worlds most widely used browser used for installing better browsers!
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
"Free" software is irrelevant when you have to spend about $2000 per seat to train your users to use the new software because it's not backwards compatible with what they are used to dealing with. Hence the still small adoption rate by business, most of which is still running fine on Win7... even companies like HP.
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
> One of the flaws in Microsoft's strategy is that if you're going to force business
> to retrain all there computer users every couple years because the user
> interface in the latest incarnation of Windows is so different from the
> previous version... then it's really a lot cheaper to switch to Linux and
> only have to retrain your users once!
+10
Before I retired, it seemed that every few years, with every new version of Windows, you had to learn Windows all over again. Indeed, my employer had training sessions for the "new and improved" version. And don't get me started on how MS-Access ODBC queries against our Oracle database had to be painfully copy+pasted over to the new version each time MS Office was updated.
This is not about grumpy old farts resisting change. This is about employees trying to do their job, having the rug pulled out from under their feet every couple of years, and competent users being reduced to newbies. At home I use linux. I switched to ICEWM in early 2010, and I'm still using it. I use my computer to do stuff, not to explore "new and improved interfaces" every year or so.
And fer-cryin-out-loud, please stop pushing a stinking smartphone touch-based interface on desktops. One only has to look at how Firefox's market share has cratered since they forced the Atrocious^H^H^H^H^H Australis smartphone-oriented interface onto their desktop product. That's what drove me to Pale Moon.
I'm not repeating myself
I'm an X window user; I'm an ex-Windows user
I prefer to run all my PCs with an OS that is on a rolling upgrade.
Ops, I shuld have usd the prevuwe but in.
I'm not really going to argue statistics, but I have Windows 10 installed on 3 different laptops ... and all of them dual-boot Xubuntu. So that's 3 less that they can really count on. Then again, dual-boot is not for everyone, even amongst my fellow LUG members. ... I might dual-boot ... or I might pull the HD out, stick another in and just run Linux!
One laptop (ultrabook) in particular has a dual core Celeron chip running at 1.1ghz, and only 2GB of RAM. I'm sure you can guess how well it runs Windows 10. Even when it had only Windows 8.1, it was a little slow. Running Xubuntu it behaves like a normal computer, boots in about 20 seconds, updates when they're available in a matter of seconds like any other of my laptops and performs quite well, even when running a couple of programs simultaneously.
I'm typing this on my main laptop, a Core i3 chip + 8GB laptop for which I had no recovery discs when it's HD died : I bought a 1TB spinning platter HD, and installed Xubuntu without a qualm. If I find myself buying a new PC with Windows 10 installed
Don't blame me, it's usually 2 in the morning when I post
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Casteism