It seems Windows 10 is about level, so no decreases. Anecdotally, outside of retail and on this forum, I don't really see Windows 10 making a big dent in terms of defining user trends. Let say by this graph that Windows 10 occupies about 23% of the Windows market in 2016. I'll hazard to bet that when Windows XP occupied about 23% of the market in 2012 or 2013, that it equaled a greater number of people, since PCs were in heavier use at the time.
When I visit people's houses or workplaces, or look at my own work place, Windows 7 still seems to rule. Other than that, it's Android, then iOS.
:)
Computer Type: PC/Desktop System Manufacturer/Model Number: HP xw8600 Workstation OS: Windows 8 Pro x64 CPU: Two Xeon Core2 Quad 3.2 GHz Processors Motherboard: Proprietary Memory: 16 GB DDR2 800 MHz Graphics Card: nVidia Quadro FX 3800 PCI-E Sound Card: Realtek HD Audio Monitor(s) Displays: Samsung SyncMaster 213T 21" 4x3 Flat Screen Screen Resolution: 1600x1200 Keyboard: PS/2 Keyboard Mouse: Microsoft USB Optical Mouse PSU: Proprietary Case: HP xw8600 Workstation Case Cooling: Two CPU Fans and a Larger Case Fan Hard Drives: Two Seagate Cheetah 300 GB SAS Disks Internet Speed: 7 mbps Browser: Firefox ESR 102 Antivirus: Windows Defender Other Info: Two LSI 3000 SAS Adapters
NM's statistics are not very good. Some time ago, their numbers showed a rise of xp users by +40% (relatively) to the month before. Go figure. I don't know who is supervising these statistics, but maybe no one.
Interesting, maybe many like me have returned to Windows 7, I dislike Windows 10 intensely it has not grown on me at all despite having used it for over a year, there are now two trend company's showing this trend StatCounter also shows more or less the same result.
I'm hard pressed outside these forums to actually find anyone who likes Windows 10, though that could just be typical of my peer group, and a few have asked me to get them 'back' to Windows 7 that along with Microsoft no longer pushing the free upgrade is probably why.
Of course it does not help that Windows mobile devices are al but dead which was Microsoft's vision for Windows 8/10.
I believe the W10 is bad as it can be.
It makes me lose many days and days, by every update, trying to FIX errors.
I think MS is not doing any testing, is just relying on the Public Beta Testing and are also hoping to get feedback from ALL Pc around the world.
With update 222/223 the Settings GUI is just Broken.
I just got a Windows Update for HD 4600 and there is a Error on Event Viewer about igfx driver
For me, I am just sorry for I myself that I went that crazy path moving to W10 on the believe that was good.
Half of the Year, I lost just going around MS Windows Errors.
2016 is a year for to forget.
I'm SHOCKED!!!! Nah, totally kidding, this is exactly what I was expecting. I know a lot of people rolling back. It isn't just the paradigm of Windows 10. It's primarily the forced updates that hose folks' machines. They'd rather install SP1 and use a third part security program than chance an update crashing their machine, or losing their data. Sorry, but until Microsoft wakes up and brings back their testing/QA team it's only going to get worse, at least until 2020. I wouldn't be surprised to see Corporations slow down adoption, even though who have the ball rolling, if Microsoft continues to roll out buggy updates. FYI, I recently talked to a guy from MSFT. Their position is that beyond Windows Insiders they can simply push out bug fixes as they crop up in the wild of "production". They are completely tone deaf to how their software is used and the critical role it plays, at least for now. Reminds me of the U.S. car manufacturers in the 70's with the first gas shortage. They said nobody would buy the Japanese cars because they were small and dangerous. They were very very wrong. Microsoft may think nobody will leave them, but remove the trust people have in your product and the risk of moving to Apple, Android(or Google's future OS) or even a Linux setup with a Corporate made user UI appears less risky. We are already seeing Linux displace Unix and Windows servers in the Financial Industry over the last several years.
NM's statistics are not very good. Some time ago, their numbers showed a rise of xp users by +40% (relatively) to the month before. Go figure. I don't know who is supervising these statistics, but maybe no one.
I remember that.
If I recall correctly, they decided to stop monitoring XP usage in China, so XP usage "dropped".
That caused some a stink, so a couple of months, later they (quietly) started using that data again, so XP usage "increased".
StatCounter shows W10 had basically zero growth in September.
StatCounter shows an increase in W8.1 and OS X.
Are the figures to be believed? Well, while it wouldn’t be the first time that NetMarketShare has released usage numbers and then revised them a few days later, rival usage share monitoring firm StatCounter has similar findings.
While that company doesn’t have Windows 10 losing share, it does show it growing by just 0.08 percentage points for a total of 22.27 percent in September.
We have only one Windows 10 (production) machine, it hasn't been friendly. We use it as our main server, and we have had numerous issues, especially with shared printers. We never could get it to work, ended up running a 50' usb cable so we could run it as a local printer. Same program worked on Windows 7 & 8. Have heard other complaints, regarding printers.
I think it may have something to do with the new smb 3.0 they initiated, can't be certain, didn't want to waste any more time, in trying to run down the culprit. Unfortunately this was a new machine which came with 10 installed, it would not have been my first choice.
I believe Windows 10 numbers will probably not change much, some will switch back as they encounter issues, but others (like us) will make do because that is what the new machine had. We certainly don't want to spend any more monies on purchasing operating systems.
To be fair to Windows 10, you can learn to work with/around it. You can turn off all the Universal App features, notifications etc. You can run Chrome in it just fine. You can shutdown Cortana and her spying for the most part, and you can limit much of the telemetry to Windows 7 levels by setting the feedback feature to basic and telling it never to ask you about Windows 10.
That said, the fact that every update makes you go through that exercise again and again because you don't know what Microsoft is going in regards to resetting your privacy and feedback preferences is problematic. The fact that their quality assurance and testing procedures are non-existent is a problem. The fact that they claim the OS is safer, but then install buggy drivers that overwrite what the systems have running, add and remove support for certain features randomly, and overall still feel directionless leaves, at least me, wondering if their security is really as tight as they think it is. Which leads, at least me, to still run a third party security solution.
Unless and until Microsoft gets its house in order it will continue to see its market share, now below 90% in the PC market, continue to slide. It may seem they have a long way to fall, but so did IE, so did other companies back in the day, like Novell and IBM.
"Unless and until Microsoft gets its house in order it will continue to see its market share, now below 90% in the PC market, continue to slide" - you mean rise, continue to rise. See https://www.netmarketshare.com/opera...=9&qpcustomb=0
Here is NetMarketShare's info for March 2017 (almost identical to last month):
W7 increased
W10 was basically flat
XP declined
128851
Data from NetMarketShare
According to NetMarketShare in December:
W7, W10 & XP all increased their share of the market
The W8 Series (W8 & W8.1) has a smaller market share than XP
115806