Page 1 of 1

#1 Windows XP increases marketshare.

Posted: Thu Feb 06, 2014 7:07 pm
by frigidmagi
besttechie
The monthly OS market share reports from NetMarketShare offer a helpful insight the rising and falling fortunes of the various operating systems that connect users to the digital world, and the report documenting the month of January provides some interesting food for thought. The upshot? Microsoft’s newest operating system, Windows 8.1, is still gaining traction. And so is Microsoft’s 13-year-old operating system, Windows XP. So that’s not great.

The big story in last month’s market share report was that Windows 8.1 was close to overtaking Vista, and it’s done so after this past January. Vista’s share fell from 3.61 to 3.3, while 8.1 picked up .35. The market share for 8.1’s slightly older brother, Windows 8, fell by about a quarter of a percent, which surely accounts for a portion of 8.1’s gains. That 8.1 continues to gather steam shows that users are starting to get a handle on its weird blend of desktop and Metro UI. The brisk holiday sales of the Surface Pro 2 could also have something to do with the increased 8.1 market share—though maybe that’s wishful thinking, as I really have to wonder if those sales could make an actually noticeable dent in the numbers.

No matter what you think of the rise in 8.1’s numbers, what’s inexplicable is the simultaneous rise in Windows XP usage. In December, XP had 28.98—in January, it gained a quarter of a percent to 29.23. It’s hard to parse. What could account for such an old operating system to actually hold a higher percentage of market share this past month? It’s especially troubling considering Microsoft plans to stop supporting XP entirely on April 8.

Currently, Windows XP is used in offices around the world, not to mention serving as the foundation for ATMs and train ticket machines, to name a few. The looming end of XP support from Microsoft means that those machines will really have to be upgraded to newer operating systems. In short, gains for XP aren’t really a great sign for Microsoft’s attempts to move on.

That said, it’s a sign of the perils of doing a good job in the first place: people have liked XP for years, and when something works, you’re reluctant to move away from it. That also accounts for the nearly unending stranglehold of Windows 7, which is currently the best version of Microsoft’s OS for non-touch computers.

What will this picture look like next month? Will XP fall back down? Will it go down as the April 8 deadline approaches? Should I be less interested in something that is legitimately boring like Windows market share percentage reports? All good questions.
I don't think it's all that mysterous. Windows XP works and it's cheap. Whereas Windows 8 only works for those of us with touch screens. So that it's marketshare is at 10% vs XP's 29% and 7's 47%.

#2 Re: Windows XP increases marketshare.

Posted: Thu Feb 06, 2014 11:39 pm
by White Haven
Two different issues there. While I totally get 8/8.1 not increasing, the fact that any change isn't going towards 7 instead of XP is the puzzling part.

#3 Re: Windows XP increases marketshare.

Posted: Sat Feb 08, 2014 11:18 pm
by General Havoc
I run XP. Until someone gives me a reason better than "because it's dumb", I plan to continue running it.

#4 Re: Windows XP increases marketshare.

Posted: Sun Feb 09, 2014 12:06 pm
by Josh
General Havoc wrote:I run XP. Until someone gives me a reason better than "because it's dumb", I plan to continue running it.
64 bit.

#5 Re: Windows XP increases marketshare.

Posted: Mon Feb 10, 2014 7:20 am
by White Haven
Thing is, Havoc, I totally get people continuing to run XP. I think there are a number of reasons they should upgrade, including being limited to ~3GB RAM, massive security concerns, and things of that nature, but I get it. I don't get people switching to XP, which is what an increasing market share represents. The only people I ever see or hear of who seek to buy new hardware running XP are people who are trying to maintain compatibility with old (usually industrial or niche-industry) software or hardware, which is reasonable given the price-gouging that goes on for those things, but those are usually 1:1 replacements for failing computers, not something that would make market share actually go up.

Well, that or it represents people just throwing more modern computers in the dumpster, but I doubt that. Then again, none of this makes much sense...