Tuesday, December 2nd 2008
Windows Market-Share Falls Below 90% Mark, Hits 15 Year Low
In the month of November, the market share of Microsoft Windows fell below the 90% mark, to 89.6%. This is a 15 year low in market share for the OS, according to market share data by Net Applications, sourced by TG Daily. The market share fell from its position same time, last year, at 92.4%.
One of the prime movers of this figure is the growth in market share of Apple's Mac OS X at 8.87%, slightly over 2% growth from its market share last year. According to the same data, Linux is still below the 1% mark.
Source:
TG Daily
One of the prime movers of this figure is the growth in market share of Apple's Mac OS X at 8.87%, slightly over 2% growth from its market share last year. According to the same data, Linux is still below the 1% mark.
26 Comments on Windows Market-Share Falls Below 90% Mark, Hits 15 Year Low
Though Linux installations in the netbook market are probably helping out some.
Time will tell if it works or not.
...I have admit that when I heard an elderly relative mention them about two months ago, before the TV commercials even started, I knew that the ad campaign was being effective. :wtf:
I've watched no fewer than 5 of my co-workers be as apprehensive and skeptical one would expect until they watched me use Vista on my laptop... slowly one by one they started to come around and accept that Vista is pretty cool. A couple of them were absolutely floored that I could play games on the laptop with Vista. They would have sworn that Vista had to be eating up all the computer's resources making playing games impossible.
*Funny doesn't sound like a bad idea*
"Here, let me show you some cool things that Vista can actually do."
::shows some cool stuff on a responsive system that doesn't crash::
"Hey, that's actually pretty cool. Guess I was wrong about Vista.
Instead of:
"HURR HURR ISN'T THIS COMPUTER COOL IT'S THE NEW WINDOWS"
"OMGWTF WOW YOU'RE RIGHT THAT'S FAST"
"LOL THAT WAS ACTUALLY VISTA WE FOOLED YOU LOL!!!111"
"OMG UR SO AMAZING MICROSOFT THANK YOU"
Like how Microsoft did it. Once again, they had an opportunity, and blew it by trying to be pompous by insinuating that they "know better."