Windows 8 struggling to take off, survey and web data show
2012-11-24 06:42:15
Net Applications data shows Windows 8 use at just 1%, compared to rapid takeoff which saw Windows 7 over 3.6% within weeks in 2009
A survey of Britons and new web user data suggests that Windows 8 is
struggling to make the same progress that its predecessors - and especially
Windows 7 - did.
A broad online survey of British internet users has found that only 39% are
likely to upgrade to Windows 8 - amid other signs that the new operating system
from Microsoft is making slower inroads than the previous version launched
exactly three years ago.
The online survey by Toluna QuickSurveys, carried out in October, got responses
from 2,000 UK-based adults (aged 18 and over). Besides the upgrade findings, it
found that Windows 7 is a clear favourite among Windows users, with 28% saying
it was their preferred choice - double the 14% who chose the newly launched
Windows 8.
Though the Toluna figures were weighted for age, gender, education and region to
reflect their proportions in the online population, it's impossible to know what
sampling error there might be - and its self-selecting nature means that it
could have broad vagaries in precision.
The survey results said that initial consumer reactions indicated that Microsoft
has not captured the interest of many potential tablet buyers: the proportion of
respondents planning to buy a tablet running Windows 8 is on par with other
systems including Apple iOS and Android (13%, 13% and 14% respectively). The
tablet-specific Windows RT received only 2% of the votes and was voted the least
favourite Windows operating system all round.
Toluna suggested that the low interest in Windows 8 may partly be due to the
success of Windows 7 in satisfying existing customers - who are very likely to
have upgraded from XP or Vista in the past three years and may not see any
reason to change.
But other figures from web browsing suggest that Windows 8 is making
comparatively slow progress among PC owners. Net Applications, which notes
desktop OS use, says that this week Windows 8 made up just 1.01% of users
visiting the sites it monitors - half that for any of the last three versions of
Apple's Mac OS X, for which the smallest share is 1.96%, and far behind the
45.56% of Windows 7 and the 39.50% of Windows XP.
Nor is the small figure typical of new releases of Windows. The takeup of
Windows 7 after its launch in October 2009 was extremely rapid. On 2 November
that year Tom's Hardware reported that "Windows 7 has officially been a part of
the worldwide mass market for more than a week and a half and now makes up more
than 3.6% of all PCs tracked by research firm Net Applications."
Interest in Windows 7 was already high, the site noted then: "On October 21, the
day before the official launch, Windows 7 usage was at 1.89%, according to
Channel Register. By launch day, the number hit 1.99%, constantly rising to
[the] 3.67% it hit on November 1."
Net Applications said in November 2009 that Windows 7 reached a 4% share in just
three weeks.
One key difference between 2009 and 2012 is that there are more PCs worldwide,
which could dilute the effect of new PCs - but the PC installed base in North
America and Europe has remained roughly constant during that period, which would
suggest that regions where Windows 8 might expect to be most quickly bought
would have the same available number of buyers.
Steve Ballmer, Microsoft's chief executive, said on 30 October, a week after the
Windows 8 launch, that 4m upgrade licences had been sold to individuals in the
previous three days - specificaly excluding corporate accounts which he said
amounted to "tens of millions" of additional licences.
By the end of January 2010, three months after its launch, Windows 7 had a 7.5%
usage share, Net Applications said - in stark contrast to Windows Vista, which
took 11 months to reach the same penetration as existing XP users dug in
following its launch in January 2007.
But in 2012, PC sales have slowed dramatically, and buyers are looking at
tablets as alternative purchases.
The introduction of Windows 8 also culminated in the departure of Steven
Sinofsky, head of the Windows division, who had piloted the product's
development - apparently after he clashed with other division heads, leading
Ballmer and he to agree they should part ways.
The arrival of "Black Friday" - the US retail extravaganza that follows its
Thanksgiving celebrations on Thursday - could provide a boost for Windows 8 and
PC makers as customers who waited for discounts buy new computers.
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