Or perhaps
It could also be because microsoft are making it harder to purchase Windows 7.
Windows 7's market share appears to have peaked, according to two sources we use to assess what's running on the world's desktop computers. Those sources are Netmarketshare and Statcounter.com, two outfits that make their assessments of operating system prevalence based on traffic hitting web servers. That's an imperfect …
Considering the length of time what Windows 8/8.1 has been available the fact that Windows 7 still has such dominance tells us how successful Windows 8 has really been.,
Of course total sales of Windows 8.1 go on rising because most buyers of a new computer get no choice.
It will be interesting to see the stats a few months after Windows 10 gets released. Most did not want Win8 at any price if they had a choice but many might take up the 'free' Win 10 offer if it looks good.
Possibly a simple explanation here... possibly not.
First, the data is taken from web servers. Are these unique hits or aggregate hits.
The other possibility or not is that Joe buys a new computer with Win 8. Says screw it after seeing what it does and dog's breakfast waiting for him on the screen. Take Win 8 PC back to store and puts his XP box back on his desk.
You can consider other theory. Assume that the winXP users are represented mostly by more senior 'workforce', or the ones who use mainly company comps with outofdate OS. Thanks to seniority they can start the Christmas vacation sooner, and if some of those needs to browse internet, they will use latest-shiny toy (with up to date OS) available within their reach.
Once Christmas vacation is over, they start hitting their company PCs again, abandoning the shiny latest gadgets.
If Windows 7 share is dropping off a bit, those people could be moving to Linux, if they are individuals or businesses without specialist applications.
Windows 8.1 buyers, who find the system difficult to use, may be getting advice from tech savvy relatives or friends to install linux in the form of ubuntu or mint. Those without help installing it, might have taken the PC back to the store and bought a chromebook.
Chromebooks are great for individuals and they are great travel PCs too. They are cheap, light weight, have a long battery life and if you spend all your time online in the browser, they are a great alternative to Windows.
I would like to see the same 2 agencies release numbers for Linux and Chrome OS on the same chart.
On the Netmarketshare site, there's no Linux grouping, only "other".
Besides the various Windows versions, they list the rest as Other 3.61%, Mac OS X 10.9 1.82% and Mac OS X 10.10 3.45%, so I expect Linux is grouped under other along with ChromeOS.
Any device that can do very little on its own and needs to be almost always tethered to its mothership is the *least* useful device while travelling. Unless travelling for you means "stay within a free wifi area (and don't care about uncrypted connections) or any area without mobile roaming charges".
But today any smartphone while travelling will do what a Chromebook does in a much more compact form factor.
Of course they could show Linux and Chrome OS on the same chart, they just need a logarithmic scaleto show those tiny data too....
"If Windows 7 share is dropping off a bit, those people could be moving to Linux, if they are individuals or businesses without specialist applications."
If a legacy Windows application doesn't need internet access to run then it won't show on these reports. Users will keep a legacy application PC (eg XP) off the internet as much as possible. It is then a moot point whether they will move their W7 browsing type activities to Linux until nearer the 2020 deadline.
No doubt many of us are looking at redeveloping home-brew Windows applications for Linux. It will offer a major advantage by giving us a chance to fix application problems - whose causes are currently Microsoft bugs that can't be circumvented.
An elderly acquaintance didn't want to give up his XP database, He was delighted to find he could preset the lan connection to "disabled" on that boot - while using only the W7 boot for internet activity.
Increased XP usage, in number of users, does not make sense. Though, these are not counts of users, but a percentage of the users the surveyors saw in a month.
But then, usage share reports that put the blinders on with regards to mobile operating systems are now missing at least half the picture and have a distorted representation of 100%.
So there we go, it's not that there are more XP users, it's that they will be the last to have 100% of their activity be on the desktop. And, so what?
I restate my question, what is the value of the picture? Microsoft with its product activation and telemetry has a much better view of its users' breakdown. Even they are in mid-transformation as to what their os business is about. The resistance to Win8 will be an irrelevant issue by late autumn.
As Windows XP is possibly a lightweight(ish) modern Windows that can be virtualised easily and runs most modern Windows applications....as Macs go on the rise, the only access to Windows applications will be through virtual Windows, and they will probably use XP rather than Win 7+. Having said that, if the stats are generally derived from web usage I guess few people will run a browser on a virtualised PC.
Netmarketshare also has Windows XP at 13.57 per cent, then 18.26 percent before a rise to 18.93 per cent, a step up for which your correspondent can't make a convincing argument.
Well, the easiest answer is probably correct: it's shit data. A slightly more nuanced data would be that some of the sites where Netmarketshare is used are seeing visitors move from desktop to mobile. This will lead to a shift in market share in the desktop that cannot be explained by looking at those numbers alone. Incomplete data is, of course, shit data.
As El Reg never controls the reports with its own data these articles only benefit is letting us commentards point out the elementary errors in them.
At home the XP box is blocked from the interwibbles. It is occasionally allowed to access the web for this and that, but is then off the web again.
We have an xp box here on the worksite, and it only gets fired up when a report needs to be generated and sent using software that doesn't like Win7 or above.
I'm sure the missus fired up her xp box to move some photos to another device, and stopped to surf the web for a moment.
... there was a Windows tablet in Sainsbury's and it was not too expensive, not too small and quite a bit quicker in screen moves, transitioning between apps and so forth (or is it exe's in WindowsLand?) than h'Android at similar prices, spec and so forth.
Add a dash of HoloLens (is that what its called?) and MS seems to be (shaking the dead donkey back into life?) and looking almost interesting?