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posted by janrinok on Saturday October 08 2016, @07:30PM   Printer-friendly
from the numbers-to-argue-about dept.

El Reg reports

Microsoft may have used its Ignite conference to trumpet Windows 10 now running on 400 million devices, but the operating system's market share went backwards in September according to two of three traffic-watchers we track each month.

StatCounter Global Stats has Windows 10 at 24.42 per cent desktop OS market share for September, down just .01 per cent from its August share. Netmarketshare recorded a sharper dip, from August's 22.99 per cent to a September reading of 22.53 per cent.

[...] StatCounter has recently recorded a surge in "Unknown" desktop operating systems, [...] suggesting tracking and/or methodological issues.

We therefore checked out another useful source of data, [USA.gov]. When we crunched those numbers, we found Windows 10 accounted for 31.98 per cent of visits to US government sites in August and 32.48 per cent in September, which hardly suggests Microsoft's latest OS is rocketing up the charts.

[...] Our analysis of this data last month suggested Windows 10 has done very well at home, but is yet to crack the business market.

[Continues...]

Some things that occurred to me (with most being mentioned in the comments there):

  • Windows 10 is no longer gratis and folks find another instance of payware undesirable
  • With the forced upgrades no longer happening, reverting to the desired earlier version will finally not be auto-overwritten (Fingers crossed for luck)
  • Many enterprises haven't even allowed upgrades to Windows 8
  • More folks have learned how to spoof the user agent, and as such, the data is skewed toward the less-informed
  • NetMarketShare, et al. use JavaScript to gather their numbers and more folks are blocking JavaScript, again, skewing toward the less-informed
  • Folks have discovered that Free Software can accomplish the tasks that they do (without a EULA which allows a vendor free rein over their systems)

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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 08 2016, @08:21PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 08 2016, @08:21PM (#411829)

    Apparently, I was a bit behind the curve on M$ news.

    Detested snooping patch KB 2952664 reappears [infoworld.com]
    Reappearance of patch designed to provide telemetry stokes users' fears about a return of 'Get Windows 10' nagware

    Perhaps the world has gone truly mad. Or maybe Microsoft's trying to pull the wool over our eyes prior to its major shift in patching strategy--the patchocalypse--widely anticipated this month. It's even possible Microsoft wants to bring back the "Get Windows 10" campaign, to drive Windows' reputation even deeper into the dirt.

    A Microsoft spokesman says it isn't bringing back the "Get Windows 10" campaign, but our old nemesis KB 2952664 reappeared suddenly [October 4], and Windows users are livid--and scared.

    -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 08 2016, @09:11PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 08 2016, @09:11PM (#411837)

    Its like users don't understand that computers are being subverted to work against the users... How many god damn examples do we neeeeeeddddddd????

    • (Score: 2) by captain normal on Sunday October 09 2016, @05:53AM

      by captain normal (2205) on Sunday October 09 2016, @05:53AM (#411957)

      Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.

      --
      When life isn't going right, go left.