Microsoft Windows 10 is growing, but its rate of growth is
slowing, suggests the latest market share data from StatCounter and
Netmarketshare. Microsoft is the main player in the desktop operating
system market, and the month of October brought in mixed results
Windows 10 gaining
market
Windows 10, which is the latest OS from Microsoft, accounted
for of the 9% market, in October compared to 7.64% in September, according to
StatCounter. Though the jump of 1.36% is nice, it is less than the jump it made
from 5.38% in August to 7.64% in September.
Netmarketshare revealed similar stats. According to it,
Windows 10 had a 6.63% share in September, that share increased to 7.94% in
October. This increase of 1.31% is less than the 1.42% increase from August to
September.
Other than Windows 10, the market share of all other
versions of Windows is declining. Windows XP is losing the least market share
compared to other versions. Both Netmarketshare and StatCounter assessed that
people who use Windows XP to cruise the web have no plans of upgrading in
the near future.
How Microsoft plans
to add more users
Though the percentage of the increase is small, it does mean
the addition of a few tens of millions of new users. Soon Windows 10 will run
on hundreds of millions of more devices as the company releases Xbox and
Windows Mobile versions.
To catch more users, Microsoft will release the first major
update for the operating system– code-named Redstone — in summer 2016,
according to WinBeta. Microsoft has already pushed out several
incremental bumps for the OS, but this update will be much bigger than those
previous ones. Much of the new functionality will center around the Continuum
features – the ability to jump seamlessly between Windows devices and apps – no
matter what a person is working on, says WinBeta, which cites unnamed sources.
Microsoft will bring extensions to the new Microsoft Edge
Web browser as
well. The list of features is not yet confirmed as the plans are at an early
stage for now. Microsoft will also debut its new OS update strategy with
Redstone. Instead of throwing big upgrades every few years, the tech firm now
plans to send smaller updates under the Windows 10 branding.
Source: ValueWalk
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