This article was published on March 1, 2013

Windows 8 now up to 2.79% market share as Windows 7 stabilizes after its first decline


Windows 8 now up to 2.79% market share as Windows 7 stabilizes after its first decline

Two months into 2013, and Windows 8 continues its slow but steady growth. Windows 7 posted growth after suffering its first depreciation in market share since its launch in 2009.

The latest market share data from Net Applications shows that February 2013 was a decent one for Windows 8, which gained 0.43 percentage points (from 2.36 percent to 2.79 percent) while Windows 7 regained 0.07 percentage points (from 44.48 percent to 44.55 percent) after losing a sizeable 0.63 percentage points the previous month.

In January, Windows 7 lost market share for the first time since its release, just a month after passing the 45 percent mark. It looks like it may never reach that point again.

windows_february_2013

While Windows 7 slightly regaining share is not too surprising (there are still PCs being sold with the operating system), Windows 8 isn’t growing as quickly as some would have hoped. Windows 8 grew 0.66 percentage points in December, meaning both January’s and February’s gains were smaller.

With the Windows 8 upgrade deal for $15 expiring at the end of February, it will be difficult for Microsoft to avoid a slowdown in sales. It will be up to the students to take advantage of the $70 price tag and of course for OEMS to draw in consumers with great hardware.

It’s still not clear if Windows 7 did indeed peak at the 45 percent mark, but we’ll know that for sure next month. As already mentioned, January was the first time Windows 7 lost share since its release (or rather since a beta leaked on BitTorrent in December 2008) and everyone will be looking at March to see what happens next.

Windows Vista meanwhile slipped 0.07 percentage points (from 5.24 percent to 5.17 percent) and is largely expected to fall under the 5 percent mark soon. Windows XP lost a solid 0.52 percentage points (from 39.51 percent to 38.99 percent), so there is definitely some good news for Microsoft there.

At the end of 2012, Windows managed to increase its market share after six months of losses, mainly thanks to Windows 7 and Windows 8. In 2013, however, Windows is back to losing share.

Between January and February, Windows lost 0.09 percentage points (from 91.71 percent to 91.62 percent). This was to the benefit of OS X (up 0.09 percentage points to 7.17 percent) while Linux remained flat at 1.21 percent.

Net Applications uses data captured from 160 million unique visitors each month. The service monitors some 40,000 Web sites for its clients. StatCounter is another popular service for watching market share moves; the company looks at 15 billion page views. To us, it makes more sense to keep track of users than of page views, but if you prefer the latter, the equivalent data is available here.

See also – Internet Explorer continues growth past 55% market share thanks to IE9 and IE10, as Chrome hits 17-month low

Image credit: Robert Linder

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