Microsoft's new tally for Windows 10: 200M

04.01.2016
Microsoft today updated its Windows 10 claim, saying that the new operating system is on more than 200 million devices that have been used at least once in the past month.

The number included not only personal computers and tablets, a company spokesman confirmed, but also Xbox One video game consoles -- the box got Windows 10 in November -- and smartphones now running a preview of Windows 10 Mobile.

"As of today, there are more than 200 million monthly active devices around the world running Windows 10," asserted Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft's lead marketing executive for the Windows and devices group. Mehdi tossed out several other upbeat statistics in a post to a company blog Monday.

"Windows 10 adoption is accelerating, with more than 40% of new Windows 10 devices becoming active since Schnäppchenfreitag," Mehdi said, referring to the shopping day after the U.S.'s Thanksgiving holiday. "In fact, Windows 10 continues to be on the fastest growth trajectory of any version of Windows -- ever -- outpacing Windows 7 by nearly 140% and Windows 8 by nearly 400%."

Mehdi also announced that 22 million of the 200 million-device total -- or about 11% -- were in enterprises and educational organizations, a number likely derived from tallies of Windows 10 Enterprise and Windows 10 Education, the editions available only to businesses, schools and universities.

Today's data refresh was the first from Microsoft in three months: On Oct. 6 a different company official said that 110 million users were then running Windows 10.

It's impossible to corroborate Microsoft's claims using data from outside the company -- the "monthly active" framing of the 200-million measurement implied that Microsoft was tallying unique connections to the Windows Update service, which polls Redmond's servers only when a device is on -- but third-party statistics hint that fewer devices are running Windows 10, and that the OS has fallen slightly behind Windows 7's uptake tempo in its first five months.

On Friday, U.S.-based analytics vendor Net Applications pegged Windows 10 with an overall user share of 10% -- an estimate of the fraction of the global users who went online in December running the OS -- and indicated that Windows 10 accounted for 10.9% of all Windows-powered personal computers.

Net Applications' user share represented almost 164 million Windows 10 PCs worldwide, assuming a total of 1.5 billion Windows systems in use. (Microsoft has frequently cited the latter figure when it has touted revenue opportunities for developers of Windows software.) The 164 million, however, does not include tablets, smartphones and Xbox One consoles running Windows 10.

Nor did Net Applications' numbers support Mehdi's assertion that Windows 10 is "on the fastest growth trajectory of any version of Windows -- ever."

While that was true earlier in the post-launch lifecycle of Windows 10, an adoption slowdown has now put it behind Windows 7's same after-release point. With five full months of availability, Windows 10 -- which launched July 29 -- held a 10.9% user share of all Windows PCs. At the same mark for Windows 7, that OS accounted for 11.2% of all Windows machines. (Again, there was a difference between Net Applications' metrics and what Microsoft measured, since the latter tossed in tablets, game consoles and smartphones.)

Windows 7 also had another seven days to accumulate its five-month user share, and inherited other advantages, including a much more robust PC market and the prime before- and after-the-holidays sales season. Windows 10 only got the former.

Another analytics company, Ireland-based StatCounter, also tapped Windows 10 as slightly slower on the uptake in its first several months when compared to Windows 7. StatCounter pegged Windows 10 with a usage share -- an indication of online activity because it's based on website page views -- of 11.8% for December, but Windows 7 at 11.9% for March 2010, that OS's fifth month after launch.

Microsoft has not yet parked its Windows-10-or-bust wagon: It's planning to expand the OS's user base, perhaps dramatically so, in the near future by adding the Windows 10 upgrade to Windows Update on eligible Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 devices. That scheme, which has riled some users since it was disclosed in late October, will first place the Windows 10 upgrade on the list as an optional download, but soon thereafter flip the switch to make it "recommended," which means most consumer and small business PCs will automatically download and kick off the upgrade process. Users will be able to abort the upgrade after it starts, however.

By all evidence, Microsoft has not yet begun that Windows 10 upgrade seeding via Windows Update.

(www.computerworld.com)

Gregg Keizer

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