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Windows 8's uptake climbs but still trails Vista's

Windows 8's uptake climbs but still trails Vista's

Windows 8 moved into a forward gear last month for the first time since May, but the OS trailed Windows Vista's tempo of six years ago

Windows 8's uptake came unstuck last month and shoved into a forward gear for the first time since May, but the OS trailed Windows Vista's tempo of six years ago, according to data published Monday.

Web analytics firm Net Applications' numbers for August put the combined user share of Windows 8 and 8.1 at 13.4 per cent of the world's desktop and notebook systems, an increase of nine-tenths of a percentage point from July. That gain was the first since May and the largest since April, and followed two straight months of declines -- the first ever for the OS.

Windows 8 accounted for 14.6 per cent of the personal computers running Microsoft's Windows, a one-month jump of a percentage point. The difference between the numbers for all personal computers and only those running Windows was due to Windows powering 91.6 per cent of all personal computers, not 100 per cent.

But even with Windows 8's increase in August, it still failed to keep up with the uptake tempo of Windows Vista, the 2007 flop that even Microsoft executives disparaged amongst themselves.

At the point in Vista's post-release timeline that corresponded to August, that OS ran on 14.3 per cent of all personal computers -- a larger percentage than Windows 8's last month -- and on 15.1 per cent of all Windows PCs. The latter is the most credible measure of comparison, as it accounts for the slightly greater dominance of Windows at the time. (When Vista was in its 22nd month after launch, Windows powered 94.4 per cent of all personal computers.)

But the gap between Windows 8's and Vista's uptakes did narrow in August. The difference was half a percentage point last month, compared to seven-tenths of a point the month before.

The increase of Windows 8's user share -- a rough measurement of the number of personal computers running a specific OS -- cannot be traced with certainty to any one cause: There are too many variables. One possibility is that back-to-school sales of new PCs have been brisk enough to boost Windows 8/8.1's share. In August-September 2013, for example, Windows 8's user share surged by three-and-a-half percentage points.

Windows 8 is expected to be superseded by the next edition -- code named "Threshold" -- in the first half of 2015.

While Windows 8 gained ground in August, Windows 7 remained flat at 51.2%. It was the first month in the last six that the 2009 operating system did not grow its share.

Meanwhile, Windows XP's user share fell nine-tenths of a percentage point in August, accounting for 23.9% of all personal computers and 26.1 per cent of only those running Windows. The decline was the second consecutive after a one-month pause in XP's gradual demise.

Computerworld now projects that Windows XP will still be running between 21 per cent and 22 per cent of the world's personal computers at the end of 2014.

It's improbable that the losses of XP directly translated into gains by Windows 8, even though the two numbers were nearly identical. Instead, it's much more likely that some users migrated from XP to Windows 7, while a different group, albeit a similar number, upgraded from Windows 7 to Windows 8.1.

Another analytics company, Ireland's StatCounter, had different numbers for Windows. StatCounter's figures are typically different than those from Net Applications because the former tallies usage share by counting page views to show how active users of each OS are on the Web.

StatCounter pegged July's Windows 8 and 8.1 usage share at 15.7 per cent, Windows 7's at 55.7 per cent and XP's at 14.3 per cent.

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