
“Windows 7 is being well received all around. We saw strong demand for Windows 7 through the holidays – Year-over-Year PC unit sales increased over 50% for each of the 4 weeks of December according to NPD’s Weekly Tracking Service. This is on the heels of a strong start to the holiday season, where NPD reported that PC sales increased 63% Year-over-Year on Black Friday 2009,” revealed Brandon LeBlanc, Windows Communications manager on the Windows Client Communications Team.
According to data provided by internet metrics company Net Application, Windows 7 had grown to a market share of 5.71% in just two months after launch. Just to help you get an idea, that’s a third is all the market share that Windows Vista grabbed in approximately three years, albeit Vista’s user base is withering and is now down to just 17.87%, with Windows XP also dropping to 67.77% from 70.48% ahead of the Windows 7 GA. The 5.71% market share would roughly translate into some 60 million copies of Windows 7 in use around the world, but this is my estimate and not an officially confirmed number from Microsoft.
“Netbooks were one of the hot items where Windows 7 has been strong. According IDC’s recent survey and its resulting paper “Mininotebooks: the New PC Phenomena” (which was sponsored by Microsoft), more than 99% of the netbooks sold today in the US (95% worldwide) now run Windows. And just 2 months after launch, more than half of those netbooks are running Windows 7. Of course it’s only natural to also want to know how Windows 7 did in comparison to its predecessor,” LeBlanc added.
According to Ballmer, Windows 7 will continue to drag the PC market along with it. Market analysis outfit Gartner has corrected PC sales forecasts, revealing that it expects a growth of 3% instead of the previously announced drop of 2% for 2009. At the same time, Gartner forecasted a boost of 12% in PC sales in 2010.
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