Take Windows 11... please.

Leaks confirm low numbers for Microsoft's latest OS

Time to rethink Windows 10 support cycle then?

By Richard Speed Wed 18 Oct 2023 
https://www.theregister.com/2023/10/18/take_windows_11_please/


Windows 11 is consistently failing to capture hearts and devices, if recent 
figures are to be believed.

First reported in WindowsCentral, active device usage of the operating system 
has apparently inched past the 400 million mark, according to an internal 
Microsoft document that leaked.

This is far behind that of Windows 10 at the same point in the operating 
system's lifecycle.

While Microsoft has yet to formally comment on the number – this hack is 
currently at the company's London Envision event, which is swarming with 
staffers, none of whom want to talk about the success, or otherwise, of Windows 
11 – it follows the same trend seen in other usage statistics.

Earlier this month, Statcounter figures put Windows 11 usage still some way 
behind Windows 10. As a reminder, Windows 10 took approximately two years to 
overtake the previous dominant player, Windows 7. Windows 11 (launched October 
2021)… not so much.

Apologists for the operating system's performance would point to the very 
different conditions under which the software was launched.

Windows 10 came on the back of the disastrous Windows 8 and 8.1 editions – as 
Windows 7 followed the self-inflicted catastrophe of Vista – and benefited from 
all manner of user encouragement from Microsoft. Occasionally, this included 
the OS slithering, unwanted, onto user devices.

Other than occasional nags, Windows 11 has not been forced down the throats of 
users of Windows 10 in quite the same way.

Windows 11 isn't a particularly bad version of Windows by any stretch of the 
imagination.

Some elements of the user interface might grate a little, and there will always 
be users for whom one design choice or another will be loudly rejected – there 
were those, after all, who raged at the imposition of the Start Menu over the 
Program Manager of old.

But the operating system itself is... fine.

Which, in a nutshell, is the problem. Windows 11 is simply OK. There's nothing 
particularly wrong with it except for its hardware requirements.

Indeed, with a vague assurance that things would be more secure, Windows 11 at 
launch required updated hardware – including recent CPUs – that necessitated 
many users to purchase new kit.

When faced with choosing between the perfectly acceptable Windows 10 or 
splashing the cash on new hardware for Windows 11, users shrugged, and so 
Windows 11 has languished.

It has been some time since Microsoft released official figures around Windows 
usage, but the latest leak has confirmed the operating system continues to 
trail its predecessor.

Windows 10 has just under two years left of updates before Microsoft intends to 
pull the plug, meaning Windows 11 has considerable ground to catch up in a 
constrained hardware market.

Unless the company blinks and keeps Windows 10 support going for just a little 
longer. ®

https://www.theregister.com/2023/10/18/take_windows_11_please/

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