Skye Jacobs

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What it means The growing adoption of Windows 11 is a positive sign for Microsoft, indicating that users are gradually overcoming initial hesitations about the OS. However, with Windows 10 still commanding most of the market share, Microsoft must speed up this transition to ensure a smooth handover before Windows 10 support ends.

Microsoft's Windows 11 is finally gaining significant traction in the market, nearly three years after its initial release. According to recent data from Statcounter, Windows 11 reached an all-time high market share of 35.55 percent in October 2024 – an increase of 2.13 percentage points from the previous month.

This acceleration is a notable shift from the sluggish growth of the past year. In October 2023, Windows 11 held just 26.17 percent of the market share, with minimal month-to-month changes and even occasional declines. The recent surge suggests that users are increasingly embracing Microsoft's latest operating system.

As Windows 11 gains ground, Windows 10 is experiencing a proportional decline in its user base. The older operating system now accounts for 60.95 percent of all Windows users, approaching the 60 percent mark for the first time since September 2019. This represents a decrease of 1.8 percentage points from the previous month.

Meanwhile, Windows 7, despite being unsupported, retains a small but persistent user base of 2.62 percent. Older versions like Windows 8.1 and Windows XP continue to linger with minimal market shares of 0.31 percent and 0.28 percent, respectively.

In the overall operating system market, which includes mobile platforms, Windows holds the second position with a 26.83 percent share, slightly increasing by 0.13 points in October 2024. Android leads the pack with 44.62 percent, while iOS follows Windows with 18.49 percent.

There are several likely reasons why Windows 11 adoption is accelerating. As older hardware reaches the end of its lifecycle, users are more likely to upgrade to new devices pre-installed with Windows 11. Additionally, the impending end of support for Windows 10, scheduled for October 14, 2025, is likely prompting both individual users and businesses to consider upgrading their systems.

Microsoft has also been actively promoting Windows 11, highlighting its enhanced security features, improved performance, and integration with AI technologies. The introduction of Copilot has been a significant selling point for the new operating system.

However, the transition to Windows 11 has not been without challenges. The operating system's strict hardware requirements, including the need for TPM 2.0 and relatively recent processors, have prevented many users from upgrading their existing machines. This limitation has likely contributed to the slower adoption rate compared to previous Windows versions.

Despite these hurdles, the gaming community has shown a stronger inclination towards Windows 11. Steam's hardware survey data shows that Windows 11 has surpassed Windows 10 as its users' most popular operating system.

As the end-of-support date for Windows 10 approaches, Microsoft is expected to intensify its efforts to encourage users to upgrade. The company has already begun displaying notifications on Windows 10 systems, reminding users of the upcoming support deadline. For those who wish to continue using Windows 10 after October 2025, Microsoft will offer extended security updates, but at an additional cost and for a limited time.

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I bet most Windows 11 users haven't "warmed up", but rather that they run Windows 11 because it is what came with their computer. And the Windows 11 share is bigger with gamers is just about them swapping hardware more often than the average computer user.

Personally I run Windows 10 on my private computers, but is force to Windows 11 on a work computer and I see more things in Windows 11 going backwards than things that want me to move to it. And that is even disregarding its spyware and has ads.

When Win 10 is dead, then I will for sure try out Linux. Microsoft can kiss my a..
 
Weeeeeeee! All aboard the Microsoft merry-go-round. Here we go again. I wonder how the new improved OS is coping with the record level ransomware attacks featured in another story here.
 
Only reason im using Windows 11 is because Start11 exists.
 
As a user of W11 for a couple of years and W10 before that, there is little to gain in a change from W10 to W11, which may be why the market share is still so high despite being discontinued in less than a year. They are just forcing the change to sell new hardware and softwate.
 
My work laptop has windows 11 on it and I'm throughly annoyed everytime I have to use it. It feels like a Chromebook only harder to use and slower. Linux Mint on my desktop and personal laptop.

So I'm all for people switching to linux and dropping windows, but I get a concerning question from people looking to switch. It's always, "what should I go with?" Realisticly, pick any popular easy one and daily it for a week. Then spend the next week learning the command line and how Linux likes to work, how to use the command line and how it's files system os structured. Put about 20 solid hours into understanding it and then the distro doesn't really matter. Learning linux feels intimidating because it looks alien and is different, but after about 20 hours of serious effort spread out over a couple weeks, it'll just click one day and you'll never look back. Put the effort in, experience that "AH-HA!" moment for yourself and you'll never want to touch a modern windows machine again.

RIP Windows 7 </3
 
My work laptop has windows 11 on it and I'm throughly annoyed everytime I have to use it. It feels like a Chromebook only harder to use and slower. Linux Mint on my desktop and personal laptop.

So I'm all for people switching to linux and dropping windows, but I get a concerning question from people looking to switch. It's always, "what should I go with?" Realisticly, pick any popular easy one and daily it for a week. Then spend the next week learning the command line and how Linux likes to work, how to use the command line and how it's files system os structured. Put about 20 solid hours into understanding it and then the distro doesn't really matter. Learning linux feels intimidating because it looks alien and is different, but after about 20 hours of serious effort spread out over a couple weeks, it'll just click one day and you'll never look back. Put the effort in, experience that "AH-HA!" moment for yourself and you'll never want to touch a modern windows machine again.

RIP Windows 7 </3
Liinux is the solution for people who still have good pieces of older hardware that work just fine.
 
Liinux is the solution for people who still have good pieces of older hardware that work just fine.
As a tech hoarder, that's not really true anymore. The kernel has gotten bloated and even light distros no longer give a smooth experience on older low-end hardware. It's true that you don't need more than 4gigs of ram to have a good linux experience, but older CPUs are the real bottle neck thesedays. I'd say 6th gen Intel chips and Zen1 AMD chips are the cutoff. I have a dual core i3 5gen Intel and it and it struggles to open a web browser or watch YouTube at 360p.
 
If hardware requirements are met in older systems, Linux will work where windows won't.
 
11 came on the computer, but the FIRST thing I installed is open shell, to make it more like 7 & 10.
 
I'd like to see the statistics on how many users have switched to a different OS rather than change to Windows 11. I'd be part of that statistic. When my Win10 laptop started to show signs that it was aging, I gave Win11 a try. What an abominable mess. I returned the new laptop to Dell (sorry Dell, it was Microsoft's fault, not yours), investigated other options, and ended up switching to a Mac.
 
Idk why they can't just offer what we used to have on W10, but also keep the new stuff too? You know... as a setting? Android phones can change the look for the UI (even the usability) so why cant windows? Why are we stuck with what they give us? All the little mods that make it look like the old OS is not really fixing the big issues. The core changes. Stuff that were here and there are now moved or deleted. People used to computers for the last 25 years got to relearn everything. Annoying. Again, if android phones make me keep the same look and feel, and totally discard Android 12-13-14 for a look that was popular in 2011... why can't the PC do that too?

Is it a size problem? Remove the bloat, and make it 50% extra larger then. At least give me the option. Perhaps when you look for the iso to install the new OS, give us different ones. 1 that looks like W10 (and works like that too) and 1 thats new and more modern like W11. Let US choose. Stop telling US what WE need. WE know what we like and need.
 
Stuff that were here and there are now moved or deleted.

This is what drove me away from Windows--the features that used to exist and that I found useful that they aggressively removed and blocked off.

My attitude is that I should be able to adapt a computer to my needs, in order to enhance productivity. I always found that to be true with Windows from Win95 all the way through to Win10. (I skipped Vista and Win8.) As of Windows 11, I found that I had to adapt my usage to fit into what is provided with the Windows 11 UI, and modifications that used to exist were completely blocked off to prevent people from bringing them back with things like registry hacks. That's backwards, and it's nuts.

The Apple ecosystem isn't perfect either, but they have left personalizations in place that allow me to run things in a manner that's productive and useful.

 
It will go down more as I'll switch to Linux soon. :D
I really like Lun
It will go down more as I'll switch to Linux soon. :D
I really like Linux Mint. But it can be tough figuring out how to get a favored program into Linux. Right now, I want to add, MPC-HC, & Zoom Player. There is a way to add Zoom Player, but it's a bear, to do, at least for me. I keep putting it off. If Linux ever makes it even close to as easy as it is to download and install any program you want like Windows, I would suspect most people would opt-in to that route.
 
Get ready for the next, better windows.
 
Get ready for the next, better windows.
The next better and enhanced spyware.

As a tech hoarder, that's not really true anymore. The kernel has gotten bloated and even light distros no longer give a smooth experience on older low-end hardware. It's true that you don't need more than 4gigs of ram to have a good linux experience, but older CPUs are the real bottle neck thesedays. I'd say 6th gen Intel chips and Zen1 AMD chips are the cutoff. I have a dual core i3 5gen Intel and it and it struggles to open a web browser or watch YouTube at 360p.
I have an X4 640 that ran Mint 21 just fine. Even my old A8-6410 (ULV Beema) with 8GB RAM runs Mint 21 just fine and can stream 1080p videos without stutter.

There's barely a difference between Intel 4 and 6th series chips as they are the same 14nm node that Intel got stuck on for a decade, thus your assertion that older hardware can't run Linux is entirely false, unless you're running the latest buggy kernel.
 
I really like Lun
I really like Linux Mint. But it can be tough figuring out how to get a favored program into Linux. Right now, I want to add, MPC-HC, & Zoom Player. There is a way to add Zoom Player, but it's a bear, to do, at least for me. I keep putting it off. If Linux ever makes it even close to as easy as it is to download and install any program you want like Windows, I would suspect most people would opt-in to that route.
sudo apt update
sudo apt install snapd
sudo snap install mpc-hc --edge

Zoom Player
Go to the Zoom Player community hub (use search engine if you don't know where it is), click install, type your password and voila, installed.

 
The next better and enhanced spyware.


I have an X4 640 that ran Mint 21 just fine. Even my old A8-6410 (ULV Beema) with 8GB RAM runs Mint 21 just fine and can stream 1080p videos without stutter.

There's barely a difference between Intel 4 and 6th series chips as they are the same 14nm node that Intel got stuck on for a decade, thus your assertion that older hardware can't run Linux is entirely false, unless you're running the latest buggy kernel.
So in the particular system I'm talking about, it doesn't run anything very well. Currently it is running xubuntu, but I have tried several distros on it over the last several weeks and everything seems like trash on it. I have an 1800x system that once something is running everything seems to run fine, but the GUI seems to hang and the system just generally isn't as responsive as I'd like. Still perfectly usable, unlike the i3 laptop I have, but that's just my opinion.

I would also like to point out that I didn't say they can't do it, just that most older hardware won't provide a smooth experience and I firmly stand by that statement. Linux on old hardware certainly provides a better experience than windows does, but that really isn't saying much going off of the smell coming from that dumpster fire.
 
So in the particular system I'm talking about, it doesn't run anything very well. Currently it is running xubuntu, but I have tried several distros on it over the last several weeks and everything seems like trash on it. I have an 1800x system that once something is running everything seems to run fine, but the GUI seems to hang and the system just generally isn't as responsive as I'd like. Still perfectly usable, unlike the i3 laptop I have, but that's just my opinion.

I would also like to point out that I didn't say they can't do it, just that most older hardware won't provide a smooth experience and I firmly stand by that statement. Linux on old hardware certainly provides a better experience than windows does, but that really isn't saying much going off of the smell coming from that dumpster fire.
We have entirely different experiences. I've tried Mint, Puppy, Manjaro and even DSL and they all run fine. I really like Puppy but its only useful for very old machines as it's limited in capabilities, despite being Ubuntu based.
 
We have entirely different experiences. I've tried Mint, Puppy, Manjaro and even DSL and they all run fine. I really like Puppy but its only useful for very old machines as it's limited in capabilities, despite being Ubuntu based.
well Mint is probably my favorite distro, but I'm finding xubuntu to be the snappiest one Ive tried and that's been my daily driver recently. Manjaro was nice. It had some quality of life issue that I couldn't fix so I stopped using it but I can't seem to remember what that is right now.
 
With 24H2 Windows 11 is finally worth moving to. I have tested Win10 and Win11 on/off on the same system and Win11 feels snappier now with 24H2.
 
Only reason im using Windows 11 is because Start11 exists.

Why do you need a start button? I only use start menu for search.

Do you press actual icons and programs in the start menu to open stuff? I have programs on taskbar and desktop instead.
 
Why do you need a start button? I only use start menu for search.

Do you press actual icons and programs in the start menu to open stuff? I have programs on taskbar and desktop instead.
Do you need a car? I only use cars when I need a taxi.
 

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