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After months of stagnation, Windows 11’s adoption rate is finally ramping up, according to a recent report from AdDuplex, a cross-promotional advertising network that many apps and games use ...
Unfortunately, it seems that Windows 11 adoption has been slowing in lieu of Windows 10 updates. That’s not always a bad thing and doesn’t necessarily mean Windows 11 is a failure, though.
Windows 11 adoption is still well behind Windows 10. ... Digital Trends, Wired, Lifehacker, and How-To Geek, and he's covered events like CES and Mobile World Congress live.
Even more telling is in the period from November 2021 to January 2022, the same company reported (Opens in a new window) Windows 11's adoption had doubled to 16.1 percent.
Adoption for Windows 11, which Microsoft released in October 2021, reached an “overall usage” of 19.4% last month, an increase of more than 10% since the beginning of December 2021.
Windows 11 adoption among Steam users now stands at 30.33% after reaching 25% in September 2022, which was up from 20% in May, when 71% were on Windows 10, and 2.4% were on Windows 7. Windows 11 ...
As we've written before, Windows 11's adoption among PC users has been a bit slower than Windows 10's, and that has continued into the operating system's second year.
Windows 10 tops the market share at 71.9% per StatCounter's latest report. Microsoft's Windows 11 lags behind with a 22.95% stake in the market share. Windows 10 will hit its end of support in ...
Data on the adoption of Microsoft's newest OS shows uptake ranging from 1% to 9%. But most enterprises will likely wait until at least 2023 before broadly rolling out Windows 11.
This transition to Windows 11 highlights some larger trends in the PC market. Security and performance have become top priorities for many organizations, especially as cyber threats evolve.
Of the 80% using Windows 10, the larger proportion were found to be using the two most recent update families.Windows 10 N21U (21H2), released in November 2021, had 28.5% of the overall market ...
For example, in January Microsoft reported that the adoption rate for Windows 11 was twice the rate of Windows 10. However, new figures suggest Windows 11's adoption rate is slowing to a crawl.