Windows 10 adoption has slowed down considerably
According to StatCounter, Windows 10 accounted for 7.64 percent of desktop Internet usage in September, compared to 5.38 percent the month prior. Rival metrics firm NetApplications pegs Windows 10 usage at 6.63 percent, compared to 5.21 percent in August.
Both firms still have Windows 10 in fourth place among Microsoft operating systems, trailing behind even Windows XP, a 14-year-old operating system that Microsoft stopped supporting in 2014. Windows 7 remains way out in front, with 51.52 percent usage according to StatCounter, and 56.53 percent according to NetApplications. (Both firms have Windows 7 dropping by more than a percentage point last month.)
Windows 10 got off to a strong start in large part because Microsoft is giving away upgrades to consumers running Windows 7 and higher. The company boasted of 75 million installs for Windows 10 in its first four weeks, while StatCounter observed faster first month adoption than both Windows 7 and Windows 8 during their debuts.
But as we get farther from launch, those numbers seem likely to fall as early adopters get their upgrades out of the way. The challenge now is for Microsoft to get other users on board without pushing too aggressively and scaring people away.
Why this matters: If August’s usage data was a sign that Microsoft’s free upgrade plan was working, September’s data is the inevitable reality check. Microsoft is still dealing with a huge base of aging PCs and deeply-entrenched usage patterns, not to mention enterprise users that must still pay to upgrade. Making upgrades free for consumers removes just one barrier among several, and turning Windows 10 into the predominant version is going to be a long slog.