Published 12/2/2008
by Paul Lilly
at Maximum PC all RSS Feed
Perhaps DRAM makers and Microsoft's top brass should join each other at the local watering hole and lament the state of the industry, as the two share a somewhat similar woe. The memory market is the worst it has been in 15 years , and likewise, Windows market share has dropped to a 15-year low, according to market research firm Net Applications. But the similarities end there. While Windows market share is as low as it has been since Windows 3.11, Microsoft still dominates the landscape by claiming just under 90 percent. The problem for Microsoft, if it can be called that, is a steady decline since Net Applications started providing market share data in October 2004. At the time, Microsoft's market share was at 96.4 percent, then 95.5 percent in November 2005, 94.2 percent in November 206, and 92.4 percent in November 2007. Hardly a landslide, but with open-source alternatives such as Firefox and Linux gaining ground in the browser and operating system arenas, Microsoft might want to take a cue ...
(link)
Tags:
Related Content
gOS "Cloud" instant-on OS comes to Gigabyte touchscreen netbooks
engadget.com 12/2/2008 —
Not that we were too impressed with gOS when we first saw Rocket almost a year ago, but Cloud -- the small footprint, quick boot Linux variant that Good OS introduced today at the Netbook World Summit in Paris -- looks like an altogether ...
Windows market share drops to 15-year low
tgdaily.com 12/2/2008 — Earlier today, we reported that Microsoft’s Internet Explorer has dropped below 70% for the first time nearly nine years. Even worse, market research firm Net Applications now estimates Microsoft’s Windows market share at less than 90%, which is still ...
Firefox sails past 20% market share, IE drops below 70%
tgdaily.com 12/1/2008 — Analysis Mozilla achieved an important milestone in November, sailing past 20% market share over an entire month for the first time since its release in November 2004. While Safari and Chrome were able to take over share from Microsoft's Internet ...
Open Source: The Model Is Broken
businessweek.com 12/2/2008 — For anyone who hasn't been paying attention to the software industry lately, I have some bad news. The open-source business model is broken.
Companies have long hoped to make money from this freely available software by charging customers for ...
Nokia seeks Control Center cronies —
The Register 12/2/2008
No place like home hub Nokia wants applications for its smart home box, but it's also sniffing around for companies interested in selling the Linux-based home-automation gateway with their own branding.…