"
In fact, on
linux.cnet.com/the client side, Windows accounted for 87 percent of all sales in 1999, a figure that will decline to 85 percent by 2004."On the client side, it's pretty boring. The story is, it's a Microsoft
world," Gillen said. Of the 13 percent of the market not buying some
type of Windows product last year, he said, about 5 percent purchased
an Apple computer running the Mac operating system.
Although that represents a 26 percent jump from its 4.5 percent
of the market the year before, Gillen said, "the Mac OS continues to be
a non-threatening element in the market."
"
h1. Linux closing in on Microsoft market share, study says - 2000
http://news.cnet.com...7.html?hhTest=1
"On the desktop, Windows's market share in new license shipments inched
up to 93.8 percent in 2002 from 93.2 percent. Linux's share of the
desktop also increased slightly to 2.8 percent from 2.3 percent. Apple
Computer Inc.'s Mac OS accounted for 2.9 percent of the total shipments
of 121 million client-operating environments." 2003
http://www.techweb.com/wire/26802826
"Microsoft currently has around 90% share of the client operating system
market with Windows but this will fall to 58% by 2007 as new devices
increasingly appear, IDC said." 2004
http://blogs.zdnet.com/ITFacts/?p=5667
We are all fairly familiar with the new low-end notebook phenomenon where GNU/Linux is thriving. There is a market that is larger than that already well established and growing 20% per annum where GNU/Linux is on about 50% of units: thin clients. This market is expected to be on 10% of seats in a few years.
see http://www.via.com.t...ctedClients.pdf
"From an operating system (OS) perspective, proprietary OS rollouts see
high traction in countries where local thin client vendors employing
their own applications have a strong say, such as Korea and the PRC.
The "others" OS category (including Sun’s embedded firmware) was the
largest, at 34% share of the overall APJ market in 2005. Windows CE was
installed in 24% of all APJ thin client deployments, Windows XP
Embedded captured 22%, and Linux followed closely with a 21% share."
see http://computers.tek.../research/8013/
There is nowhere that GNU/Linux is not doing well and taking market share: servers, clients, thin clients, mobile devices. Get used to it. Competition has arrived in the OS market and it is here to stay. As long as you blindly follow M$ and keep sending them money, M$ will survive but their licence to print money is ending. They have nowhere to go but down, probably to less than 50% in a few years. This is good. They may finally have to sell on price and performance and not position on shelves in stores. I would not pay $1 for Vista. GNU/Linux works for me.
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