Subscribe to Windows IT Pro
July 12, 2011 07:39 AM

WPC 2011: 400 Million Copies of Windows 7 Sold

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #139789
Rating: (23)

In the opening keynote of its annual Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC)—being held this year in Los Angeles, California—Microsoft provided a series of updates about Windows 7 and related products and services while casting an eye to its Windows 8 future. The company reported that it has now sold more than 400 million licenses to Windows 7, an OS that continues to sell and sell almost two years after its release.

In October 2010, on the occasion of the OS' one-year anniversary, Microsoft noted that it had sold 240 million Windows 7 licenses—a run rate of 20 million copies a month. Given the 8-month period between then and now, one could surmise that Windows 7 is still selling at the same rate of 20 million copies per month. This means that Windows 7 sales haven't slowed a bit over 20 months.

Another way to look at this success is to compare Windows 7 with its closest competitors, and there are two: previous versions of Windows and Mac OS X. Comparing Windows 7 with Windows XP (the aging OS that Microsoft is still trying to convince slow-moving corporations to jettison), the software giant noted that Windows 7's sales trajectory has outpaced that of XP, and that customers now have just 1,000 days before XP support ends. And in just 20 months, users of Windows 7 have outpaced the entire Mac OS X user base—that's every single current Mac user, regardless of OS version—by 8 to 1. Mac OS X has been in the market for a decade.

Microsoft briefly mentioned Windows 8 but simply reiterated information it provided previously, including simply repeating a video demonstration from June. I've covered this information extensively on the SuperSite for Windows, so there's little need to rehash it here.

Moving on to partner-friendly Windows 7-based solutions, Microsoft announced the public beta of Windows Intune 2, which is adding software distribution and other new capabilities to the company's cloud-based PC management service. There's also an August update to the Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack (MDOP), which will see three of the suite's applications upgraded. Microsoft also announced changes to the way it compensates partners who help customers deploy specific Microsoft solutions.

Many of the company's new services, including the partner-supported ones, are cloud-based, and Microsoft noted that its transition from big, complicated on-premises servers to cloud-hosted services is going well. If anything, the quick transition to Intune 2, which will ship in final form this year, indicates that it's going more quickly than expected. And Microsoft recently released the well-received Office 365, which makes Google's competing service, Google Apps, look like a child's toy by comparison.

Other transitions aren't going so well. Windows Phone 7 has yet to take off in the market—"We've gone from very small ... to very small," Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer darkly joked of Windows Phone's market share—but the addition of Nokia to the team should turn things around.

The WPC continues Tuesday with more keynotes and product announcements, so there should be more news from the show throughout the week.

Related Content:

ARTICLE TOOLS

Comments
  • 10 months ago
    Jul 12, 2011

    We own about 20,000 of those licenses. Not one of them installed. Microsoft's Byzantine licensing practices are being noticed and we have been tasked to look at other options for the long term. I imagine this is happening the world over. MS will have some troubling days in the years to come.

  • yoshipod
    10 months ago
    Jul 12, 2011

    @BananaJr

    When comparing a companies stock price, its better to look at market cap, not actual share price. MS stock is a lot lower per share than Apple, since there are many more shares. Apple is "worth" more than MS, but not anywhere near the 13:1 ratio you suggest. Its much closer to 3:2.

    The 8:1 ratio is also misleading as MS does not "directly compete" with Apple. Apple sells Hardware, MS sells Software. Apple really competes against Dell, HP, Lenovo, etc.

  • infiniteloop
    10 months ago
    Jul 12, 2011

    @argraphics:

    That's exactly what has happened to Apple over the years.

    Thanks for the quote.

  • argraphics
    10 months ago
    Jul 12, 2011

    As Mahatma Gandhi once said

    First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.

  • BananaJr
    10 months ago
    Jul 12, 2011

    How in the world does a CEO who outsells his nearest competitor 8 to 1 but that competitors stock price is 13 times your companies stock price keep his job?

    It seems the powers that be are more interested in protecting their fiefdoms than in parlaying past success into new area's of growth. They insisted on sticking with a pen based phone way past it's time and never made fully touch based versions of Office to run on a tablet, still insisting on the same pen based model for usability. Windows 8 will attempt to fix that but will it be too late? Windows Phone is a capable product but with a late entry to the market is stuck at 1% share and hasn't made any headway. iPads are reaching 7-8 million a quarter and could have 75 million out there by the time Windows 8 is released. That's a mighty stiff headwind to sell into. Desktop sales will be fine, but just like Windows Phone there is no margin for error and the first product out of the gate had better be more complete than Windows Phone was when it was released against phones that were much more mature.

You must log on before posting a comment.

Are you a new visitor? Register Here

advertisement

advertisement

Windows is a trademark of the Microsoft group of companies. Windows IT Pro is used by Penton Media Inc. under license from owner.