How has COVID 19 affected the Windows; Windows 10's market share remained unchanged in March, although users had a very good excuse to hold off on upgrades to Microsoft's new operating system: the COVID 19 pandemic.
According to Net Applications, Windows 10 represented 57,3% of the global OS market share last month, while they held 64,3% in total with the various versions of Windows.
Although the percentages are close to the previous month, February showed that many users were upgrading their systems. The percentage reached 65,1% in February.
The destabilization of the share of Windows 10, after the increase in February, changes the forecasts for the operating system. All the signs indicate that a slower adoption of the operating system is probably starting.
According to the February forecast, Microsoft's operating system should reach 75% by September and almost 80% by the end of 2020.
Of course, it is impossible to know for sure that all this is due to the pandemic, but below we will see at least one parameter that was not calculated in the upgrade from Windows 7 to Windows 10.
It should be noted here that Windows 7 increased its market share during March.
Net Applications reports that Windows 7 was in February at 26,2% of all operating systems. The operating system of 2009 rose to 29,4% in March and the increase was one of the largest observed since September 2019.
The numbers do not mean that about 12 million computers have suddenly returned to Windows 7 since Windows 10. data of Net Applications, which measure activity, may simply show us that many users dusted off their old, unused PCs when their employers told them to go home and try to work from there.
If this case has any base, Net Applications should continue to show stability on Windows 7 throughout the COVID 19 crisis.
In turn, Microsoft may be pressured by its customers, including very important companies, to resets security updates in Windows 7, maybe just for the duration of the pandemic.
Microsoft already has these updates in the program Extended Security Updates (ESU), for a fee to companies. These updates fix it security gaps characterized as “critical” or “important.”
The company from Redmond could make available the latest patches to each computer running Windows 7, for as long as work-at-home lasts, and to compensate paying customers by extending updates over several months.