since market share is a proportional statistic, any increase in the market share of one thing must correspond with a decrease in others. If I've sold 1 apple and 1 pear, the market share of each is 50%. If I sell an additional apple, the apple share increases to 66% while the pear share decreases to 33% despite no actual drop in pear sales.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ i remain similarly skeptical that so many people would be actively downgrading their OS. for the vast, vast majority of people any qualms with W11 aren't going to lead to learning how to reinstall a fresh OS. there's got to be something more going on
I'd love to say it's people getting so fed up with Win11 that they install Linux, but judging by the graph and how these stats are collected (percent of page views), I think it's actually Win11 users getting so sick of it that they browse the internet with their phones more often.
since market share is a proportional statistic, any increase in the market share of one thing must correspond with a decrease in others. If I've sold 1 apple and 1 pear, the market share of each is 50%. If I sell an additional apple, the apple share increases to 66% while the pear share decreases to 33% despite no actual drop in pear sales.
Like I said above, that'd require over 2% of all Windows installs to be new installations of Windows 10.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ i remain similarly skeptical that so many people would be actively downgrading their OS. for the vast, vast majority of people any qualms with W11 aren't going to lead to learning how to reinstall a fresh OS. there's got to be something more going on
The same site also shows Windows overall useage going down in the same time
I'd love to say it's people getting so fed up with Win11 that they install Linux, but judging by the graph and how these stats are collected (percent of page views), I think it's actually Win11 users getting so sick of it that they browse the internet with their phones more often.