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Keyword: operatingsystems

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  • Most Popular Computer Operating Systems 1985 - 2024

    04/27/2024 3:10:42 PM PDT · by Signalman · 112 replies
    YT ^ | March, 2024 | Captain Gizmo
    These are the most popular computer operating systems from 1985 to 2024, based on market share. The latest numbers from 2003 on are readily available from Wikipedia and Statcounter. The first half of the video required a bit more research, which entailed finding and converting sales figures into market share. These numbers may be different based on what OSes are included in the stats, this is why different videos have slightly different numbers.
  • Windows 10 is now comfortably the most used OS in the world

    10/25/2019 12:57:59 PM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 66 replies
    The Inquirer ^ | 10/25/2019 | Chris Merriman
    MICROSOFT HAS HAD A MIXED MONTH in terms of market share, as we dive into the murky world of Netmarketshare's figures for September. Windows 10 is the big winner (as you'd hope). In terms of desktop/laptop users, it's now comfortably over the halfway line, with 52.38 per cent of the market (+1.39). With less than four months until it reaches end of life, Windows 7 still remains a major force, though it continues to drop. It now stands at 28.17 (-2.17). Lesser versions of Windows continue to chug along - Windows 8.x now stands at 4.1 per cent (-0.73) of...
  • Windows 10 begins to eat into Windows 7's usage share

    09/21/2015 11:17:47 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 46 replies
    Tech World ^ | 09/21/2015 | Gregg Keizer
    Although it initially tempted Windows 8.1 users, Windows 10 has increasingly grown its usage share at the expense of the much more widely used Windows 7, an encouraging sign for Microsoft's efforts to convince the old guard to switch. Using data from Irish analytics company StatCounter, Computerworld calculated the changes in usage share -- a measurement of desktop-and-laptop-driven online activity -- of the various editions of Windows since 10's debut on July 29. For the first four weeks after Windows 10's release, Windows 8.1 led in losses, beating Windows 7 by a wide margin. During that month-long span, Windows 8.1...
  • Microsoft Windows Turns 29: Happy Birthday to the World's Number 1 OS! [Love it or hate it]

    11/21/2014 1:41:49 PM PST · by SeekAndFind · 58 replies
    Softpedia ^ | 11/21/2014
      Windows 1.0 was launched 29 years ago24 photosVIEW ALL  Windows was, is, and will continue to be the world's number one operating system for the desktop for many years from now, as neither Mac OS X nor Linux have what they need to overtake Microsoft's key player in the PC war. But have you ever wondered how everything actually started? Today is the best moment to ask such a question, because this is the day when Microsoft's Windows celebrates its 29th anniversary. While we're not going to get through the whole Windows history, because both Microsoft's official website...
  • Windows 8.1 overtakes Windows 8 in desktop OS arena

    06/03/2014 2:13:28 PM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 129 replies
    C/NET ^ | 06/03/2014 | Lance Whitney
    Friendlier to PC users than its prececessor, Windows 8.1 continues to eke out a higher share while Windows 8 slips downward. Net Applications Windows 8.1 is now more dominant than its predecessor, at least based on all desktop OS traffic seen by Net Applications.For the month of May, Windows 8.1's share inched up to 6.35 percent from 5.88 percent in April. That gave it just enough of a nudge to steal third place from Windows 8, which earned a 6.3 percent share, down from 6.36 percent the prior month.Windows 8.1's gradual ascension over its predecessor in the desktop market should...
  • Vanity - Has anyone tried installing XP lately? (Update not working for fresh install)

    10/10/2013 4:46:21 PM PDT · by Slump Tester · 47 replies
    10/10/2013 | Self
    I just noticed this about 2 weeks ago. It took all night to update, then worked fine. Today's install seems to be updating even slower. Thinking it may be an issue with my ISP, I got a friend (many miles away) to do an install with his XP, and he's experiencing the same issue.My install cd came with SP2. I slipstreamed SP3 onto it many years ago, and it has worked flawlessly ever since. I can manually install a downloaded media player 11 which makes me validate and that passes, so that's not the problem.
  • Researchers find surprising similarities between genetic and computer codes

    04/06/2013 10:35:13 PM PDT · by neverdem · 20 replies
    Phys.org ^ | March 29, 2013 | NA
    Computational biologist Sergei Maslov of Brookhaven National Laboratory worked with graduate student Tin Yau Pang from Stony Brook University to compare the frequency with which components "survive" in two complex systems: bacterial genomes and operating systems on Linux computers. Their work is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Maslov and Pang set out to determine not only why some specialized genes or computer programs are very common while others are fairly rare, but to see how many components in any system are so important that they can't be eliminated. "If a bacteria genome doesn't have a...
  • Over 40% of computer users are still using decade-old Windows XP

    06/29/2011 5:46:08 AM PDT · by upchuck · 124 replies
    Tecca ^ | June 29, 2011 | Mike Wehner
    Microsoft's past operating system woes might have some people living in the past While many computer lovers eagerly await the arrival of Windows 8 and Mac OS X Lion, a massive segment of users takes a decidedly slower approach when it comes to embracing new operating systems. According to an uber-detailed infographic by blog Manolution, 40.7% of users still run Windows XP on their computers. XP, which was released way back in October 2001, has since been succeeded by both the not-so-well-received Windows Vista, as well as Windows 7. In that same time frame, a half-dozen new versions of Apple's...
  • The Death of the Hard Drive

    Stop worrying about when the hard drive in your computer will die. Google wants to kill it permanently anyway. The new Google Chrome operating system, which was unveiled Tuesday, as well as hints and suggestions from Apple and Microsoft, offers us a preview of the PC of the future. And it will come without that familiar whirring disk that has been the data heart of the PC for the past 25 years. The Chrome OS will at first be available on all-black laptops from Samsung and Acer. And because the new platform stores everything -- files, applications, data bits and...
  • Google VP: Chrome OS Coming To Tablets & TVs; Windows And Sys Admins Going Down

    11/26/2010 11:49:52 AM PST · by nickcarraway · 23 replies
    TechCrunch ^ | 11/24/2010 | MG Siegler
    Chrome OS draws near. Last night brought perhaps the more surefire sign yet: Google is openly talking to The New York Times about it. Perhaps that is in response to rumors that it was being delayed into next year. While details are still scant, NYT reports that before the end of the year, Google will release a lightweight netbook running Chrome OS. It will likely be branded as a Google product, but built by a third-party, similar to what the search giant did with their Nexus One phone, says the report. This is in line with what we’ve heard and...
  • Five Reasons It's Time to Switch to Windows 7 (Tomorrow is D-day for Windows XP SP2 users)

    07/12/2010 7:58:50 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 127 replies · 1+ views
    PC World ^ | 07/12/2010 | Tony Bradley
    Tomorrow is D-day for Windows XP SP2 users. Granted, Windows XP SP2 will still work, but tomorrow is the last Patch Tuesday for the venerable OS which means it will become more unstable and less secure as time goes on. Simply applying SP3 will suffice to continue running a supported platform, but here are five reasons to consider switching off of Windows XP entirely. 1. Hardware Support. Windows XP is archaic, and it is designed to run on outdated hardware. As new technologies are introduced, it is unlikely that Windows XP will be compatible or able to take advantage of...
  • Computer Help (Laptop won't load XP)

    12/22/2009 2:06:56 PM PST · by GeronL · 47 replies · 1,425+ views
    There is this older Toshiba laptop running Windows XP. It loads but I can not log in. It says it is loading the settings but then it logs off, the desktop never loads. I tried safemode but AVG is hard to use in safe mode. There may be a virus but why would it do this? I think AVG may have quarantined a file the computer actually needs or something. Does anyone have a clue?
  • Best Buy memo explains that Vista doesn't work, details Windows 7 upgrade plans

    06/05/2009 10:12:17 AM PDT · by Gomez · 24 replies · 1,326+ views
    Ouch. We're guessing this is one that the suits at Best Buy would like to have back. A leaked company memo detailing how the retailer will handle Windows 7 upgrades has accidentally given the world a tasty tidbit to opine upon. The note starts off as such:"Microsoft is launching Windows 7 in mid-October 2009. This new operating system isn't just a "Vista that works" program - it's a new operating system with improved productivity, functionality and creativity that uses less computer resources." Never mind the fact that we never knew an OS could posses "improved productivity" -- how about admitting...
  • Revolution

    05/19/2009 11:44:49 PM PDT · by plsjr · 120 replies · 3,384+ views
    American Thinker ^ | May 20, 2009 | Herbert E. Meyer
    During the last 30 years we Americans have been so politically divided that some of us have called this left-right, liberal-conservative split a "culture war" or even a "second Civil War." These descriptions are no longer accurate. The precise, technical word for what is happening in the United States today is revolution. Because of our country's history, we tend to think of revolutions as military conflicts, and of the revolutionaries as the good guys; the image of Minutemen fighting valiantly against the British forces at Lexington and Concord lies deep within our DNA. But sometimes -- quite often, actually --...
  • Microsoft issuing emergency fix for browser flaw (Save this title for future use)

    12/17/2008 10:38:22 AM PST · by Red Badger · 55 replies · 2,033+ views
    www.physorg.com ^ | 12/17/2008 | Staff
    Microsoft Corp. is taking the unusual step of issuing an emergency fix for a security hole in its Internet Explorer software that has exposed millions of users to having their computers taken over by hackers. The "zero-day" vulnerability, which came to light last week, allows criminals to take over victims' machines simply by steering them to infected Web sites; users don't have to download anything for their computers to get infected, which makes the flaw in Internet Explorer's programming code so dangerous. Internet Explorer is the world's most widely used Web browser. Sponsored Links (Ads by Google) Security for Your...
  • How to get down off a duck ( why Linux is inherently more secure than Windows.)

    10/31/2008 11:14:46 AM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 45 replies · 735+ views
    A Man and His Penguin ^ | Monday, October 6th, 2008 at 6:32 am | bigbolshevik
    As promised, this is an article about why Linux is inherently more secure than Windows. I don’t promise that it’s 100% accurate down to the last detail; in fact, I have purposely simplified many details, and left out some more complex topics. I apologise about the length, too; it’s rather long, but I hope it’s interesting reading for people who are new to Linux as well as those who have not properly tried the Linux platform yet.———- In an earlier article “How to get down off an elephant”, I described why Windows viruses don’t infect Linux systems, and why you...
  • Vista's big problem: 92 percent of developers ignoring it

    06/16/2008 8:35:11 PM PDT · by twntaipan · 51 replies · 69+ views
    Cnet.com ^ | 6/16/08 | Matt Asay
    And to think Microsoft used to be popular with the developer crowd... Not anymore. A recent report from Evans Data shows fewer than one in 10 software developers writing applications for Windows Vista this year. Eight percent. This is perhaps made even worse by the corresponding data that shows 49 percent of developers writing applications for Windows XP. Such appreciation for history is not likely to warm the cockles of Microsoft's heart, especially when Linux is getting lots of love from developers (13 percent writing apps for it this year and 15.5 percent in 2009). The Mac? I don't have...
  • Testing Shows XP Still Outperforms Vista

    04/06/2008 5:31:58 AM PDT · by Notary Sojac · 52 replies · 158+ views
    ChannelWeb ^ | April 4, 2008 | Samara Lynn
    With the market preparing for the next -- and final -- phase of the life of Windows XP with the forthcoming general availability of Service Pack 3, the old operating system continues to show itself to be a spry performer. In head-to-head tests between Windows XP Service Pack 3 Beta (Release Candidate 2) against Windows Vista Service Pack 1, it's clear that XP still holds a measurable performance advantage overMicrosoft (NSDQ: MSFT)'s next-generation desktop operating system. Our CRN Test Center conducted a faceoff-type of performance evaluation. Testing was done on two identical desktops: HP (NYSE:HPQ)'s rp5700 model with a single...
  • Windows 7 in the Next Year? ("or so"?)

    04/05/2008 9:46:25 AM PDT · by sionnsar · 111 replies · 283+ views
    Slashdot ^ | 4/05/2008
    Journal written by symbolset (646467) and posted by ScuttleMonkey on Saturday April 05, @07:21AM from the also-duke-nukem-forever dept. Microsoft's efforts to get businesses to adopt Vista may come to a screeching halt now that Bill Gates has announced "Sometime in the next year or so we will have a new version", referring to Windows 7, the next expected version of the company's flagship desktop operating system.With a new version available soon, many organizations may decide to wait and see if they can avoid the pain of a Vista rollout altogether.
  • Symantec, Windows users beset by Vista SP1 flaws

    03/25/2008 8:43:40 PM PDT · by TigerLikesRooster · 205 replies · 3,484+ views
    ZDNet ^ | 03/24/08 | Tom Espiner
    Symantec, Windows users beset by Vista SP1 flaws By Tom Espiner, ZDNet UK Monday, March 24, 2008 10:56 AM Security vendor Symantec has said that updated drivers to replace those adversely affected by Windows Vista Service Pack 1 are not yet available. The company said users will have to wait for the updated drivers, which will be available "in the coming weeks". The drivers in question are for Endpoint Protection and Network Access Control, two of Symantec's flagship enterprise security products. Microsoft released Vista Service Pack 1 (SP1) to Windows Update on Tuesday. However, in the Vista team blog, Vista...