Microsoft to Kill Windows 7 sales for consumer PCs in October
Interesting news today, as it seems Microsoft will allow OEMs to ship consumer PCs with Windows 7 until October 31, 2014. The cut-off date for business PCs with Windows 7 is yet to be announced though. While Microsoft has always allowed PC makers to continue shipping previous versions of Windows on their hardware for some amount of time after the release of a new Windows version, this policy has come under scrutiny in recent months for two reasons.
Here's what was reported by Windows Supersite today:
First, Windows 8 is the most poorly received version of Windows since Windows Vista, and there are fears that if Microsoft doesn't fix this OS through a series of subsequent free updates, it may trigger a further decline in PC sales.
And second, the firm erroneously revealed that it had halted Windows 7 sales to PC makers late last year, triggering worries that Microsoft was forcing Windows 8 on its customers in a new way. In December, however, Microsoft announced that it hadn't really ceased sales to PC makers and that its Windows 7 lifecycle support page had been changed in error. At the time, it said that it had yet to determine the end of sales date for PCs with Windows 7 preinstalled.
Well, now it's made half of the decision, according to Mary Jo Foley. Microsoft will no longer allow PC makers to bundle Windows 7 on PCs aimed at consumers after October 31, 2014. But it's still not sure when it will halt the sale of Windows 7 Professional-based PCs to businesses. "Microsoft officials are saying Windows 7 Pro will be available to OEMs for preload beyond the October 31, 2014, date, [but] they are not yet specifying what the new cutoff date will be," she writes.
When you consider that Microsoft recently revealed that it has sold 200 million licenses to Windows 8, it doesn't take much of a mathematical leap to understand that many individuals and businesses are still buying Windows 7-based PCs as well. Over 300 million PCs were sold in 2013 alone, and if you go back to Windows 8's October 2012 release date, it's pretty clear that well over 100 million Windows 7 licenses were sold in this 16-month time period. So halting the sale of Windows 7 on new PCs isn't necessarily a panacea.
And with volume license customers able to downgrade to Windows 7 as long as that OS is supported, we're going to see more new Windows 7 usage for the foreseeable future, even if new business PC sales are halted. Collectively, this begs the question of whether Microsoft has a new Windows XP on its hands in Windows 7. I suspect that's exactly what's happening.
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Senior Member
Posts: 568
Joined: 2009-03-27
men thios is normal. win8 is new and 7 is old now like the XP(nearly), noboy wants or should hav to use the old OS even if it still works. 7 was good but it gettin time to have it in a bed now an let 8 parade around town with us until it gets old too!
am glad to see moer men switchin to the windows 8 like hallryue it can only mean god things ahead! i no i did a long time ago! (hallryu try ebay for a key?)
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Joined: 2011-12-31
Windows 7 is erotic.
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Joined: 2008-09-07
That, or their PCs/laptops that are built from 2004+ can still serve all their needs: Facebook, email, web search, office programs, simple games and Youtube. Most people don't even need anything after XP/Vista for the little things they do with them. Same with hardware.
As far as PC sales in the future, we may one day soon have retail stores that only carry tablets- those same stores being what average people got their junky PCs from to start with (the ones made to be thrown out rather than easily upgraded). Workplace environments though, I can't see them going fully tablet less you can still plug a mouse and keyboard in. And there will always be situations which the more customizable PC will be more favorable or just simply is more powerful.
Basically, we weren't ever mainstream and never will be. The types like us who do build PCs will have a strong market still.
...and for the entrepreneurial types, there is a market for trade-in deals to be had: clunky pc's people bought for 90% of the usage can now be used in a tablet or smartphone.
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Posts: 1289
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It is already sort of happening. The Future Shops where i live have far more tablets on display than PC. They really have only a few PCs on display and a few monitors. The rest is laptops and tablets. And the size of the tablets display is getting bigger and bigger. Last fall when i went there to buy a new monitor a clerk tried to sell a laptop to an approx 50yo woman. She left the store with an iPad.
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Posts: 1095
Joined: 2010-11-28
That, or their PCs/laptops that are built from 2004+ can still serve all their needs: Facebook, email, web search, office programs, simple games and Youtube. Most people don't even need anything after XP/Vista for the little things they do with them. Same with hardware.
As far as PC sales in the future, we may one day soon have retail stores that only carry tablets- those same stores being what average people got their junky PCs from to start with (the ones made to be thrown out rather than easily upgraded). Workplace environments though, I can't see them going fully tablet less you can still plug a mouse and keyboard in. And there will always be situations which the more customizable PC will be more favorable or just simply is more powerful.
Basically, we weren't ever mainstream and never will be. The types like us who do build PCs will have a strong market still.