CIO Today

CIO Today Network Sites:   Top Tech News  |   CIO Today   |   Mobile Tech Today   |   Data Storage Today
Daily Briefing for Technology's Top Decision-Makers
Commvault Simpana® 10
Protect, manage, access, and
realize the untapped value of data.

www.commvault.com
Tuesday, June 18th 
Introducing Simpana® 10 software
Home
Enterprise Software
Enterprise Hardware
Network Security
Cloud & Virtualization
CRM Systems
Data Storage
Unified Communications
Operating Systems
CIO Issues
Mobile Tech
Chips & Processors
Small Business
World Wide Web
Business Briefing
After Hours
Press Releases
 
Free Newsletters
Top CIO News
 
Mobile Tech Today
 

Advertisement


Microsoft/Windows

Windows 8 Sales Tepid; MS Partner Fujitsu Unhappy

Windows 8 Sales Tepid; MS Partner Fujitsu Unhappy
January 2, 2013 10:21AM

Bookmark and Share
"We can't be optimistic about the PC industry," said Yoshihisa Toyosaki, a Tokyo-based analyst, according to Bloomberg. "PC makers' bet on Windows 8 has failed, as cheaper tablet computers are taking away customers." Only 1.7 percent of desktops, notebooks and laptops connected to the Web in December were Windows 8 machines, says Net Applications.

CommVault is a data and information management software company dedicated to providing organizations worldwide with a radically better way to manage data and information. Their unique Solving Forward philosophy allows them to deliver complete solutions with infinite scalability and unprecedented control over data and costs. Be among the first to experience Simpana 10 software. Click here now.

Sales of Windows 8 are far from what Microsoft Relevant Products/Services hoped. Early signs from companies like Net Applications are dismal -- and some Microsoft partners are complaining about missing targets.

Only 1.7 percent of desktops, notebooks and laptops that were connected to the Web in December were Windows 8 machines, according to Net Applications. That compares with a 21 percent market share for Windows 7 during the same point in its lifecycle. That means, roughly, Microsoft is off to a 20 percentage-point slower start with its re-imagined Windows.

"Now it's clear: Windows 8 did not blow the doors off during the holiday," said Roger Kay, principal analyst at End Time Technologies Associates. "In context, this tepid launch is just one of a litany of failures fast relegating Microsoft to the status of incidental spectacle in the information technology business."

Is Microsoft Blind?

As Kay sees it, Microsoft has reached an "Orwellian impasse" in which the company cannot tell the truth -- even to itself. Kay told us Microsoft is blinded by its own hallucinations about how the market is operating. The result, he said, is that its pronouncements entirely lack credibility.

Even its partners aren't fully backing the new Windows. Fujitsu is missing its annual shipment target for personal computers in the face of tepid demand for Windows 8 PCs. Fujitsu President Masami Yamamoto told reporters in Tokyo that appetite for the new operating system was "weak," according to Bloomberg.

"We can't be optimistic about the PC Relevant Products/Services industry," Bloomberg reported Yoshihisa Toyosaki, a Tokyo-based analyst at Architect Grand Design, an electronics research and consulting company, as saying. "PC makers' bet on Windows 8 has failed, as cheaper tablet Relevant Products/Services computers are taking away customers."

NPD Group reports that U.S. retail sales of devices running Windows dipped 21 percent year-over-year in the month following the Oct. 26 release of Windows 8. NPD said a 24 percent drop in notebook Relevant Products/Services sales fueled the decline and Apple and Android Relevant Products/Services were beneficiaries.

Craig Mundie Shifts Roles

Meanwhile, Craig Mundie is stepping away from his role as chief research and strategy officer at Microsoft into what Redmond is calling "senior adviser to the CEO."

"In this role, he works on key strategic projects within the company, as well as with government and business leaders around the world on technology policy, regulation and standards," an updated biography on Microsoft's Web site said.

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer announced the move in a Dec. 14 internal memo that The Wall Street Journal's AllThingsD blog published. In the memo, Ballmer wrote:

"Over his career, Craig has brought great value to the groups and initiatives he has started and overseen and now brings that wealth of experience to his new role. Craig has also been instrumental in building relationships with governments and policymakers around the world."

Tell Us What You Think
Comment:

Name:

Russellghall:

Posted: 2013-01-06 @ 2:24pm PT
It's awesome that Fujitsu would complain about sales. I addressed this specifically in another article: http://rghnews.wordpress.com/2012/12/29/fujitsu-windows-8-complaint/

Once Fujitsu addresses their strategy, sales will increase.

Frank Cobden:

Posted: 2013-01-04 @ 9:24pm PT
From what I see, the problem dealers are having is that the customers, some of whom are eager to try something new, are disappointed by the new interface unless on a touchscreen device. Instead of helping new PC sales, it is backfiring badly and actually hurting the industry. They wanted an OS that works as well on all types of devices, but truly miscalculated on what PC users would find acceptable. So what now? Do they scrap 8 early and come out with 8A or a "9" that is PC friendly? The logical solution is to extend Windows 7 sales while withdrawing 8 for PC users, but there is way too much pride and ego involved for them to even consider that. So I think we're in for a long period of Microsoft waiting for 8 sales to take off, which will never happen either, until they finally do something about the situation.

W:

Posted: 2013-01-04 @ 6:38pm PT
Windows 8 will go down in history as a bigger mistake than Vista. In both cases they took an operating system that wasn't broken and broke it into something confusing and awkward for the average user. Windows 8, or something equivalent, should have been released separately for phones and tablets and never should have been released for conventional desktop and laptop.

Marek:

Posted: 2013-01-02 @ 10:51am PT
I think Windows 8 is really much better operating system than any previous Windows. It is leaner, faster and more reliable. The problem is the new interface that does not introduce anything significant to desktop users, because all touch capabilities were already there in Windows 7. Tiles take too much space and allow for use of only two programs at the same time. This is good for smartphone, small tablet. It is not good for a large tablet and desktop computer. More, it is useless for desktop from my point of usage. If I want touch I have it and I had it in windows 7 desktop applications already. Everything is/was there. The large tiles look too big and fuzzy on the large screen, they look good on small screen only. The new style programs are showing too much of empty space. What's the point to see one or two small boxes of a program operating in full screeen mode? We had it already under DOS. I see no gain at all here for a desktop user and I bypass tiles going directly to the desktop, which is running truly outstanding all programs.
If someone claims that tiles are great as a menu system, I do not agree either. It is visually very difficult to see what program is connected to its tile. One can find such things much easier in any form of text menu, which on top of that can be fitted into one display's screen without need for scrolling or sideways moving. All systems (ios, android too) use this approach, let's say, to stay "in touch" with the user and all of them have the same problem: too much scrolling and too much time in looking for the program one wants to find. In this respect Windows 8 phone's alphabetical menu is the simplest and the best.

Advertisement



 Microsoft/Windows
1. Free Video Messaging Comes to Skype
2. Judge in Microsoft Antitrust Case Dies
3. MS, Facebook Tell of Security Requests
4. MS Office 365 for iPhone Hits Market
5. One IE Patch, But 19 Vulnerabilties


advertisement


 Most Popular Articles
1. New Nvidia Chip Boosts Citrix Graphics for Remote Workers
2. Verizon Enters Cloud Storage Wars with a Wisp
3. Dell Kills Its Public Cloud Effort, Will Offer Partner Marketplace
4. What's in Store for Apple's iOS 7?
5. Will BlackBerry Fans Flock to the Q10 and Its Keyboard?

Have an informed opinion on this story?
Send a Letter to the Editor.
We want to know what you think.
Send us your Feedback.

 Related Topics  Latest News & Special Reports

  Huawei Phone Is a Quarter-Inch Thin
  Yahoo, Apple Disclose Data Requests
  Free Video Messaging Comes to Skype
  Prism's Secret: Bigger Data Seizure
  Judge in Microsoft Antitrust Case Dies

 Technology Marketplace

BYOD & MDM
Forrester Research Inc., Report: BYOD from AT&T. Make everyone more efficient.
 
Cloud & Virtualization
Brocade technologies help enable the full benefits of virtualization.
 
Contact Centers
Unlock the potential in your people with Microsoft Dynamics
Improve your customer relationships with Microsoft Dynamics
 
Customer Service
Unlock the potential in your people with Microsoft Dynamics
Improve your customer relationships with Microsoft Dynamics
 
Data Security
Simpana® 10 software: an exponential leap forward
 
Data Storage
Brocade makes it easier to deploy, manage, and scale networks.
 
Enterprise Hardware
Panasonic Toughbook® mobile computers are built to keep you running.
 
Enterprise Software
Simpana® 10 software: an exponential leap forward
 
Hardware
The best document scanner for you? Try KODAK's scanner selector
 
Innovation
The best document scanner for you? Try KODAK's scanner selector
 
Laptops & Tablets
Panasonic Toughbook® mobile computers are built to keep you running.
 
Network Security
Brocade makes it easier to deploy, manage, and scale networks.
 
Mobile Enterprise Spotlight

Why Google's Project Loon is Smart Business
Google is once again proving that it's much more than a search engine or even a mobile-device company, with Project Loon. The initiative aims to bring "balloon-powered Internet" to isolated areas of the world.

Authorities Want Smartphone 'Kill Switch' To Fight Thefts
Law enforcement authorities are calling on the smartphone industry to adopt "kill switch" technologies that would deter theft by squeezing the market for selling stolen devices, which would be worthless if "bricked."

Small Business Gets Boost from Mobile Marketing
Aside from the requisite e-commerce tricks, small businesses are turning their attention to the mobile arena to engage social media-savvy customers, as mobile marketing tools offer more channels.

Advertisement
Enterprise Hardware Spotlight

Samsung Offers Tiny, Superfast PCIe SSDs for Ultrabooks
Solid-state drives are continuing their march forward. On Monday, Samsung Electronics announced it has started to mass produce the first PCI-Express 3.0 SSDs for the new wave of Ultrabooks.

Amazon.com Joins 3D Printer Craze, Enabling Wide Availability
Commercially available 3D printers have recently moved from being expensive hobbyist devices to being pricey but accessible consumer and manufacturing machines. And now, Amazon.com will sell 3D printers & supplies online.

New Facebook Data Center Uses All Home-Grown Servers
Facebook has opened its new data center in Lulea, Sweden. The data center is a first in two ways: the first in Europe and the first to be equipped with all Facebook-designed, Open Compute servers.

Advertisement
Navigation
CIO Today
Home/Top News | Enterprise Software | Enterprise Hardware | Network Security | Cloud & Virtualization | CRM Systems | Data Storage
Unified Communications | Operating Systems | CIO Issues | Mobile Tech | Chips & Processors | Small Business | World Wide Web
Business Briefing | After Hours | Press Releases
Also visit these Enterprise Technology Sites
Top Tech News | CIO Today | Mobile Tech Today | Data Storage Today

Services:
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | XML/RSS Feed

About CIO Today Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Services for PR Pros (In partnership with NewsFactor) | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2013 CIO Today. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo. Member of Accuserve Ad Network.