cesar_spain 22 November 2009 at 11:44 am.Pingback: Google išsiskyrė su Apple, ištekėjo už Sony Pingback: Happy Wasted Time « Homo Sapiens Blatherus Pingback: Flickr makes my pictures look like dog poo - The Photo Forum - Photography Discussion Forum Personally, I doubt it – the Windows 7 feature list certainly doesn’t set my pulse racing. It will be interesting to see if it can repair some of the damage caused by Vista and slow the growth of Mac OS X. Hopefully this, coupled with increasing Mac market share, will further improve my Mac sales.Ī beta of Windows 7 has just been released.
WINDOWS VS MAC OS MARKET SHARE 64 BIT
The recent porting of Qt 4.5 to Cocoa gives me the opportunity to further improve PerfectTablePlan’s Mac look and feel and to release a 64 bit version.
WINDOWS VS MAC OS MARKET SHARE SOFTWARE
My software is built on top of the Qt cross-platform toolkit. Given the disparity in cost between Windows and Mac hardware it is hardly surprising that Mac users are more ready to reach for their credit card. I wouldn’t want to live off my Mac sales, but it is very useful additional income. So Mac users currently account for 20% of my sales. My data also shows that Mac users are twice as likely to purchase my software as Windows users (I have heard similar figures have reported by others). Mac visitors to my website have followed the general trend, up from 7.41% in 2007 to 8.5% in 2008 and accounting for around of 10% of visitors at the end of 2008. I sell table planning software for Windows and Mac OS X. Of course, it is highly questionable to project 15 years from a single year of data, but it gives an idea how much work Apple still has to do. 15 years if you project the 2008 gains forward. While Mac OS X’s annual gains are impressive, it has a long way to go to catch Windows. Windows market share fell from 91.79% to 88.68% in the same time. That is a 32% increase in market share during 2008, compared to a 22% increase during 2007. According to data (via sharewarepromotions blog) Mac OS X’s share of the OS market increased from 7.31% in Dec 2007 to 9.63% in Dec 2008. 2008 was a good year for Apple and Mac OS X.