Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Finally, Windows 8.1 surpasses XP in usage

Add as a preferred source on Google

It took Microsoft a little longer than expected, but the newest Windows iteration available to the masses has finally edged out the aging XP build more than a year after reaching general availability. According to StatCounter, Win 8.1 leaped from a market share of 9.31 percent in October to nearly 11 percent in November.

Meanwhile, XP dipped over a percentage point in the recent 30-day timeframe. As such, it yielded the silver medal it was so desperately clinging to, dropping to last place on the podium, with a 10.69 percent share.

Recommended Videos

Modest compared to, say, XP’s 19.3 score a year back, but still pretty solid for an OS that turned 13 in October. As for 8.1, StatCounter has been tracking its slow but steady progress for a while now, reporting monthly increases of below one percent since its inception.

The last couple of months have seen its growth accelerate from 8.07 percent in September to 9.31 in October and finally 10.95 now.

However, it seems highly unlikely 8.1 will ever catch up to Windows 7. Its market share is over 50 percent again, up from 49.66 in October and 49.51 in September.

Things aren’t looking encouraging for Windows 8.1 even if we sum up its figures with results posted by Win 8. The second freshest flavor of Microsoft’s dominant desktop OS barely sits at 4.9 percent, down from 5.94 a month ago.

In a different report, via Net Market Share, Windows XP holds a fragile lead over 8.1. But it’s only a matter of time until the latter will surpass the former with tablet and console web traffic out of the equation.

Net Market Share’s report also shows XP rapidly faltering, from 23.87 percent usage in September to 17.18 in October and 13.57 in November. Meanwhile, 8.1 enjoyed a jaw-dropping upsurge between September and October, from 6.67 to 10.92 percent, and now sits at 12.1.

Windows 7 comfortably leads Net Market Share’s ranks, picking up an extra 3 percent over the last 30 days and hitting a phenomenal 56.41 peak. Win 8 earned a measly half of percentage point or so, trailing 8.1 at 6.55 percent, followed by OS X 10.9 (2.79), OS X 10.10 (2.66), and finally, Windows Vista (2.65).

Adrian Diaconescu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Adrian is a mobile aficionado since the days of the Nokia 3310, and a PC enthusiast since Windows 98. Later, he discovered…
Intel Core 3 test shows it could give Windows laptops a fighting chance again MacBook Neo
Fresh PassMark scores suggest Wildcat Lake is closing the gap with Apple's A18 Pro.
Intel Core Series 3 Processors Featured

Apple's MacBook Neo has shaken up the budget laptop market with its $599 price tag and surprisingly capable A18 Pro chip. But if fresh benchmark numbers are anything to go by, Intel may finally have a worthy response. The company's upcoming Core 3 304 processor has surfaced on PassMark, and the results suggest that entry-level Windows laptops could soon be much more competitive.

Intel's Core 3 304 is closing the gap with Apple's A18 Pro

Read more
Hackers leak facial recognition records tied to millions of Madison Square Garden visitors
Facial Recognition Composite

Madison Square Garden has spent years using facial recognition technology to monitor who enters its venues. Now, that same surveillance system is at the center of what could become one of the year's most troubling privacy breaches.

The cybercrime group ShinyHunters has published a massive cache of data allegedly stolen from Madison Square Garden Entertainment after the company missed a ransom deadline. According to reports, the leak includes facial recognition records, customer information, internal security assessments, and other sensitive data tied to millions of visitors. While large-scale breaches have become depressingly common, this one feels different. Most data leaks involve passwords, email addresses, or financial information. This breach reportedly includes something far more personal: information connected to how people were monitored and identified in physical spaces.

Read more
Windows 11’s modern Media Player is somehow worse than the version from 17 years ago
The modern Media Player for Windows 11 is slower and heavier than the classic version
Windows 11 media player user interface

Microsoft has released a new Insider Preview update for the modern Windows 11 Media Player. However, the app is facing criticism after tests revealed it uses more memory and opens local video files more slowly than the classic 17-year-old Windows Media Player.

The update adds some useful fixes, including better captions, clearer codec errors, and improved file recognition. But the biggest complaints remain higher RAM usage and paid codec support for some common video formats. The update is not available to everyone yet. Media Player version 11.2605.14.0 has only arrived on Experimental Insider builds as part of Microsoft’s June 12 Insider Preview releases.

Read more