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Vista not selling as well as XP
Sales of boxed copies of Windows Vista continue to significantly trail those of Windows XP during its early days, according to a soon-to-be-released report.
Standalone unit sales of Vista at US retail stores were down about 60 per cent compared with Windows XP during each product's first six months on store shelves, according to NPD Group. In terms of revenue, sales are also down, but the drop has been less steep, at 42 per cent. The findings largely mirror the sales pattern NPD saw for Vista during its first week on the market in January.
"It's just not doing well," NPD analyst Chris Swenson said of Vista's performance at retail stores, though he added that most people get their OS on new PCs, with only a minority of customers purchasing boxed copies.
Microsoft also agreed that an analysis of boxed copy sales is not representative of Vista's momentum, noting the trend of people getting a new operating system with a new PC has further accelerated with Vista.
"While we can't comment on the findings of a report we haven't seen, we continue to be on track in all segments we follow," the company said in a statement to CNET.co.uk's sister site News.com. "As of this summer, more than 60 million licences have been sold."
Microsoft noted in a regulatory filing that more than 80 per cent of its Windows revenue comes from computer makers that install the OS on new machines, with boxed copies accounting for only a fraction of total sales. And the PC market is far larger than it was five years ago. According to research firm Gartner, roughly 239 million PCs sold worldwide last year, compared with 128 million in 2001.
In many ways, sales of Vista are tied closely to the rate of PC sales. One of the big variables is how quickly businesses move to adopt Vista. Most businesses are not moving to the OS in significant numbers yet, though Microsoft has begun to tout a few large deployments from corporations including Infosys, Citigroup, Charter Communications and Continental Airlines.
The software maker said ahead of Vista's release that it expected businesses to adopt the new operating system at twice the rate of XP during its first year on the market.
However, many businesses have said they are waiting until Microsoft releases the first update to Vista before considering deployments of the operating system. Microsoft is starting beta testing of its first service pack for Windows Vista, though that update won't be released in final form until next year.
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