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Although Microsoft has put all its energy into promoting Windows 11, it is quite embarrassing in terms of its upgrade speed.

According to AdDuplex’s April statistics, Windows 11 is currently running on 19.7% of PCs, an increase of less than 0.4% from the previous month (19.4%).

The number of users running the Insider version is currently at 0.7%, up 0.1% in a month. In other respects, according to the latest data, the specific shares of Windows 10’s fragmented system versions are:

Windows 10 21H2 — 35%

Windows 10 21H1 — 26.4%

Windows 10 20H2 — 6.1%

Windows 10 1903 — 1.2%

Windows 10 1909 — 2.1%

Windows 10 2004 — 6.5%

Windows 10 1809 (and earlier) — 2.2%.

Overall, Windows 10 was running on 79.5% of systems, down 1.1% from the previous month. In 2013, Microsoft Windows accounted for more than 90% of the overall operating system market, but that number has dropped significantly over the past decade in the face of increasing competition. According to StockApps.com, Windows has lost 17% of its market share, down from 90.96% in 2013 to 73.72% now.

Right now, Windows 11 isn’t giving Microsoft the much-needed momentum either. According to the latest data from AdDuplex, the growth of the new version of the operating system almost completely stalled in March.

Of course, seeing this situation, is Microsoft liberally loosening restrictions and allowing more users to upgrade to Windows 11…

Microsoft is embarrassed!Users are not interested in Windows 11, and the upgrade rate is too pitiful

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Responsible editor: Snowflakearticle error correction

Hashtags: WindowsOSWindows 10Windows 11

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