20% desktop market share by mid-2006
Posted Aug 14, 2003 20:08 UTC (Thu) by
AnswerGuy (subscriber, #1256)
Parent article:
Global IT firm predicts Linux will have 20% desktop market share by 2008 (NewsForge)
I personally believe they're wrong again. Linux is likely to reach 10%
by the end of 2004 or mid-2005 (it's hovering close to 5% now, world wide).
After that there will be an accelerated inrush and it can double in just one more year.
Currently it appears that desktop Linux and OpenOffice.org adoption by government and educational institutions (in the U.S. and abroad, and including grade and secondary schools) is driving up the adoption rate considerably. Spain and Brazil, Korea and China, and India are just the tip of the iceberg, the small part of this trend that are poking up above the mass media and trade press waters.
Linux adoption is also driven by both ends of the computer hardware supply chain. Linux is attractive for new 64-bit Opteron and Itanium systems because it's already available and a huge corpus of software is readily and freely portable to the new platforms. Meanwhile Linux can still run on old machines that won't run the latest XP, ME, or whatever. (I've just shutdown my 14 year old 386 recently --- and I still might
use it as a router or small server later; my other 386 was retired when
the motherboard died after spending 10 years as my mailserver and 5
years before that was the workstation on which I taught myself Linux. It's hard drive was must moved into a slightly newer 486; and it's still my mail server).
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