News Warner Logo

News Warner

Around 500 million PCs are holding off upgrading to Windows 11, says Dell

Around 500 million PCs are holding off upgrading to Windows 11, says Dell

  • Dell reports that around 500 million PCs are holding off upgrading to Windows 11, citing hardware requirements as a major obstacle.
  • The PC market is expected to remain relatively flat next year, with Dell’s COO Jeffrey Clarke warning of slower upgrades due to the increased hardware requirements for Windows 11.
  • Microsoft has tightened its hardware requirements for Windows 11, leaving behind millions of PCs that were sold over the past decade and cannot run the new operating system.
  • The fact that so many PCs are sticking with Windows 10 is a surprise, as Microsoft’s decade-old OS was expected to be less popular among consumers and businesses.
  • Dell sees an opportunity to guide customers towards newer Windows 11 machines and AI PCs, but acknowledges the challenges in upgrading the PC market due to the increased hardware requirements.

Windows users are transitioning to Windows 11 at a slower rate than the upgrade to Windows 10. Microsoft’s 10-year-old operating system, which just hit the end of support phase, is still proving popular among consumers and businesses. Dell revealed this week that around 500 million machines are capable of upgrading to Windows 11, but are sticking with Windows 10 instead.

“We have about 500 million of them capable of running Windows 11 that haven’t been upgraded,” said Dell COO Jeffrey Clarke on a Q3 earnings call earlier this week, referring to the overall PC market, not just Dell’s slice of machines. “And we have another 500 million that are four years old that can’t run Windows 11.” He sees this as an opportunity to guide customers towards the latest Windows 11 machines and AI PCs, but warns that the PC market is going to be relatively flat next year.

It’s the first time we’ve heard that as many as 500 million machines are holding off upgrading to Windows 11, and that a similar amount simply can’t. Microsoft tightened its hardware requirements for Windows 11, leaving behind millions of PCs that were sold over the past decade.

I expected millions of consumers to stick with Windows 10 if they couldn’t upgrade due to the hardware requirements, but Microsoft’s decade-old OS is clearly a lot stickier among consumer and commercial PCs than I thought.

Dell’s Windows 11 upgrade numbers come just a week after Windows chief Pavan Davuluri said that “nearly a billion people rely on Windows 11.” It’s not clear what rely means here, as Microsoft has typically provided monthly device numbers in the past.

link

Q. How many PCs are capable of upgrading to Windows 11 but are sticking with Windows 10?
A. Around 500 million machines.

Q. What is the reason for Dell’s COO Jeffrey Clarke stating that around 500 million machines can run Windows 11 but haven’t been upgraded?
A. He sees this as an opportunity to guide customers towards the latest Windows 11 machines and AI PCs.

Q. How many PCs are four years old and cannot run Windows 11, according to Dell?
A. Another 500 million.

Q. Why did Microsoft tighten its hardware requirements for Windows 11?
A. To leave behind millions of PCs that were sold over the past decade.

Q. What is the expected PC market trend next year, according to Dell?
A. The PC market will be relatively flat next year.

Q. How many people rely on Windows 11, according to Windows chief Pavan Davuluri?
A. Nearly a billion people.

Q. Why did Microsoft typically provide monthly device numbers in the past?
A. Not specified in the article.

Q. What is the significance of Dell’s statement about PC users transitioning to Windows 11 at a slower rate than the upgrade to Windows 10?
A. It highlights that Microsoft’s decade-old OS, Windows 10, is still popular among consumers and businesses.