Windows 7 OEM sales to cease on 31st October 2016

by Mark Tyson on 3 November 2015, 10:06

Tags: Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Windows 7, Windows 10, Windows 8

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All good things must come to an end, and Microsoft has quietly updated the Windows Lifecycle Fact Sheet page, naming a date upon which sales of PCs with Windows 7 installed will end. On 31st October 2016 sales of PC with Windows 7 Professional pre-installed will officially cease.

Windows 7 has already had a charmed life in some respects. As noted by Ed Bott on ZDNet, it would be normal for a Microsoft OS to reach an end-of-sales date two years after the launch of the version of Windows that succeeds it. If that had been the case Windows 7 PC sales would have completely ceased in October last year. Microsoft's decision to name a date shows some confidence that it can get businesses to migrate from Windows 7 to Windows 10, suggests Mr Bott.

If you look at the chart above, you can see that Windows 7 does make it further into the 20-teenies than Windows 8, which will reach its last gasp of availability on 30th June 2016, six months before its predecessor. You will also notice that Windows 8.1 shares the same 31st October 2016 date for the end of pre-installed sales as Windows 7.

The other interesting chart on the Windows Lifecycle Fact Sheet page concerns when various OSes meet the end of their mainstream support and the end of their extended support periods. Despite Windows 7 seemingly living longer than its successor, in pre-installed availability terms, Windows 8 gets a further three years of extended support (as updated to Windows 8.1). Windows 10 is set to get mainstream support until October 2020 and extended support until October 2025.

On Friday HEXUS asked readers how they were getting on with Windows 10, in our regular QOTW. The latest OS has been generally available for about three months and your feelings seemed to be largely positive.



HEXUS Forums :: 4 Comments

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Microsoft's decision to name a date shows some confidence that it can get businesses to migrate from Windows 7 to Windows 10, suggests Mr Bott.

Unlikely: it just gives businesses who want to stay on Windows 7 a target date for when they need to buy their next round of hardware. Given refresh cycles in most business are between 3 and 5 years, that's still plenty of opportunity for any businesses who buy their PCs preinstalled to keep Windows 7 until 2021.

And that's not considering the large corporations who'll be on Win 7 Enterprise through volume licensing and will be able to just keep imaging their own machines 'til the cows come home…
My dad has mild dementia switching OS is bad because it confuses him. I wish if they were going to force you to change you could reskin like win7
Microsoft's decision to name a date shows some confidence that it can get businesses to migrate from Windows 7 to Windows 10, suggests Mr Bott.

I think Mr Bott has got that a little backwards. If MS are so confident in Windows 10 then why pull the plug on Windows 7 so early. Seems to me Windows 7, 8, 8.1 are seen as a threat to Windows 10.
rob4001
… I wish if they were going to force you to change you could reskin like win7

They're not forcing anyone to change. They're simply withdrawing Win 7 from the market. You won't be able to buy a new computer with Win 7 on it after October 2016. You're welcome to keep using Win 7 for as long as you want.