By Colin Barker, 31 July 2007 08:34
NEWS
Microsoft has declined to confirm statistics from its chief operating officer on the number of copies of Windows Vista it has sold, throwing into confusion how successful the operating system has been.
COO Kevin Turner told financial analysts last week that "60 million units have been sold of Windows Vista into the marketplace".
But, approached by silicon.com sister site ZDNet UK for confirmation, Microsoft could only confirm it had sold 40 million, saying the last figure is two months old.
If Microsoft's figures are to be believed, this means Vista sales are flat. Turner's figures mean 20 million copies of Vista have been sold, on a wholesale basis at least, over the last two months, with 40 million sold in the first four months since the consumer launch in January.
But, despite the uncertainty, Turner seized the opportunity for a spot of publicity. "By our math, we eclipse the entire installed base of Apple in the first five weeks that this product shipped," he said.
A Microsoft spokesperson added: "Windows Vista is on track to be the fastest-selling operating system in Microsoft's history. IDC says that, for every dollar of Microsoft revenue from Windows Vista in 2008, the ecosystem beyond Microsoft will reap approximately $22 [£11]."
Colin Barker writes for ZDNet UK

Comments
There are 3 comments. Join the discussion
1. Karen Challinor
Would this count - a friend of mine who after struggling with vista on a new laptop for a fortnight scrapped it and put Ubuntu on instead ?
2. Simon Cox
Absolutley nobody I know owns Vista. I think people will only get it when they buy a new computer - upgrades to PCs are just not going to happen except for the 3% of PC Geeks.
3. Simon
There are more interesting statistics which Microsoft will never release :
How many copies have actually been sold as oppposed to forced on new PC buyers ?
How many copies are actually registered - as in activated and still being used ? Their Genuine Disadvantage system should know exactly how many !
Given that at work we have actually sold as many OEM licences for XP as we have Vista machines, I can tell you that any metric based on "number of copies shipped" will greatly overstate the number actually being used.