Windows 8 upgrades to come often

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Windows 8 upgrades to come often

Microsoft plans to overhaul how it develops the flagship Windows operating system in a strategic shift aimed at keeping pace with nimbler rivals Apple and Google, people familiar with the matter said.

Microsoft aims to upgrade the software more frequently, about once a year, rather than every two or three years as it has been done in the past, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the product plans are private. The company plans to unveil the first of these updates in 2013, one of the people said.

The world’s largest software maker has floundered as personal computers, where it has long dominated, have lost ground to the smartphones and tablets championed by Apple and Google. The new approach could help Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft respond to industry changes and integrate new technologies more quickly.

U.S. retail sales of PCs running Windows have declined 21 percent since the company released the latest version of the operating system, Windows 8, according to a report by NPD Group.

The decrease has been fueled by a 24 percent drop in sales of notebook computers as many customers opt for Apple’s iPad or tablets powered by Google’s software instead of Windows, NPD said.

The report compared sales from Oct. 21 to Nov. 17 of this year to the same period of 2011. It was based on a sampling of retailers and excluded Microsoft’s own stores, where the company’s Surface tablet is sold.

The company on Friday said the Intel chip-based version of the Surface will cost $899 for the cheapest model, not including the tablet cover with a built-in keyboard that is one of Surface’s key features. That raised concerns among analysts that the price may be too high for many users.

Microsoft hasn’t yet figured out whether the new, more frequent upgrades will be offered for free or for a low price to current customers, said one of the people.

Catherine Brooker, a spokeswoman for Microsoft, declined to comment.

Bloomberg
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