Close ad

It's another Tuesday and that means we can take a look at how the new iOS 11 is doing in terms of installs. For the first time, this statistic appeared after twenty-four hours, followed by a summary after a week. Yesterday at 19:00 it was exactly two weeks since Apple released the new operating system for the iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad, and it seems that the so-called adoption rate is still significantly lagging behind last year's iOS 10.

Last night, the new iOS 11 operating system was installed on 38,5% of all available iOS devices, at least according to data from Mixpanel. At first glance, it may seem that this is a decent number, given the fortnight of operation of the new iOS. However, compared to last year and iOS 10, this is a big step back. At the end of last September (that is, fourteen days after the launch), iOS 10 was installed on more than 48% of all active iOS devices. Thus, the trend of a generally slower transition to a new operating system continues.

Official iOS 11 Gallery:

In the first 24 hours, the new iOS hit the 10% device, after a week he was on 25,3% device. In the next week, he added another 13%. The expiring iOS 10 is still on almost 55% of all devices, and the swapping of positions between the two systems should happen sometime in the following weeks.

mixpanelios11adoptiontwoweeks-800x439

The question is why the transition to the new version is so much slower than it was last year. There can be several reasons for this. Hardware incompatibility shouldn't be such a problem, because in order for the "eleven" to not be available to you, you would have to have an iPhone 5 (or 5C) or a really old iPad. Many users may resent the fact that their favorite applications that have not been updated to 64-bit instruction sets may not work under the new operating system. I believe that a large number of users are also waiting for Apple to fix the bugs found in the new version (and that for once there are quite a few). Abroad, users can also wait for some features to be added to iOS 11, such as paying via iMessage, which should arrive with version 11.1. How satisfied are you with the new iOS? Was the switch from iOS 10 worth it?

Source: Macrumors

.