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So in essence, these numbers mean nothing because these numbers are "estimates." If you don't agree, read carefully the conflicting "estimates":

Gartner claims worldwide PC shipments declined overall while Apple's Mac sales remained steady.

IDC claims worldwide PC shipments remained steady while Apple's Mac sales declined.

You are now free to decide....





Amid a continuing decline in worldwide PC shipments, Apple's Mac sales have remained steady in the first quarter of 2018, according to new PC shipping estimates shared this afternoon by Gartner.

Apple shipped an estimated 4.26 million Macs during the first quarter of 2018, up from 4.2 million Macs in the year-ago quarter, marking 1.5 percent growth.

Apple's market share for the quarter comes in at 6.9 percent, up from 6.7 percent in Q1 2017. Apple was ranked as the number four PC vendor worldwide during the quarter, coming in after HP, Lenovo, and Dell, and ahead of Asus and Acer. Apple was ranked the number five vendor during the same quarter last year, but this year, it surpassed Asus.

gartner_1Q18_global.jpg

Gartner's Preliminary Worldwide PC Vendor Unit Shipment Estimates for 1Q18 (Thousands of Units)
Most vendors saw shipments remain steady during the quarter. HP, the number one worldwide PC vendor, shipped 12.9 million PCs during the quarter for 20.8 percent market share, while Lenovo, a close competitor, shipped 12.4 million for 20 percent market share. Dell came in third with 9.9 million shipments and 16 percent market share, while Asus and Acer brought up the rear with 3.9 and 3.8 million shipments, respectively.

The overall worldwide PC market, however, declined 1.4 percent year over year. In total, there were an estimated 61.7 million PC shipments during the quarter, down from 62.6 million in the year-ago quarter and the 14th consecutive quarter of decline.

Apple saw less growth in the United States. During Q1 2018, Apple shipped an estimated 1.49 million Macs, a 0.5 percent increase from the 1.48 million Macs it shipped in the year-ago quarter. Apple was also ranked the number four PC vendor in the U.S., trailing behind Dell, HP, and Lenovo.

gartner_1Q18_us.jpg

Gartner's Preliminary U.S. Vendor Unit Shipment Estimates for 1Q18 (Thousands of Units)
Dell was the top U.S. PC vendor 3.44 million shipments, while HP shipped 3.35 million machines and Lenovo shipped 1.63 million. The overall PC market in the U.S. saw a 2.9 percent decline compared to Q1 2017.

gartner_1Q18_trend.jpg

Apple's Market Share Trend: 1Q06-1Q18 (Gartner)
IDC also released its own shipment estimates this afternoon, and as is often the case, IDC's shipping estimates are quite a bit different from Gartner's. IDC and Gartner's data often varies due to the different ways each firm makes its shipment calculations.

The IDC numbers suggest overall worldwide PC shipments remained flat, with 60.38 million PCs shipped during Q1 2018, down just slightly from 60.39 million in the year-ago quarter.

IDC says Apple was the number five worldwide PC vendor with just 4 million Macs shipped, a 4.8 percent decline from the 4.2 million shipped in the year-ago quarter. While Gartner ranks Apple above Acer, IDC does not.

It's important to note that data from Gartner and IDC is preliminary and the numbers can shift, sometimes dramatically and sometimes less so. Last year, for example, Gartner estimated shipments of 4.217 million Macs in Q1 2017, while the actual number was 4.199 million.

It's been several months since Apple last refreshed the bulk of its Mac lineup, with the exception of the iMac Pro, so it's not surprising to see little growth in shipments. Apple is expected to introduce refreshed MacBook, MacBook Pro, and iMac models at some point this year, perhaps at the Worldwide Developers Conference in June.

Article Link: Mac Shipments Remain Steady in Q1 2018 Amid Continuing Worldwide PC Decline
 
Anecdotedly, I'm one user who returned his 2016 MacBook Pro.

I would gladly buy a new Macbook Pro if they actually shipped something people actually want and not just gimmicks and dongles. I'm glad Apple's market share is going down. Well deserved for the crap they shipped the last 2 years.
 
Apple sells around 1-2 million more Macs a year now then they did during the "Glory Years" of the early 2010s when you could upgrade them at will like a PC, so I would guess sales would be at best pretty similar.




They do not.

But even when Apple did offer the Macintosh Server and Xserve they were a rounding error in global PC server sales.

If it is correct that they are selling more computers now then in the glory days don't assume it's because their products are any better or novel. Have you considered an up-tick in sales could have a direct correlation with the fact it's nearly impossible to upgrade or fix one of the current or recent generation computers and therefore the user is forced to buy a new one instead? Apple uses a lot of glues, specialty adhesive tapes and soldering now. Opening up many parts just ruins them. Even Apple technicians can't repair them. Apple has the consumer held by the b*lls. It's a smart strategy yet it also feeds anger and frustration from the consumer end. It is not the behavior I expect from a truly ethical company. They are just greedy yet some of their products are necessary for certain types of work. I wish Microsoft's user interface was more like macOS. If so, I would never look at Apple again. Apple's UI is hands down superior.
 
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