linux has achieved a 3% desktop market share
see also: Latency Budget · Platform Risk
Linux has achieved a 3% desktop market share lands as a clean signal for the current cycle (source). The point is not the news itself but the behavioral drift it exposes. I care about what becomes default after the dust settles.
context + claim
linux has achieved a 3% desktop market share shifts the center of gravity toward a new default. My claim is simple: this is a habit-forming change, not a one-off event. If teams internalize the behavior, the market follows.
causal chain
Trigger → workflow adjustment → new default, because habits are stickier than roadmaps. New default → platform leverage → narrowing options for smaller teams.
counter-model
The skeptical read is that this fades as soon as attention moves. That is plausible, but I keep watching whether teams encode it into their routines. Routines are the actual signal.
my take
I am leaning cautious: treat the change as real, but do not calcify it until the operational story holds.
linkage
- tags
- #market-news
- #finance
- #2023
- related
- [[inflation hits 9.1 percent]]
- [[svb collapse rewrites depositor trust]]
ending questions
What would make this feel durable instead of episodic?