

If Windows XP's rate of decline over the last 12 months continues, its share of the personal computer operating system market will have fallen to about 7% by September.

According to metrics company Net Applications, Windows XP powered 8.6% of the world's personal computers last month, and Vista - one of Microsoft's biggest OS failures - ran 1.1% of the globe's PCs. It's unclear what percentage of Firefox users run the browser on the two aged operating systems, but analytics vendors portray both as minor players. Microsoft retired Windows XP from support in April 2014, and will do the same to Vista on April 11, 2017. From that point until Mozilla officially retires Firefox later in the year, XP and Vista users will receive only security updates to the browser. Firefox ESR 52, slated to ship on March 7, will be what Mozilla moves XP and Vista users to. Mozilla created the ESR track in 2012 after some customers balked at its scheme to ship a new edition of the browser every six weeks. (Microsoft adopted a similar approach with its Windows 10 Long Term Servicing (LTS) Branch, a release track that eschews feature changes for months, or even years.) Instead, Firefox ESR remains feature-static for approximately a year, at which time a new ESR is issued. ESR builds are regularly updated with security fixes, but do not receive the new features and enhancements that the standard version does.
