• progress_activity cloud_sync

    Reconnection to the server…

    Movim cannot talk with the server, please try again later


    • Public subscriptions

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

  • Register Login

    Movim

    movim.chatterboxtown.us


  • group_work rss_feed
    add Follow

    ArsTechnica

    • Ar chevron_right

      Windows, hardware, Xbox sales are dim spots in a solid Microsoft earnings report

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 26 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Windows, hardware, Xbox sales are dim spots in a solid Microsoft earnings report

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

    It has been a tough year for PC companies and companies that make PC components. Companies like Intel, AMD, and Nvidia have all reported big drops in revenue from the hardware that they sell to consumers (though the hardware they sell to other businesses is often doing better).

    Microsoft contributed another data point to that trend today , with fourth-quarter 2023 financial results that showed modest growth (revenue up 8 percent year over year, from $51.9 billion to $56.2 billion), but no thanks to its consumer software and hardware businesses.

    Revenue from the company's More Personal Computing division, which encompasses Windows licenses, Surface PCs and other accessories, Xbox hardware and software and services, and ad revenue, was down 4 percent year over year. This decrease was driven mostly by a drop in sales of Windows licenses to PC makers (down 12 percent because of "PC market weakness") and by reduced hardware sales (down 20 percent, though the company didn't say how much of this drop came from its accessory business and how much came from Surface PCs). Microsoft makes its own PCs and PC accessories and sells the software that most other PC makers use on their hardware, so when the entire PC ecosystem is doing poorly, Microsoft gets hit twice.

    Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagtech tagtech tagtech tagearnings tagearnings tagearnings tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagtech tagtech tagtech tagearnings tagearnings tagearnings tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagtech tagtech tagtech tagearnings tagearnings tagearnings tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11

    • Ar chevron_right

      Windows, hardware, Xbox sales are dim spots in a solid Microsoft earnings report

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 26 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Windows, hardware, Xbox sales are dim spots in a solid Microsoft earnings report

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

    It has been a tough year for PC companies and companies that make PC components. Companies like Intel, AMD, and Nvidia have all reported big drops in revenue from the hardware that they sell to consumers (though the hardware they sell to other businesses is often doing better).

    Microsoft contributed another data point to that trend today , with fourth-quarter 2023 financial results that showed modest growth (revenue up 8 percent year over year, from $51.9 billion to $56.2 billion), but no thanks to its consumer software and hardware businesses.

    Revenue from the company's More Personal Computing division, which encompasses Windows licenses, Surface PCs and other accessories, Xbox hardware and software and services, and ad revenue, was down 4 percent year over year. This decrease was driven mostly by a drop in sales of Windows licenses to PC makers (down 12 percent because of "PC market weakness") and by reduced hardware sales (down 20 percent, though the company didn't say how much of this drop came from its accessory business and how much came from Surface PCs). Microsoft makes its own PCs and PC accessories and sells the software that most other PC makers use on their hardware, so when the entire PC ecosystem is doing poorly, Microsoft gets hit twice.

    Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagtech tagtech tagtech tagearnings tagearnings tagearnings tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagtech tagtech tagtech tagearnings tagearnings tagearnings tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagtech tagtech tagtech tagearnings tagearnings tagearnings tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11

    • Ar chevron_right

      Windows, hardware, Xbox sales are dim spots in a solid Microsoft earnings report

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 26 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Windows, hardware, Xbox sales are dim spots in a solid Microsoft earnings report

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

    It has been a tough year for PC companies and companies that make PC components. Companies like Intel, AMD, and Nvidia have all reported big drops in revenue from the hardware that they sell to consumers (though the hardware they sell to other businesses is often doing better).

    Microsoft contributed another data point to that trend today , with fourth-quarter 2023 financial results that showed modest growth (revenue up 8 percent year over year, from $51.9 billion to $56.2 billion), but no thanks to its consumer software and hardware businesses.

    Revenue from the company's More Personal Computing division, which encompasses Windows licenses, Surface PCs and other accessories, Xbox hardware and software and services, and ad revenue, was down 4 percent year over year. This decrease was driven mostly by a drop in sales of Windows licenses to PC makers (down 12 percent because of "PC market weakness") and by reduced hardware sales (down 20 percent, though the company didn't say how much of this drop came from its accessory business and how much came from Surface PCs). Microsoft makes its own PCs and PC accessories and sells the software that most other PC makers use on their hardware, so when the entire PC ecosystem is doing poorly, Microsoft gets hit twice.

    Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagtech tagtech tagtech tagearnings tagearnings tagearnings tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagtech tagtech tagtech tagearnings tagearnings tagearnings tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagtech tagtech tagtech tagearnings tagearnings tagearnings tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft earnings tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft revenue tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagmicrosoft teams tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice 365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagoffice365 tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 10 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11 tagwindows 11

  • cloud_queue

    Powered by Movim