End users and consumers are the most important from the perspective of end users and consumers but as I mentioned it's less than half of their business. As for the NetMarketShare stats, I wasn't going off of them because I opted for stats that were more conservative in support of my position but those stats indicate an even higher percentage of Windows OSes in the wild than what I quoted. But "no" I don't agree that the PC market is disappearing and that's based on having worked in the industry for coming up on a quarter century (24 years). Mobile is huge and it's taken a chunk of the laptop/desktop business but it's not going to replace it in spite of any predictions that some might make, just like 3D tvs and movies didn't replace 2D, and just like motion controls didn't replace controllers. But even if it did, again that's just a portion of MS's total business. Microsoft still pulls in 58 billion without the 19 billion that they get from Windows and Surface.
"If Azure is successful, it will be because it was made available on Android and iOS devices."
A statement like that tells me that you have no idea what Azure is (or probably cloud in general). Azure is a huge host of online services (over 80) that are targeted at business of all sizes with only a tiny portion of them being anything that an end user would ever purchase. You as an end user might pay a few bucks a month for an O365 account, a paid Onedrive account, a Dropbox account, etc and you might think from that perspective that this is how companies like MS and Amazon make their money, but that's not even remotely true. Where they make their money is through the cloud services that you -don't- know you use because are their customer's customer. NBC News uses Azure hosting. Netflix is hosted on Amazon's cloud services (AWS). This is where the cloud providers make their money, not a few paid Onedrive accounts.
-Byshop
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