Server revenue worldwide fell 14 percent year over year to US$13.5 billion in the fourth quarter, market researcher IDC said Wednesday.
IBM held onto the top share position with 36.3 percent of the market.
According to IDC's tally, worldwide server unit shipments in the quarter fell 12 percent from a year ago. The fourth quarter also represented the second consecutive quarterly decline.
For full-year 2008, global server revenue fell 3.3 percent to US$53.3 billion, even as units grew 2 percent to 8.1 million. IDC said it's the first time the server market has topped 8 million units in one year. The rub: average selling prices were under pressure so revenue fell.
Here is the fourth quarter, by the numbers:
• Volume systems revenue fell 16.8 percent compared with a year ago.
• Midrange enterprise server demand fell 14.5 percent year over year, with high-end enterprise server sales falling 7.5 percent.
• Unix server revenue fell 6.2 percent from a year ago to US$4.9 billion. That accounts for 36.2 percent of market spending.
• Windows server revenue fell 17.8 percent to US$4.8 billion. Windows server revenue was 35.3 percent of the market.
• Linux server revenue fell 7 percent to US$1.8 billion. Linux server revenue was 13.6 percent of the market.
• Blade servers represent the only category that had positive growth with gains of 16.1 percent to US$1.4 billion.
This article was first published as a blog post on CNET News.












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