Quote from: mikeal on April 04, 2020, 11:26:34
It's most probably due to pandemic and home-office/layoffs - and ever expanding boredom.
From detailed data we can see that it's not the high-performance CPUs that reversed the Intel trend in March, but mostly sub-3Ghz units.
As a way to confirm this, check GPU share and scroll down to DirectX 11 and 10 - Intel HD 4000 alone gained almost 3%, Intel 3000 the same.
People clearly dusted up their Steam accounts(or made new ones) to weather through mandatory stay-at-home boredom.
My thoughts exactly. In times like these when a massive amount of people are suddenly forced to stay home, they're likely to seek out new forms of entertainment. Gaming is one possibility then, and as these people are highly unlikely to already own a game console or to buy/build a new PC just to play some games to pass the time, they'll use what they have. Which is likely an Intel laptop from a few years back. An entirely predictable development that doesn't tell us anything new about market share or sales numbers - the Steam Hardware Survey never really does, as there are too many intermediate steps between it and those types of data for them to be properly read out from survey data.