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Firefox Growth Slowing?

ninja_assault_kitten writes "Silicon.com has an interesting article on the apparently slowing growth of Firefox. To quote the article, 'The slackening of Firefox's growth could mean that the browser has converted a substantial proportion of its natural constituency, thought to be early adopters and the technically savvy. It could also show that the browser's widely publicised security flaws have begun to undermine the foundation's argument that people should switch from IE to be safer.' One thing's for sure, with the release of 1.0.3 and now 1.0.4 we can probably expect to breach the 80 million download mark shortly."

5 of 433 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Translation to layman's term- by Brandybuck · · Score: 4, Informative

    Except for those using Safari, Konqueror, Opera, OmniWeb, Netscape, Mozilla, several dozen gecko-based browsers that are indistinguishable from each other, emacs in web mode, xemacs in web mode, lynx, links, other text mode browser, etc, etc.

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  2. Re:How many unique downloads? by VortexMK · · Score: 5, Informative

    Some companies downloads just one copy of Firefox and then everyone in the company installs that one copy... at least my company (30+ people) does it to save bandwidth. I bet that that many other companies use the same practice.

  3. Re:Widely Publicized? by GarfBond · · Score: 5, Informative
    It was actually originally reported to the Mozilla Foundation as a critical security bug (bug 292691, still closed access since May 2), and was actively being worked on with the original bug reporter under wraps before someone managed to leak it without anyone's permission, at which point FrSirt (or whatever their name is) and Secunia repackaged it as their own security advisory.

    True credit belongs to Paul from Greyhats Security Group and Michael Krax (and in the spirit of this post, I'm going to give credit to mozillazine for originally posting the summary I'm writing this off of).

    I am still trying to gather all the details as to how my research was leaked, but recent conversations are leading me to believe that it was a misplacement of trust, not a server compromise. However, I do not want to jump to conclusions too quickly, as this will only lead to more problems. That's all I will say about that subject, as I don't want to offend anybody.
  4. Stats from my site by mjtg · · Score: 5, Informative
    Here are some stats from a site that I help maintain. It is an Australian state government website that receives about 3 million hits per month. The site is not technology-oriented, and about half of the hits come from overseas, so they're probably a reasonably good sample of browser use.

    Here are some running percentages for IE and Firefox over the past year:

    2004-05: IE 94.1%, Firefox 0.6%
    2004-06: IE 94.0%, Firefox 0.9%
    2004-07: IE 93.1%, Firefox 1.3%
    2004-08: IE 93.1%, Firefox 1.8%
    2004-09: IE 92.6%, Firefox 2.0%
    2004-10: IE 92.5%, Firefox 2.5%
    2004-11: IE 91.9%, Firefox 3.1%
    2004-12: IE 89.3%, Firefox 4.5%
    2005-01: IE 88.0%, Firefox 5.6%
    2005-02: IE 87.9%, Firefox 5.7%
    2005-03: IE 88.0%, Firefox 5.9%
    2005-04: IE 87.3%, Firefox 6.2%
    2005-05 (first 12 days): IE 88.8%, Firefox 5.9%

    The big jump towards Firefox occured late last year with the Mozilla Foundation's marketing blitz. Since then, there does indeed appear to be a slowing up in migration towards Firefox. This month's stats so far actually show a reversal.

  5. Re:How many unique downloads? by Trillan · · Score: 5, Informative

    Downloads initiated through update don't count.