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IE Market Share Drops to Lowest Level in Years

Cultural Mosaic writes "Browser market share figures for September were released yesterday, and the numbers showed a big dip for Internet Explorer, as it dropped to just 82.10%, its lowest market share figure in years. Ars Technica notes that 'it's no surprise that Internet Explorer has been losing ground steadily over the past couple of years. There have been no significant innovations in the browser since XP SP2 was released over two years ago, and most of those were security tweaks.' Firefox grew from 10.77% in June to 12.46% while Safari jumped to its highest figure ever, 3.53%. I wonder how the release of Firefox 2.0 and IE 7 later this month will change the game?"

5 of 386 comments (clear)

  1. I'm confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just the other day you said IE's market share was up, and now it's down? But... but... you both have statistics! I don't know what to believe.

  2. Re:Queue up the anecdotes by Tom · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Since you asked for it:

            Firefox Nein 2001451 58.5 %
            MS Internet Explorer Nein 1059985 31 %
            Opera Nein 179838 5.2 %
            Mozilla Nein 89402 2.6 %
            Safari Nein 31450 0.9 %

    This is October data. As you can see from the numbers (we're talking 3.5 mio hits here), this is not a tiny site. As you can see from the site itself, it's not a Linux, Free Software or Firefox site. I've got plenty of AOL users, hotmail users and other "dumb", average, random Internet users as players.

    History: Firefox was at 50% in January, 46% in October last year, 34% December 2004 (my oldest data).

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  3. Re:IE vs. FF by Ant+P. · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why does FF have its own gigantic memory cache in the first place, instead of letting the OS's disk cache do its job properly?

  4. Re:Site stats by walt-sjc · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A site I work with is not a slashdot / geek demographic. It's a combination of government use (primary), non-profits, education, and business (in that order of heaviest to least % of users.) This site gets on average a million page views / day. Looking at the month of September, 76% IE, 16.3% firefox, 1.9% safari, Opera 0.2%. Back in March, it was 81% IE, 6.3% FF, 2% safari, Opera 0.2%. From my viewpoint, FF has jumped HUGE in that time frame. (Yes, the numbers don't add up to 100% - unknown and other browsers are the remainder.)

  5. Still using IE and don't intend to change by archcommus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Please, do not take my post as flamebait. I introduce general points. Many of you are geeks. Admit that, it's okay. Many of you are developers, too. Many of you are enthusiasts and like to tweak and customize out the wazoo. For all of you folk, browsers like FF are great. They're secure, customizable, not Microsoft, everything you could want in a browser. Now consider everyone else in the world. And actually, this even includes myself, even though I AM an enthusiast and a slight geek. You have IE7, given to you automatically via Windows Updates. No hassles required. It is already on your system, offers tabs and good security, and works without a hitch. It is integrated into the OS so it opens faster and does not introduce any problems. I have used IE6 for years and never once got a virus or spyware because of it. So please, tell me, why should I switch to Firefox? Answer: I shouldn't. IE7 may not pass some Acid2 test or whatever, but I am a user, not a developer. IE7 is secure and does what I need and there is really no reason for me to use any other browser.