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Chrome Is the Third Double-Digit Browser

An anonymous reader writes "Google's Chrome has taken the 10% market share hurdle, according to Net Applications and is past 15%, according to StatCounter. It is interesting to see that IE is declining at an accelerating pace and IE9 Beta cannot, despite the massive marketing campaign, dent Chrome's growth, while Firefox is holding on to what it has. It almost seems as if IE9 will not be able to turn around the decline of IE."

16 of 299 comments (clear)

  1. Wasn't on purpose by MrEricSir · · Score: 5, Funny

    Studies also show that due to the icon, most Chrome users thought they were downloading a Pokemon application.

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    There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
  2. Re:IE9 by icannotthinkofaname · · Score: 5, Funny

    Sometimes integration is a bitch.

    Integration is always a bitch. I find derivatives far easier to calculate.

    --
    Let q be a radix > 1. I am in ur base-q, killing 10 d00ds.
  3. IE9 beta? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why would a beta of the browser stop the transition? It's clearly aimed at web developers and designers for testing, not at general populace. That's also where all the marketing is at. Actual users only see IE8 (if that!), and Chrome, of course, soundly beats it.

    The only way to see if IE9 can turn the tide is to wait until it gets released (and rolled out to Windows Update, at least as optional update).

    If you really want to compare the numbers, how about Chrome beta/dev installs vs IE9 installs?

  4. As a web developer, by unity100 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    im thanking my lucky stars, heavens, whatever god/deities that are present out there, for this day.

    even as of this VERY moment, i am having to battle with standard incompliance of various ie versions (including next ones) and the different 'interpretations' they have of the same fucking pages than other browsers.

    really ... gimme a break ...

  5. I switched back to Firefox from Chrome. by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I switched back to Firefox from Chrome.

    Chrome is nice, a bit under featured, poor ad blocking (although it has gotten better its still slower and not as good as firefox.

    In general, Firefox is faster than chrome all around. Even on older hardware, Firefox scrolls better than Chrome.

    Firefox's bookmark manager is much nicer. I loved how chrome syncs your bookmarks but now that FireFox has it built in as well, I'm plenty happy.

    Firefox has better color management. Chrome nice but... It still has that slight sluggish feeling about how it renders pages.

    The new Firefox betas are looking and performing very well, so well that I switched back from chrome.

    1. Re:I switched back to Firefox from Chrome. by mTor · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I too prefer Firefox because I don't trust Google. Chrome sends so much data to Google (every keystroke that you type into OmniBar) and I prefer not to give Google any of my data. Firefox has no such issues.

      Issue with Chrome's ad blocking is that ad blocking in Chrome works by DOM modification and all the ads are downloaded before they're hidden. That also means that all the ad companies have your IP and browser fingerprint as well and that also means that you waste bandwidth downloading ads. Firefox, again, has no such issues because it filters actual requests.

  6. Re:Here's a constructive comment by Atriqus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This isn't about X being less evil than Y. The more web browser options that are out there and the more evenly distributed their populations become on the internet, the safer we are from closed, non-free, or just browser-exclusive extensions rotting the platform.

    I think it's great that Chrome has surpassed the psychological (but purely arbitrary) milestone of rendering web pages for a double-digit percentage of the internet's population. But the moment they have too much of the percentage is when my approval becomes concern.

    --
    Hey, look! It's Bono's brother.
  7. Re:Browser support by sites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Generally speaking, any site that uses browser detection and refuses to support an unknown browser (or specifically refuses Chrome) will not be visited by me. I can understand using browser detection to refuse to support IE6, or perhaps even IE7. Afterall, those two browsers often require work-arounds to display standards-compliant content. But the default assumption should be the a browser is compliant unless it is otherwise known not to be. If you've coded your site in such a way that it can only work on IE6/IE7, then shame on you. If you've coded your site to presume unknown browsers are non-compliant, double shame on you.

  8. Re:Webkit browsers by amentajo · · Score: 4, Funny

    If I follow your math correctly, then in just one year, 101% of internet users (17% + (7% * 12)) will be using WebKit browsers, leaving just -1% left to split between Mozilla-derived, Opera, and Internet Explorer!

  9. Re:Here's a constructive comment by characterZer0 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Balanced people certainly don't think MS is any more evil than Google or Facebook.

    Have Google or Facebook corrupted standards organizations? Threatened OEMs? Illegally abused monopolies to gain market share in other markets and lock out competitors? Massacred standards to create lock-in?

    --
    Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
  10. Re:IE9 by Mitchell314 · · Score: 3, Funny

    wget mothafuckas

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    I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
  11. Re:Realistic analysis of he daa by tecker · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This correlates to IE market loss, so it is reasonable to suggest that chrome users are abandoning IE.

    The simple fact could be that Chrome does not require administrator privileges to install. Users at offices where we are not given admin rights can install Chrome over IE and use it without slogging through a helpdesk ticket for something IT deems unnecessary. This may account for the growth we see as users are looking for more freedom and the bells and whistles a more modern browser with the ability to install extensions without needing better permissions.

    Perhaps we are seeing a leveling out as those who want a different browser are finally being exhausted and entering a "long tail phase".

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    Procrastinating life a way at a rapid rate of speed.
  12. Re:IE9 by zach_the_lizard · · Score: 3, Funny

    Pfft, I lick my Ethernet cable to get raw frames, bitches!

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    SSC
  13. Re:Webkit browsers by gstrickler · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, I'm not doing it incorrectly. Short term growth trends which are well below some limit are completely sustainable, and in practice are usually sustained until they start to approach their peak saturation. Also, it's not necessary for them to sustain a 7% monthly growth to achieve the result I stated. They're currently gaining approximately 1% of the traffic per month. While that's currently 7%, the percentage growth needed to gain an additional 1% traffic volume will decrease from 7% to about 4% over the next 6--9 months. Nor do they need to gain the same 1% of traffic volume every month to actually reach a total approaching 25%.

    Therefore, my 6-9 month trend extrapolation is completely valid and likely, but by no means certain. The other responder's comments and extrapolations are not what I stated, and they are not valid. His calculations are covered by the referenced XKCD, however, mine are not because mine are actually based upon proper trend prediction statistics, not some arbitrary constant growth.

    Now, go learn something about statistics and get back to me when you have a valid criticism of my extrapolation.

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    make imaginary.friends COUNT=100 VISIBLE=false
  14. Re:Browser support by sites by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It happens. An airline company had to access my banking account and it only worked in IE. I struggled a little to understand what was going on, since all that I got was a "problem connecting to the banking services - please retry", then called support and the bastards politely told me to fuck off like this:

    -Hi, I'm trying to pay for my ticket and can't. I've tried using Firefox and Chrome.
    -You must use IE.
    -Yeah... I actually don't use Windows. Is there some other way?
    -Click Start, then IE.
    -I'm telling you I can't. Are you telling me there isn't any way that I can buy from you guys if I don't also buy a Windows license that costs more than the plane ticket I'm trying to purchase?
    -Is there anything else I can help you with?

    Then people ask how a reasonable, sane person turns into RMS. Dealing with this sort of crap on a daily basis.

  15. Re:Here's a constructive comment by Omestes · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Balanced people: "So....why should I care? Oh yeah, Microsoft's evil."

    As a balanced person (I'm running OS X, Win7, Vista, OpenSuse, and Ubuntu currently); I'd be happy if Chrome/ium, IE, and Firefox were split down the middle. I would be happier if their were ten mainstream browsers with 10% usage. Competition is good.

    IE benefited greatly from Firefox. Firefox might benefit from Chrome being around (it needs to, it has turned into a fat, sloppy, unfocused mess). Chrome might benefit from poor old Opera. And Opera will sit in a corner and feel depressed that no one loves it.

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    A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey