While Chrome Dominates, Microsoft Edge Struggles To Attract New Users (neowin.net)
An anonymous reader quotes Neowin's report on the newest browser-usage figures from NetMarketShare:
Microsoft Edge only commands a market share of 5.65% -- which is an increase of only 0.02 percentage points compared to last month... it only grew by 0.56% year-over-year. On the other hand, Google Chrome has continued its dominance with a market share of 59.49%. As a point of reference, this is a sizeable growth of 10.84 percentage points year-over-year... Data from another firm, StatCounter, depicts an even more depressing situation for Microsoft. According to the report, Edge sits at 3.89%... Chrome is the king of all browsers according to these statistics as well, with a market share of 63.21% -- a decrease of 0.14 percentage points compared to last month. Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Safari command 14%, 9.28%, and 5.16% respectively.
The firm also calculates that when it comes to desktop operating systems, Windows has 91.51% of all users, followed by MacOS at 6.12 and Linux at 2.36%.
The firm also calculates that when it comes to desktop operating systems, Windows has 91.51% of all users, followed by MacOS at 6.12 and Linux at 2.36%.
It was a POS when it came out but it got better. Now, it's usable.
Interesting to think that forcing the Windows 10 upgrade while Edge was a total turd may have accidentally killed the web browser market for Microsoft.
It's neither compatible with IE, nor better.
Table-ized A.I.
Even with aggressive defaults or the missing eu browser ballot, most users appear to be deciding they do not want to use edge on Windows 10.
I can feel it. Next year is going to be the one. 2018 will finally be "The year of Linux on the Desktop" that we've been waiting for! X^D
Right guys? Guys????? Hello!?!?! Where did everybody go?
I use Chrome on my phone and tablet but don't even have it installed on my Window 10 desktop. There I use SeaMonkey, with Edge in the places where NoScript won't let through must see pages.
depicts an even more depressing situation for Microsoft. According to the report, Edge sits at 3.89%...
when it comes to desktop operating systems, Windows has 91.51% of all users...
Depicts an even more depressing situation for the world...
It all comes down to the user interface.
I'd still be with firefox if they didnt butcher the interface trying to copy windows ribbon with a shytty alternative.
This is actually still really bad news for consumers. Both browsers are designed to lock you into an ecosystem. In Chrome's case it is Google's advertising ecosystem; Edge is designed to keep you dependant on Microsoft tech. What is really needed is a move to Firefox and (yes) Opera. A diversification of browsers is good for compatibility and standards compliance and liberates users from monopolistic corporation whose motivations are unclear and convoluted.
Edge is the only browser that Netflix supports for 1080p (and even 4K streaming with certain processors). All other browsers are stuck at 720p or less for Netflix. It's an artificial limitation created by Netflix for piracy protection, but until I set up another device (perhaps an Amazon Fire TV) that can do as well or better for Netflix, I'll stick with Edge. Netflix's Windows 10 app will also allow 1080p, but the interface is a bit wonky, and for some reason, it doesn't work well on my laptop (though it works perfectly well for another laptop I have, and I have no idea why.) The app will just up and crash.... but, Edge works just fine.
Sure, I could use a different browser and watch Netflix in 720p, but why when Edge can do better?
My 1080p smart TV has its own Netflix app, but I believe it's also limited to 720p (it's pretty old for a 1080p TV)... maybe if/when I get a 4K TV I'll just use the app that comes with it instead.
I just found out that I am banned in Slashdot
I can't submit any story and I am prohibited from making any comment (non-anonymously)
Reason - my submis
Submissions have been marked as "SPAM"
If I have spammed the submission process and I get banned, then I have nothing to say. However, I submit real stories, and stories that I have submitted that have been adopted by the editors and appeared on the Slashdot frontpage, have also been marked 'SPAM'
Example, this submission - https://slashdot.org/submission/7143315/we-dont-want-your-bitcoins
As you can see, the submission has a red "SPAM" stamped on it
But the same submission has made it to the frontpage - https://news.slashdot.org/story/17/06/19/0455205/ia-coinbase-closing-accounts-for-paying-ransoms-with-bitcoins
Slashdot must be seriously fucked !
91.5% of users on Windows isn't that surprising, the real fun stat will be how many are on 10.
Windows worked really hard to shove that down peoples throats weather they wanted it or not. I bet adoption numbers are lower than MS wants by a lot.
Chrome may only be 59.49% of the market share, but it owns 99% of the memory out there. It's the browser one percenter!!
Chrome becoming the new IE is what I'm afraid of. Its market share is >60 and rising fast - at this rate in a few years Chrome is reaching 90% and everything else is marginalised. That opens up the opportunity for Google to start "extending" its browser and for web developers to develop sites that are Chrome-only as "it's what everyone uses", instead of coding to standards as they just about have to in the current situation.
The risk of Google stopping browser innovation and stalling the web for a decade is less likely than back in the IE vs Netscape days but it is a distinct possibility when we again have a single browser dominating the field.
Give the world the ability to write tools. Block ads, block scripts, save content.
Imagine been able to create something useful on a Microsoft OS thats not a computer game.
Edge does nothing thats useful.
Been a browser that can surf the web without crashing or not failing as much is not a really a selling point.
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
This phrase in the summary: "Windows has 91.52% of desktop operating systems" .... you really need to think what that means.
"desktop" is *NOT* the classifier there, I have 3 computers on my desk and two of those are Android tablets. "mouse" isn't the classifier when you're including Windows laptop and Windows '2 in 1s'.
For "business use" perhaps? but all my serious trading software runs on Android none of it on Windows.
"For development"?... Moved to Linux now.
So what is it? Basically the group of {MacOS, Linux varitants running Windowing software, and Windows} and ignore everything else even when used for the same use on similar hardware, or running software from the same vendors.
See, it isn't that Windows has lost market share, it's that the market has moved from under Windows.
85% of surfing is done on Android and iOS devices.
And the majority are run ontop of Linux. (>50% of web browsing is on Android which in turn sits on Linux).
So you've just fallen for the artificial numbers here. Edge is a web browser and it only runs on newer versions of Windows, which itself isn't the main websurfing OS, Android on Linux is.
Happy now?
Didn't you notice everyone using Android devices and iOS devices to surf with? It's not that Windows died, the world just moved on.
Having a FreeBSD desktop on Ryzen machine I can tell it's the best desktop I had for past 50 years. Mac is the second best one. Linux is just a toy.
A differential shows that more than a half of percentage points lost by IE (.71%) since the last month go to "other" (.38% increase) which is more than twice larger than the increase in Safari points (.16%) which is actually a largest winner (by a small margin) last month (Chrome has only .13% increase)
Month June, 2017
Chrome 0.0013
Internet Explorer -0.0071
Firefox 0.0004
Microsoft Edge 0.0002
Safari 0.0016
Other 0.0038
Sum 0.0002
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
Microsoft products can attract users only and only if they can create an "artificial" environment where that product is the only one to work.
For example, can you tell me where and when a Microsoft browser is preferable to any other one?
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
The phase out of W7 flattened in the last year. The year before it was slowly dropping, but now it is steady percentage. W10 continues to grow but at the expense of earlier W versions. I suspect that some of the incentives MS was offering to upgrade to W10 expired last year.
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
It could of had more market share and stop the chrome monoculture that is forming on the web. But no, they had to take the reliable XUL apis that worked for over a decade and replace it with millennial hipster "web extensions". There will be a lot of Firefox refugees coming to chrome when their extensions break in version 57.
Welcome to the Chrome web, even worse than the IE web as tracking and adverts are built in.
I definitely think Edge is usable now. But Chrome is far more compatible on many devices. Edge is locked to Win 10 a big disadvantage and even Win 10 users seem to have ignored it. Edge might have a advantage in battery life? Kind of debatable the significance of that. So it's possible some users have tried Edge and weren't compelled enough to switch.
What is Microsoft Edge?
Did they re-brand Explorer?
Microsoft crippled Edge simply by not allowing the user to return to previous Web pages by left-clicking on the back arror and selecting the page you wanted to return go. Result: you had to click click click click click click click click click click click click click to get back to the page you wanted. I gave up that tomfoolery and quickly moved to Chrome (even though I think Google is anti-America. I search using Bing.)
The morons at Microsoft eventually fixed that flaw, but too late. I've continued to use Chrome.
Took me a couple seconds to remember. That about says it all.
Desktop? But my tablet is on the desktop.
To me a "desktop operating system" is one whose GUI shows more than one window at a time, as opposed to the "all maximized all the time" window management policy of stock Android versions 6 ("Marshmallow") and earlier, where a four-function calculator fills the screen.
Surfing on a "desktop" copy of Windows or a "non-desktop" Android device is still surfing the web. Writing documents in Windows or Android is still writing documents.
Can you surf the web in half the screen and write a document about the site you're surfing in the other half? Or do you have to switch back and forth and suffer doorway amnesia?
Too many negative connotations with MS. Nice guys until they're on the winning hand. And then they turn into big, cocky scoundrels.
I hadn't the slightest objection to his spending his time planning massacres for the bourgeoisie... (P.G. Wodehouse)
The dominance of MS in the desktop is an excellent situation for those of us who like Linux in such an environment: all the security issues will be blamed on Microsoft, and the bad guys will continue focusing on Windows, leaving us mostly alone. We might not get access to the latest and greatest hardware immediately, and we might not have some key applications (none, in my case - YMMV) albeit a Windows VM (or even Wine) fixes that. But we enjoy a fully functional desktop, that does everything that we want, that is secure and (when avoiding the Windows wannabees hogs that are KDE and (especially) Gnome) efficient. Thank you, Microsoft. May things continue this way indefinitely.
Gosh, I wonder why people don't really choose to use a browser that's a replacement for a previously atrocious browser from the same company, that was foisted upon people resulting in monopoly lawsuits, that choose just about every non-standard and insecure method of rendering a page that it possibly could, that only ever runs on a single operating system, is again bundled so you can't avoid it and pesters the shit out of you on upgrades to make it the default AGAIN, and really doesn't do anything that other browsers don't do, while also NOT doing quite a lot of things that other browsers do.
I can't possibly work it out.
From Microsoft's POV, the computer biz should be child's play. An OS that just works well on current hardware. Driver models that are sane and efficient. An Office program people enjoy using. A best-of-class browser. All of these things are wholly evolutionary for a company that has been around since the microprocessor beginning, and has infinite financial resources for development (effectively).
Yet the best of Microsoft today (its coding tools) are barely adequate, and everything else a very bad joke. Edge comes from a company form whom being 'edgy' (and no that isn't a joke or coincidence) is the ONLY important metric. History be damned- evolution be damned- standing on the shoulders of your own prior products be damned. No, be edgy and hip, like the infamous Poochy the dog from the Simpsons. That episode of the Simposns is literally the only MS buisness philosophy in play today.
So current MS products are shit, with hundreds of millions spent on forum shills and good reports at the usual pay-for-play internet outlets. MS buys good press rather than bothering to make good products.
In industry terms using Microsoft has never been more common, but Microsoft's industry rep has never been lower. Nothing just works. Everything is unreliable. There's no proper backward support OR forward support. It's all of 'the now' as MS tries to clone Apple. But just as being Apple makes no sense for MS, MS doesn't even get Apple. Jobs turned Apple aroound by telling the engineers that he's never listen to their excuses- the consumer is king, and what the consumer feels about a product is all that matters. So Jobs gave the punters a 'flawless' experience even if 'flawless' was a tiny subset of what a real computer user would want. Apple punters were trained to want less, and then that less was perfected.
Meanwhile MS had a massive successful biz doing the exact opposite- being the functional everyman computer system. The sane workhorse base. But no longer.
Today using MS (no choice, Apple is a laughable dimwit's toy, and Linux is made by scary dysfunctional egotistic no-talents who don't care what anybody thinks) is a constant war of tracking the wrong built-in and trying to deactivate or circumvent the wrong. Every MS update adds a whole new wodge of 'wrong'. MS's top managers are now actually insane. Paint their faces and any one of them could play The Joker in a new Batman movie.
Edge browser falls to the same insane philosophy. What is good in it is matched by what is insane. And any sensible user of edge has to constantly wrangle the insane.
I honestly thought Microsoft could never keep this up. Now I don't expect 'sane' Microsoft to ever reemerge. There is no commercial pressure on MS, when their competition (Apple and Linux) is really no competition at all and getting worse year on year. This is why we should hate and fear monopolies- the peeps running them become convinced of their own godhead and eventually go mad. Intel has gone mad and is currently crashing and burning (literally, their new chips crash and burn), andf Microsoft has gone mad. And like that scene in BBC's I Claudius, all we can do is attempt to 'humour' the 'mad king', and get something useful from it regardless.
I visit the same sites and see the same content with all browsers....
Are you just talking about default search engines when you say "Both browsers are designed to lock you into an ecosystem."?
... the javascript engine that it is bundled with is sure nice. I've been working on a project that will require an embedded javascript engine, and I've been looking very seriously at using ChakraCore.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
Why are you using a browser for Netflix and not some TV box?
This should be the headline.
The last thing the world needs is more people using crappy Microsoft software!
Chrome is just an advertising platform for Google. It exists to make sure Microsoft didn't cut them out of ad revenue. They don't care what browser you use as long as you can see their ads.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
Edge is the only browser that Netflix supports for 1080p (and even 4K streaming with certain processors). All other browsers are stuck at 720p or less for Netflix. It's an artificial limitation created by Netflix for piracy protection, but until I set up another device (perhaps an Amazon Fire TV) that can do as well or better for Netflix, I'll stick with Edge.
I find 720p is fine and Chrome has the major advantage of plugins that control video speed, which I haven't run into for edge yet. Watching videos at 1.1x or 1.2x speed you never notice the difference and save substantial time, for example.
Real lawyers write in C++
I stick with Firefox because of the addons. No Flash nonsense with slide shows, popups, flashing adverts, etc. No unwanted trackers or spyware. No suspicious remote scripts. And the ability to change the format of a page: for instance, seeing Slashdot the full width of the window instead of wasting half my expensive screen space.
It seems that some of these addons are available for other browsers, but perhaps less effective. I'd experiment with other browsers but I really don't care as long as Firefox gives me a clean browsing experience. Yes, your browser may be 1.6% faster, but if it can't cut the crap from the screen I don't care. The choice of browser for me is not a religious obsession, it is simply a plea for peace of mind as I try to navigate aggressive web pages and preserve some privacy.
...omphaloskepsis often...
As long as Firefox has FireFTP extension working, I will be staying with Firefox. If any of Firefox's upgrades permanently breaks FireFTP, then I will be shopping for a new browser. Edge does not support in-browser FTP nor does Chrome. If none ever do, then it may be Chrome or a Chromium offshoot in the long run. Edge seems born to make MS money from me, so I doubt I will use it. I realize Chrome is the same way :). I support a lot of beginners, and I usually configure their Windows 10 systems to use Chrome, with the bookmarks bar and home page turned on. As someone pointed out, releasing/pushing Windows 10 when Edge was "such a turd" pretty much killed Edge.
From the Windows 10 S FAQ: "When in Windows 10 S configuration, you are able to download any browser available in the Windows Store"
From "Windows Store Policies", as reported in "Microsoft Has Effectively Banned Third-Party Browsers From the Windows Store" by Catalin Cimpanu:
Thus all web browsers for Windows 10 S are wrappers for the same EdgeHTML engine that Microsoft Edge uses, in the same way that all* web browsers for iOS are wrappers for the same Apple WebKit engine that Safari uses. If a user encounters a site that relies on a new web platform feature that Edge does not implement, the option to switch to a Blink or Gecko browser in order to work around lack of support in Edge is paywalled to users of Windows 10 S, as the user would first have to purchase the upgrade to Windows 10 Pro.
I know Google has made Chrome In Name Only for iOS, and Mozilla has made Firefox In Name Only for iOS, both of which wrap Apple WebKit. But to what extent would it be a worthwhile effort and positive brand move for Google and Mozilla to produce browsers that wrap EdgeHTML for Windows Store?
* Except Opera Mini, which is more like running Remote Desktop to a web browser running on a VPS somewhere.
Can you surf the web in half the screen and write a document about the site you're surfing in the other half? Or do you have to switch back and forth and suffer doorway amnesia?
There is another solution, get 6 or more screens. :D
One app per screen should be enough then
... then I could not post any replies. It took me a couple of months to figure out what had happened. I had just figured Slashdot was failing with some weird error message, guessing incorrectly perhaps related to the IP range of my ISP. I was also going through mixed feelings about Slashdot, so fixing it was not high on my priority list.
I eventually had to contact someone at Slashdot via email to fix my account. Then I could post again.
But they never unmarked the submissions as SPAM.
Here are the three submissions I posted that got marked SPAM:
"SPAM: Investigation of Nano-Nuclear Reactions in Condensed Matter"
https://slashdot.org/submissio...
"SPAM: Employment Law and Robotics, AI, and Automation"
https://slashdot.org/submissio...
"SPAM: Trump GOP convention infringed copyright for at least seven songs "
https://slashdot.org/submissio...
My stats on submissions over the past fifteen years or so:
https://slashdot.org/~Paul+Fer...
"47 declined, 12 accepted (59 total, 20.34% accepted)"
I did get one front page submission again today (on Moore's Law ending). The problem is that many interesting tech stories are about specific companies that might sell something -- like that one by HP Labs. I could maybe understand the reasoning that an article about a law firm's report about employment law (and technology) might seem spammish. But a fact-based article about the GOP convention (and tech hypocrisy)? Or an article from a US government agency about cold fusion replication (vindicating the original researchers)?
The person who responded to my email (maybe six to nine months ago?) said Slashdot had been working on its spam filters.
Still kind of annoyed those all three still have bright red SPAM tags since they were not intended as such and I have no financial interest whatsoever in those groups mentioned. But I was glad to get posting privileges back.
Much more frightening was the time my GitHub account went away after posting an issue on Calypso (for WordPress). That felt like having my whole career deleted. I had spend hours writing up the comment previously intending to post it on Matt Mullenweg's blog, but it did not go through (guessing for length and links), and then decided to make a GitHub issue instead. Their spam filters must have detected that a lot of text with links was pasted right after opening an issue. Fortunately GitHub put my account back right away after I contacted them. That issue:
https://github.com/Automattic/...
And a post about that to Mullenweg's blog:
https://ma.tt/2015/11/dance-to...
Both cases serve as reminders to me of the problems of investing time into specific commercial online services with creating a body of published works and an associated online reputation. Fortunately, both companies fixed things up -- since they have reputations to maintain too.
Anyway, hope Slashdot resolves the account issue for you too, Mosquito Bites! I see Slashdot marked twelve of your submissions as spam -- which all look like good articles to me:
https://slashdot.org/~Mosquito...
Seeing this happen both to me and someone else makes me really wonder about the risk of submitting any more articles to Slashdot? I'd rather be able to discuss stuff than get front page articles posted.
Anyway, could be worse -- see the movie Brazil (hopefully not the darker Director's cut version though).
A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
I used it occasionally, but at some point something in Edge went wonky and now it'll launch and hang. Since it's effectively not removable (or not without more effort than I'm willing to spend), and there's no reset, no control panel to get to its settings, nothing that's not accessible only from that one non-responding window.
Sure I could create a new Windows profile, move all my data over, etc. Of course, it's a profile tied to a Microsoft account, so I think I'd have to back it up, nuke the profile, re-create it by logging in and restoring my data to it. Or I could reset Windows, with or without keeping all my data, then I'd only need to reinstall all my software and hope I don't have any product activation issues.
Or I could continue using Firefox as my daily driver with uMatrix, with Chrome and uBlock as a secondary for sites with so many outside connections that I'm not willing to fuss with them.
Chrome on Android (at least)
has a nasty bug (horribly designed feature?)
where the address bar doesn't appear, and it shows the bar of the web site... which completely violates the trust of the browser.
Edge makes it very difficult to change the search engine. Being the users can't switch from Bing to Google, the users switch to Chrome. By trying to force user to use Bing, I think that Microsoft destroyed the market share for Edge.
I'd like to think that Edge hobbled itself because of the removal of privacy features.
Then again, Chrome.