Internet Explorer has been facing growing competition from rival browsers, but it's still the leader with more than 50 percent of the market, according to Net Applications.
IE grabbed a 54 percent market share last month, down from 56.7 percent a year ago. Traveling further back in time reveals an ongoing decline from November 2007 when Microsoft held almost 80 percent of the desktop browser market.
Nothing really new here, TBH. IE is still being used by fanboys (such as myself) and, of course, those who still (somehow) have no idea that there is competition. The latter, however, is growing smaller in numbers day by day. I used to troubleshoot people's PC problems only to get a herpy derp response when asking which browser do they used or do they have alternatives to IE.
Nowadays people have approximately 1-2 additional browsers they either have no idea how it got installed (like Chrome being offered through Avast installation) or tried to use it and just kept it on the PC while still preferring IE.
Yup it comes to no surprise. Windows is the majority platform and most common users tend to use the apps which come with their machines. IE comes with everything by default so many people use it. On Mac platforms the same could be said about why so many of them use Safari.
I use IE for sites which doesn't support the browser I use (Chrome). For example OWA (outlook web access) are sometimes configured so that when you login using IE, it gives you the full-version OWA experience but when you login using Chrome, the server provides only the lite-version experience.
System Manufacturer/Model Number: Sony / IBM / Apple MB Pro 2011 OS: Windows 7 Ultimate x64 / OS X Snow Leopard 10.6.8 CPU: i7 QM720 - AMD MV40 - i5 2.3Ghz SB Memory: 8GB - 4GB - 8GB Graphics Card: Nvidia 310M - ATI 3200M - Intel HD3000 Sound Card: Various Monitor(s) Displays: Sony 17 inch LCD - 12 inch - 13 inch Hard Drives: OCZ Vertex 2 240Gb
Crucial RealSSD C330 256GB
OWC Mercury Extreme Pro 6G 240GB
Internet Explorer has been facing growing competition from rival browsers, but it's still the leader with more than 50 percent of the market, according to Net Applications.
IE grabbed a 54 percent market share last month, down from 56.7 percent a year ago. Traveling further back in time reveals an ongoing decline from November 2007 when Microsoft held almost 80 percent of the desktop browser market.
I think Microsoft's marketing dept is paying for stories like this, from my real world stats and several other reports I've seen Chrome is in a clear lead with IE & FF pretty much neck and neck in 2nd and 3rd spot.
Google has an aggressive approach to marketing Chrome. Most obvious is the one on their own homepage, where certain browsers in certain scenarios (like IE9 at times, Midori, Sleipnir... the smaller browsers) have trouble keeping the add away once you X the add. Any "smaller" browser, once you end your session and then open a new one, will display the add again when you reach Google.
It used to be marketed on YouTube, and is included as a default checked option when installing software like Avast and (quite) a few more. Those who don't pay attention to what they're installing suddenly have Chrome as their default browser; some of them don't even notice, believe it or not - I've had many cases like that xD
It's no wonder why Chrome's usage soars so "quickly"...
Internet Explorer has been facing growing competition from rival browsers, but it's still the leader with more than 50 percent of the market, according to Net Applications.
IE grabbed a 54 percent market share last month, down from 56.7 percent a year ago. Traveling further back in time reveals an ongoing decline from November 2007 when Microsoft held almost 80 percent of the desktop browser market.
I think Microsoft's marketing dept is paying for stories like this, from my real world stats and several other reports I've seen Chrome is in a clear lead with IE & FF pretty much neck and neck in 2nd and 3rd spot.
Referencing to the last of these articles I read a few weeks back, IE has clawed back about 12% market share after reading this one!
Hi all. I recently re-installed Windows 7 about a week ago because of a serious system error that System Restore couldn't fix, but now I've encountered
another problem. After about half an hour of use, my computer starts to lock up and freeze - I can move around my mouse cursor, but nothing else....