In search of a better browser
Posted: Wed Aug 18, 2004 8:56 am
The popularity of Web browsers other than Internet Explorer could still be defined as cult. In the United States, the five most popular browsers after Internet Explorer — AOL's Netscape, the Mozilla Foundation's Mozilla and Firefox, Opera Software's Opera and Apple's Safari — together have about 5 per cent of the market. Internet Explorer has 94 per cent, according to WebSide-Story, a Web analysis firm.
But for the first time since Microsoft's browser beat out Netscape to gain dominance, its market share is eroding as users like Sandlin shift to other browsers.
No one is forecasting the demise of Internet Explorer, but the most recent data from WebSideStory show that of visits to websites the firm tracks, the number made using Explorer declined 1.3 per cent from early June to mid-July. At the same time, use of other browsers — Firefox and Opera in particular — rose.
Full Story:
http://www.globetechnology.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20040812.gtbrowseaug12/BNStory/Technology/
But for the first time since Microsoft's browser beat out Netscape to gain dominance, its market share is eroding as users like Sandlin shift to other browsers.
No one is forecasting the demise of Internet Explorer, but the most recent data from WebSideStory show that of visits to websites the firm tracks, the number made using Explorer declined 1.3 per cent from early June to mid-July. At the same time, use of other browsers — Firefox and Opera in particular — rose.
Full Story:
http://www.globetechnology.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20040812.gtbrowseaug12/BNStory/Technology/