Firefox and Chrome snatch share from IE

Just browsing, thanks

By Tom Espiner, 3 February 2009 08:32

NEWS

The amount of market share commanded by Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser has dropped for the seventh consecutive month.

Internet Explorer now has 67.55 per cent of global browser market share, a drop of more than seven percentage points in a year, according to figures from web-metrics company Net Applications released on Monday. Mozilla's Firefox browser, meanwhile, has gained market share in the same timeframe, climbing more than three percentage points to 21.53 per cent.

Microsoft's browser has steadily lost ground to its competitors in the past year. Its share dropped sharply in both October and November 2008, when it lost more than one percentage point in each month.

Browser wars

Top 10 alternatives to Internet Explorer from Firefox to Chrome.

Apple's Safari browser now stands at 8.29 per cent, up from 7.13 per cent in November, when IE dipped. Safari has gained share more quickly than Firefox in that period: Mozilla's browser accounted for 20.78 per cent of browser use three months ago, and now has 21.53 per cent.

Google's Chrome browser, launched in September 2008, now has 1.12 per cent of the market, having overtaken Opera in November. Opera's share of the market now stands at 0.7 per cent.

Internet Explorer's seven percentage-point drop since February last year is a continuing trend. Microsoft lost more than nine per cent of browser market share in the preceding two years.

Most of IE's drop in the past year has been in Internet Explorer 6, which fell from 30.63 per cent last February to 19.21 per cent this January. Internet Explorer 7 has gained market share overall over the same time period, rising from 44.03 per cent to 47.32 percent.

Microsoft launched the first release candidate for Internet Explorer 8 last week. It hopes to regain lost ground by adding features such as private browsing and a cross-site scripting filter.

Which browser do you use? Post a reader comment below…

Comments

There are 4 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Standards Compliant

    ...private browsing and a cross-site scripting filter...

    ...and some standards compliance perhaps?

  2. 2. Malcolm

    As a Mac user it would be natural to say that I use Safari, but not so. I'm very disappointed with Safari 3.2.1, which keeps hanging on my machine, so I've now designated Firefox, which I've used in parallel for over 18 months, as my primary browser and I'm unlikely to switch back. Unlike IE, FF has a standards-compliant, stable core product which can be customised (add-ons) in ways that are useful to me and still remain usable. I design for the web and my business partners also use Firefox, running on Linux. We HAVE to have access to Windows and all the flavours of IE in order to develop for the majority but it's nice to see that alternative browsers are gaining ground. Pity about Opera. It's a good browser but until its code goes 'public' it will remain a Cinderella.

  3. 3. Andie Coppini

    Until a few months ago I wouldn't have looked at anything but IE mainly due to its ubiquity, but nowadays I have Chrome set as the default browser on all my PCs. I don't care about bells and whistles, I just want it fast.

  4. 4. Rory Choudhuri

    I use different browsers for different tasks. On my Macs, I use Safari, with Firefox and Camino as backups for sites that don't work well.

    On my Windows laptop, Firefox is my primary browser, but I'm increasingly using Chrome. I use Safari on Windows to check my personal webmail and, very occasionally, use IE for sites on our intranet that won't work in anything else.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ