New data from StatCounter
suggests that Internet Explorer's market share has continued to fall
over the last three months, while Chrome has shown steady growth, and
Firefox has remained largely static. The trends suggest that IE has lost
by around the same amount as Chrome has gained, and other browsers
remained steady through the same period. However, analyst Net Applications
tells a different story — Chrome's growth has stalled, Internet
Explorer has seen a slight resurgence, and Firefox has lost around 0.9
percent. Opera, Safari, and other browsers account for 7-10 percent.
The disparity between these numbers reflects the different sampling methods used by each statistics firm, and StatCounter showed far more dramatic changes while Net Applications remained comparatively flat. Both agree that Internet Explorer remains the most used browser (though the ranking of the other browsers is contentious). One question remains — will Internet Explorer 10 reverse IE's downward trend?
By Jamie Keene
www.theverge.com
The disparity between these numbers reflects the different sampling methods used by each statistics firm, and StatCounter showed far more dramatic changes while Net Applications remained comparatively flat. Both agree that Internet Explorer remains the most used browser (though the ranking of the other browsers is contentious). One question remains — will Internet Explorer 10 reverse IE's downward trend?
By Jamie Keene
www.theverge.com
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