Browser Wars: Chrome grabs market share from IE

browser wars

The latest update in the browser wars is out, and it appears someone is shaking things up a bit. The order of the top five browsers on the market now looks a little different:

1. Internet Explorer (62.7%), 2. Firefox (24.6%), 3. Chrome (4.6%), 4. Safari (4.5%), 5. Opera (2.4%)

In just one year, Google's Chrome web browser has tripled its market share and jumped into third place in the browser wars.

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Browser Wars: Chrome grabs market share from IE
posted by Bret on 01/09/2010 at 10:34 PM
categories: internet explorer - Firefox

IE6 finally hears the Death Rattle

Internet Explorer 6 is like a bad date that just won't take the hint. The long standing browser has been causing headaches for web developers and designers since 2001, and until recently people have done nothing but accept the abuse. Recent news, however, suggests we may have finally had our fill of abuse from IE6.

Internet Explorer is the main web browser that many of us nerds learned to surf the web on. Back in the early part of the decade, IE6 did its job and did it well. This was in large part because no other options existed. Before Microsoft was legally forced not to, they had the ability to bundle the browser with the Windows operating systems, which led to Microsoft experiencing a 95% market share for internet browsers. And when that many people adopt a product, it then becomes impossible to move away from.

Today, we have far superior browsers in the market like Firefox, Chrome, Opera, and Safari, as well as Internet Explorer 8 (I hate to say it, but IE8 is pretty slick). These browsers are not only standards compliant, which IE6 is not, but they have evolved into all-encompassing utilities that reach far beyond the internet and into your everyday lives. I can't imagine life without FF and all of its plugins, let alone surfing the web without it.

I liken the IE situation to one of your grandparents living until 204 years of age, and then thinking they could adequately compete in the NFL for a starting RB position. In 2001, IE6 was just what we needed, but for the web to continue evolving and growing, the browser that requires the most time, energy and effort to make things work must be permanently retired. Not just retired, but banished from even coming close to a computer connected to the internet.

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IE6 finally hears the Death Rattle
posted by Bret on 07/21/2009 at 8:45 AM
categories: web news - nerdish - css - twitter - internet explorer - Firefox