Firefox Continues Gains against IE 585
kurtz_tan writes "News.com reports that the popularity of alternative Web browser Firefox continues to rise at the expense of Microsoft's Internet Explorer, according to a new study by WestSideStory.
The study measured market share by embedding sensors on major web sites such as those of Walt Disney, Best Buy, Sony and Liz Claiborne. WebSideStory retrieves data from 30 million internet users a day passing through its monitored sites. The company then takes a snapshot of two days and compares the growth.
Since beginning its measurements last summer, WebSideStory has been cautious to draw any broad conclusions about Firefox's popularity. This time around, the company said many people are not only downloading Firefox, they're sticking with it and using it."
It's WEBSideStory , not WestSideStory (Score:5, Funny)
It's WEBSideStory , not WestSideStory
I feel pretty, oh so pretty...
At the risk of revealing a proclivity ... (Score:4, Funny)
Admittedly, I am not a typical user. I visit numerous porn sites and am addicted to looking at gorgeous, naked women who would never spend time with me. Unfortunately, those sites are also boobytrapped with pop ups, viruses, and malware. If you do not believe me, then use IE on Windows and surf 1000 sites over the course of a month. At the end of the month, your computer will be unusable, and you will be forced to reinstall Windows.
With FireFox, I am relatively safe when I visit those sites. So far, none of the boobytraps have infected my computer. The only negative is that downloading the pictures takes a while with FireFox since it is not as tightly integrated into the OS as IE. Nonetheless, I am no longer reinstalling Windows on a monthly basis.
Now, where's that can of vaseline.... Just kidding.
Re:At the risk of revealing a proclivity ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:At the risk of revealing a proclivity ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:At the risk of revealing a proclivity ... (Score:5, Informative)
Kmeleon is Gecko, not KHTML. I don't believe that KHTML has been ported to Windows.
--Asa
Re:At the risk of revealing a proclivity ... (Score:3, Funny)
You mean "boobie-trapped"?
Re:It's WEBSideStory , not WestSideStory (Score:2)
Re:It's WEBSideStory , not WestSideStory (Score:3, Funny)
The funny part is that the submission called it WestSideStory (the namesake musical), not WebSideStory (the company). This is in itself humorous, but the "I feel pretty" line makes it even more so.
Explaining the joke: Effectively taking the humor out of it since 1997.
hah (Score:3, Funny)
A Microsoft spokesman did not immediately comment for this story
but i love that.
Re:hah (Score:2)
No matter what they might say at this stage in the game, you and others would mock them, instead, they stay quiet, biding their time and enhancing their own product for their counter attack with will no doubt come in good time.
.88%? (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, the websites they use probably skew the results as well; Disney, Best Buy, Sony, and Liz Claiborne?
If they want accuracy they should try throwing a few porn sites in, or maybe popular search engines.
I imagine if you had a more accurate sample that Firefox's share might be a little higher.
Re:.88%? (Score:2)
Re:.88%? (Score:2)
Re:.88%? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:.88%? (Score:2)
business/work PCs aren't moving so quickly.
Re:.88%? (Score:4, Interesting)
I disagree. At first I thought that you could increase measured non-IE browser share by including, say, Slashdot. But then I realized that the whole point of choosing the studied websites is that those websites appeal to Joe Sixpack, and not the geeks who would normally gravitate towards using non-IE browsers.
So in this case we have the worst case scenario (websites used by few geeks), showing that Mozilla is gaining over IE. Ane you're complaining?
--Rob
Re:.88%? (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, the websites they use probably skew the results as well...
If they want accuracy they should try throwing a few porn sites in, or maybe popular search engines.
Granted, their method isn't perfect...that probably isn't possible. But it's a lot better than your idea. These guys want a picture of normal, actual internet users that they can count. Neither search engines nor porn will provide that.
In the porno case, you just hand everything to IE, as all those hits from the popup windows roll in. Also, the control in those situations is passed mostly from the user to the site, which isn't ideal for these tests either. And search engines are visited by scripts a lot, most of which misidentify themselves as one browser or another. So, either way you're adding a lot to your inaccuracies.
Choosing high-traffic sites from major providers does sound like favoritism (or at least just corporate whoring), but it's really probably about as accurate a picture as we can get of how people browse.
Re:.88%? (Score:3, Informative)
Do this. [hackaday.com]
Spread it around...
Re:.88%? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:.88%? (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, but what is happening to opera? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Yes, but what is happening to opera? (Score:5, Interesting)
Opera ---is--- a brilliant browser, i just feel it's not suitable for the general public.
Re:Yes, but what is happening to opera? (Score:2)
That'd be too bad, it's my preferred browser, and I'm sorry to say I doubt they'd opensource it any sooner than Netscape did. That is, too late to save the company and the browser.
However, Opera has another niche in mobile phones, which they might focus more on in the future. Does anyone know it there is there any progress in porting Gecko to these platforms? Goota love competition.
Re:Yes, but what is happening to opera? (Score:3, Insightful)
It would be a shame to see Opera die, I don't want to use it myself, merely to have its nice features available as extensions to firefox....
Re:Yes, but what is happening to opera? (Score:3, Interesting)
I use Opera, for one. And you don'thave to pay for it if you don't mind a small box of TEXT ads - not graphical, but text - in the upper right-hand corner.
To each his own. Anyone reasonable person will conclude that a world dominated by Firefox could hardly be any better than a world dominated by IE. We need a heteregeneous mix of browsers, not one browser to "rule them all".
Max
Re:Yes, but what is happening to opera? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think I'd like to meet one of your reasonable persons.
The resonable people I know would surely prefer a Web dominated by a standards-conforming browser that was faster, safer, more secure, more usable, and ran on a dozen platforms than a Web dominated by a browser that pushes proprietary lock-in technologies like ActiveX, is filled with security holes that are deeply tied int
Internet Explorer technologies for UNIX (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.microsoft.com/unix/ie/default.asp/ [microsoft.com]
Re:Internet Explorer technologies for UNIX (Score:2)
Re:Internet Explorer technologies for UNIX (Score:2)
Re:Internet Explorer technologies for UNIX (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Internet Explorer technologies for UNIX (Score:5, Informative)
As one who has tried out msie for solaris, I can assure you that it gave new meaning to the terms buggy, bloated, and crash-prone. It was such a disaster that noboy would ever use it. OTOH, netscape ran fairly well, and stable, on all the major flavors of unix, so there was simply no contest. It's fairly certain that microsoft did the "port" as a political stunt, and an attempted propoganda coup, for 2 reasons:
#1, the blaring hype in ms ads saying "microsoft brings the internet to unix" (yeah right, the internet was pretty much a unix thing until microsoft woke up and came late to the party)
#2, the fact that they ported to an obscure platform like hpux, rather than linux, despite the fact that there were several hundred thousand linux desktop users for every hpux desktop user.
Then they backpedaled, saying "we didn't realize how difficult it was to program for unix". tee hee, a comparison to netscape and it's solid cross platform support puts the talents of microsofts programmers in a fairly bad light here.
And what's the margin of error in the polling? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:And what's the margin of error in the polling? (Score:5, Interesting)
seriously, we do the same thing in the UK, but mostly with retail sites (B&Q, Comet, H Samuel, etc) and there are soooo many things that cause inaccuracies!
firstly, the monitors are clientside - so depending on where in the host page they live, howmany images there are on the page, how fast the user's connection is and how long they spend on a page you may or may not even register a hit.
then misconfigured caches can hided it before it gets you your logging server (but there are ways around that).
but for tracking unique users (rather than pageviews), you need cookies as well:
- some peopl have cookies turned off
- some people have cookies demoted to session-only
- some people clear their cookies periodically (e.g. they've been looking at pr0n and dont want their missus to know)
- some people use 'security' software that strips cookies and/or rewrites page content on the fly.
its a mess. numbers are never accurate and its impossible to accurately determine how inaccurate they are!
but they're right - there is a consistent and significant move toward Firefox
But having said that - it has just been Christmas, and there does seem to be a big difference between home computers and business PCs (home = more up to date, more Firefix, work = older, no alternative browsers)
we're actually seeing a *decline* in firefox figures post-Xmas, but hoping that will change!
Re:And what's the margin of error in the polling? (Score:4)
Mod parent up!
\begin{rant}
Statistical figures (or any "scientific" figures, for that matter) are mostly meaningless without an error estimate (a.k.a. "confidence interval"). In fact, the lack of such estimates has been found to be a strong indication of bad research in 57.3% of all cases.
TFA claims IE market share to be "92.7%". As parent succintly explains, that claim is clearly bogus: there are two separate percentages:
Somehow I doubt that you will find the claimed figures to even be accurate to within %1. Hence the observed rise could be entirely due to random fluctuations or other errors and is likely completely insignificant.
\end{rant}
Meaningful Figure (Score:5, Insightful)
If people going on to Liz Claiborne or whatever are using FF, then you can assume that is someone's mom. Either that, or the IT guy trying to look at women's underwear pics through his work's web filtering. :)
Good analysis, though. Let's hope this continues...
Baby steps, right?
Re:Meaningful Figure (Score:2)
Re:Meaningful Figure (Score:2)
Best Buy doesn't appeal to everyone? I mean sure, Newegg or whatever is a better alternative, but I bet 90% of the people on this site have been to a Best Buy in the last year...
Re:Meaningful Figure (Score:2)
But not necessarily their website. It's certainly not a valuable research tool; and with the exception of music, movies, and games, you can get everything else they sell cheaper elsewhere.
Re:Meaningful Figure (Score:2)
Been where? Oh, you must be assuming everyone is American. I'd wager more than 10% of Slashdotters aren't American and therefore haven't been anywhere near Best Buy in the last year.
Re:Meaningful Figure (Score:2)
Re:Meaningful Figure (Score:5, Informative)
I've been very critical of this "Firefox is making a difference" bandwagon for a long time. However, I've been observing my own site's statistics over the last few months and the numbers are, indeed, surprising.
Until recently, my site has been 95% MSIE, just like it has been for almost five years. Viewing just the most recent stats shows that out of 40,000 unique visitors:
77.2% are using MSIE
18.5% are using Firefox, Mozilla or Netscape
2.3% are using Safari
1.1% are using Opera
The reason I take these statistics seriously is that my site is not at all a technical site. It's an auction site with 95% females between the ages of 15 and 50. A lot of AOL users. While there are some very technically savvy people on the site, the majority of them are extremely novice to average. So if a lot of them are moving away from MSIE, it is a significant indication of where the general web population is also going.
Yeh but.... (Score:2, Funny)
Web (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Web (Score:2)
It might not be wise to measure gains in the browser market by introducing a platform variable... if you just look at platforms where IE is available, you'll more accurately depict the Firefox gains. I think that's what they're trying to do - show gain, not depict actual browser market share. That's ok, because as the number of Linux users inrease, the percentage of IE users will decrease. That's an extra factor to consider here, and might not be something they wa
Re:False logic, nothing more. (Score:3, Interesting)
Increasing Linux users means that you're obviously going to decrease IE market share. That's the important part to unders
Sensors? (Score:2, Interesting)
Embedding sensors? You mean it checked the user agent. Probably logs (I don't run a webserver, so I dont know if all webservers log that). I knew media tended to sensationalize things but
No surprise. (Score:5, Interesting)
This would have happened a long time ago if such a good browser had come along sooner.
Firefox is fast, secure, easy to use, skinable, free, and compatible.
For once, IE isn't more popular based on it's merit. It's actually at a technical disadvantage again and it's decline in popularity is a result of that.
I was skeptical about converting most of my less tech savvy associates over to Firefox at first, but when a few actually actively asked me to help them and their feedback was all positive afterwards, I suggested it to a few more and then even more.
Now anyone I don't feel is capable of keeping their system clean while using IE I recommend convert and I've yet to hear one single complaint.
Re:No surprise. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:No surprise. (Score:3, Informative)
Firefox is secure? Look at these vulnerabilities from last year.
2005-01-11: Mozilla/Netscape/Firefox Browser Modal Dialog Spoofing Vulnerability
2005-01-05: Mozilla Temporary File Insecure Permissions Information Disclosure Vulnerability
2005-01-05: Multiple Browser IMG Tag Multiple Vulnerabilities
2005-01-05: Mozilla Firefox Download Dialogue Box File Name Spoofing Vulnerability
2005-01-05: Mozilla Firefox Insecure Default Installation
Microsoft might be stubborn (Score:5, Interesting)
Windows only statistics? (Score:2, Interesting)
If You accept that;
1. Some non-zero number of people aren't running windows.
2. More that 5% of these are runnning firefox.
Then these figures are an underestimate for the entire web population.
Of course accepting (1) but not (2) suggests an over-estimate, so in either case be wary of considering these figures as accurate.
Liz Claiborne? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Liz Claiborne? (Score:5, Insightful)
"Sensors"??? (Score:2)
Re:"Sensors"??? (Score:2)
Internet.com browser stats (Score:2, Interesting)
September 2004 - 2% Mozilla [thecounter.com]
October 2004 - 2% Mozilla [thecounter.com]
November 2004 - 3% Mozilla [thecounter.com]
December 2004 - 3% Mozilla [thecounter.com]
January 2005 - 5% Mozilla??? [thecounter.com]
OT: Fermi solutions (Score:3, Informative)
The amazing thing is that the more you have the better since you are unlikely to guess everyone on the high or low side. The more variables you have the more accurate.
Fermi himself used this to estimate the power of the first Atom bomb via dropping paper confetti from above his head (2 meters) and look where they landed after the blast arrive
Security Flaws? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Security Flaws? (Score:2)
Internet Explorer has one giant glaring vulnerability going for it that was designed in from the beginning: ActiveX.
we need a getexplorer.com .. or something (Score:4, Funny)
Help fight these horrible new statistics... Install IE today! [sidenet.ddo.jp]
Spread Firefox! (Score:2, Interesting)
Firefox at 50+% in some places (Score:3, Informative)
Ace's Hardware recently ran a short article that Firefox passed 50% share at their website in December. They had a nice graph showing IE clearly in the majority, lessening over time, and, finally, passing into the minority.
We'll miss you, IE...not!
Re:Firefox at 50+% in some places (Score:3, Informative)
Not using Firefox does not make you a moron. Still, the vulnerabilities in IE are legion, and constantly being expanded. Take this one for example. [secunia.com]
Some vulnerabilities have been discovered in Internet Explorer, which allows a malicious web site to execute arbitrary commands or install code on your computer without any user interaction.
That exploit was disco
The best is yet to come (Score:5, Informative)
1.1 also contains some decent enhancements [mozilla.org].
IMHO adoption will pick up when 1.1 is released and some of these fixes take place.
1.1 will also have a MSI, which will make it easier for corporations to deploy Firefox to computers within their organization. That will allow for more Firefox gains.
You knew *this* post was inevitable... (Score:5, Funny)
meanwhile, in the real world.... (Score:4, Insightful)
First, "% of browsers used" != "% of boxes". Firefox is having a hit because its users are people who spend a lot of time in internet. There're a *lot* of people who don't use internet a lot, and they don't get eflected in the stadistics just because they don't browse a lot.
Second, If firefox continues growing at this rate, microsoft will have enought time to rewrite their browser. Remember, 100% of windows boxes have IE installed, and as soon as microsoft gives them a update which is "good enought" they could stop using firefox. Don't understimate the power of microsoft, they control the most used software distribution channel for windows boxes - windows update
And let's remember that around 50% of the OS used to browser internet is XP. XP SP2 has a popup killer by default which is one of the biggest reasons to use firefox. And SP2 enables automatic updates, so IE is "safer". It doesn't really matters if IE is secure or not, if microsoft patches it fast enought users won't have problems.
so, what we need is to get *better*, and get better *faster*. Currently, firefox is just "a better IE". Yes, it's more than that, we know, but users only see that "a better explorer". We need to offer something different, innovative. We need to give them more things that are not just "better than the IE equivalent", but cool things that have not equivalent so users will stick with firefox. (don't talk me about extensions, IE has plugins and they could start those to add funcionality!)
And of course we need to have "automatic updates" for firefox. I think those are already there, right? If you don't updae users' browser, they won't do it themselves, automatic update (or at least a window warning about a "fastest, more secure version) is needed if you want that your users continue appreciating all the work you do.
2004 Browser Stats for my employer (Score:4, Interesting)
I work for a Washington State agency [esd101.net]. The majority of the vistors to our main site are K-12 related (teachers, parents, students, etc). Microsoft products are quite popular around this area due to the steep discounts that Microsoft hands out to K-12 schools and their related state agencies. However, the 2004 stats for my employer's main site are quite interesting.
5% (Score:3, Interesting)
As a mac user who's had compatibility complaints about some sites, the retort that I encountered was that the problematic site in question was designed for "95%" of the browsers going there, and if I wasn't in that 95% it just sucks to be me.
Now that it appears that FireFox is coming really close to squeezing on the 5% margin, my question is: will web designers really consider making their sites compatible with 92% of IE and 5% of FireFox? That could be a lot of work, depending on the site. Or are site designers just more likely to say "as long as we have 90% compatibility, that's good enough"? Turning away 10% of your customers seems like a lot, though, too.
Web designers in the biz care to comment? Are you guys seeing new compatibility standards? If so, that's good news for mac users. The faster ActiveX is obsoleted, the fewer problems Mac users are to face--even if the impetus for the compatibility change came from FireFox.
Re:5% (Score:3, Insightful)
Given the razor-thin margins in a lot of retailing, giving up even 5% of potential customers seems pretty retarded, IMO. A lot of companies break even by such a slight margin that just the wind blowing differently could push them to a loss. Ignoring 10% would be insane.
Re:5% (Score:3, Informative)
Well, we're not targeting 5%, we're very likely already past that and headed to 10% i
In the end, does it matter? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:-1, Redundant for me, please... (Score:2)
Re:-1, Redundant for me, please... (Score:2)
You might want to pay for it. Not all software has to be free, you know. And Opera is IMHO the best browser available bar none - well worth it's price.
Re:-1, Redundant for me, please... (Score:4, Insightful)
Price.
Not that I mind paying for software. Hell, I've even bought boxed Linux distros. But, and it is a big but, most people pay for perceived value. For these people, which includes me, Opera does not provide $39 [opera.com] more value than Firefox.
Maybe I'm just cheap...
Re:-1, Redundant for me, please... (Score:2)
Re:-1, Redundant for me, please... (Score:5, Interesting)
Why?
Simply because the people who wrote it aren't assholes. They don't have copy-protection to make my life difficult, and they compete on features rather than on marketing.
They offer a student discount, and want a letter from the registrar or a copy of your grades to prove your status. My university is run by trolls, so I wrote them and asked them if I could post a small note on my Uni webspace as proof that I was a student.
Six hours later the response came back: "Sure, that's fine. Greetings from Norway!"
I don't mind paying those guys.
Re:-1, Redundant for me, please... (Score:2)
Re:-1, Redundant for me, please... (Score:3, Informative)
Sure I can. Who are you to tell me what I should value or how I should spend my money?
Max
Re:-1, Redundant for me, please... (Score:2)
Some people are, however, locked into IE because of the ActiveX component support (typically intranet business applications).
A bad idea to incorporate in-browser ActiveX objects into your app of course, but I'll bet there are still plenty of in-house apps around that do just that.
So, Firefox (great though it is) is not an option for everyone while the ActiveX legacy continues to bite us.
Re:-1, Redundant for me, please... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Marketing (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, it also becomes more and more likely that advertisers will spend more and more resources trying to figure out new and exciting ways to get past Firefox's popup blocker and the Adblock extension, so it's a bit of a double edged sword.
Re:Marketing (Score:2)
And perhaps those lazy Web developers who use simplistic crappy Javascript to determine your browser name/version will be forced to use something more professional that determines your browser's current capabilities (you have: Flash plug-in, Javascript, no Java, ask about cookies, no ActiveX etc.etc.etc.). The site will then work depending on your settings, never mind the name/version.
Re:Marketing (Score:5, Informative)
Also, as far as image blocking goes, while the stock Firefox build blocks images from specific domains (so you wouldn't want to block the ad if it came from the same server or proxy as the good images) a simple ad-on like AdBlock gives users the power to easily block ads without losing the legitimate page content.
--Asa
Re:F*ing developers who build for IE only! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:F*ing developers who build for IE only! (Score:2)
Re:F*ing developers who build for IE only! (Score:2)
Re:F*ing developers who build for IE only! (Score:5, Insightful)
In the meantime, it's just not that big a deal to change banks, or just to fire up IE for minute. Oh... I'm guessing you run on Linux. Alas. Your bank will come around on their own, or they'll get tired of fielding the complaints. Market pressure works - banks are service companies, and believe me, they do listen to compaints - mostly in the cummulative, but they do listen.
Re:F*ing developers who build for IE only! (Score:3, Interesting)
I wrote the website support and they sent me a response, and even fixed the website for me.
I think that most sites would like you to access their services (only idiots design a site for one browser). Sometimes you just need to politely mention it to them.
Re:F*ing developers who build for IE only! (Score:3, Informative)
Not only have I had to deal with recently a web application designed for only one browser but it wouldn't work on all versions of Windows either. Had to run on 2k or NT, wouldn't work on XP. I am not even sure how to categorize actions like that. The people who did that one (not going to name the company) should be in the bad software decision hall of fame.
Re:F*ing developers who build for IE only! (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm thinking of sites/apps for internal, corporate intranets - not the Internet in general.
What were these guys supposed to do exactly? Resign on a point of principle?
Get real!
Re:F*ing developers who build for IE only! (Score:3, Insightful)
The point I was making is that professional programmers work to specifications and if the spec says "use ACME's ActiveX charting control" then that's exactly what you do kiddo! You don't whine and bitch about it, you get on and do it.
To give a real world example, I have often had to use sophisticated 3D charting contols and frankly, the Java applet ones suck mightily IMHO in terms of features and performance compared to the ActiveX ones.
Ever try free-spinning a large 3D surface plot
Re:F*ing developers who build for IE only! (Score:3, Interesting)
MLS - Multiple Listing Service for Real Estate. this website alone has prevented meny a Windows -> Mac switch for me alone, now multiply this acnticidote by 1000. but this one doesn't count because only realters are locked into the system, not the general public.
Seibol - a stupid, slow, and crapy internal system used at the techshop that i work for dealing assets, and time management. This system
Re:F*ing developers who build for IE only! (Score:3, Insightful)
If you don't care about anything non-Microsoft, it makes sense to just use the tools in front of you. Despite your anti-Microsoft frothing, those tools usually work and get the job done, and their use is intended for use on Microsoft's platform.
I don't see anything wrong with that -- if the customer has different needs and the develop
Re:F*ing developers who build for IE only! (Score:3, Interesting)
Congratulations, and I'm sorry that my own mod points timed out a few hours ago.
I guess the fact that this AC didn't get modded -1, Troll like anyone else talking like that shows that we are, almost unanimously, really, really pissed off at the state of the web.
From MSN groups:
MSN Chat is not currently compatible with your Internet browser and/or computer operating system. [...] W
Re:Too bad my school won't use Ff (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:test of my own (Score:2, Informative)
Re:KHTML in Windows ? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm all for more quality browsers, but a great engine doesn't gain marketshare without a great application around it.
--Asa
Re:embedded sensors (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hate to rain on ya'lls parade... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not just yet - unfair moderation! (Score:3, Insightful)
I hope this mod pops up in meta-moderation, and somebody wakes up. Firefox could start supporting scrollbar colors, because maybe that means something to somebody.
Sheesh, usually the Slashdot moderation system works, but sometimes it's just a big let down.