
Who's taking market share from whom?
By Colin Barker
Published: 13 October 2006 09:00 GMT
Mozilla's Firefox increased its share of the browser market last month at the expense of Microsoft's Internet Explorer and other browsers, according to one set of statistics released this week.
But with another set showing that the opposite happened - with Firefox's share dropping in September - it's unclear which figures are correct.
The state of play in the ongoing battle between Firefox and IE is particularly important this month, because both Microsoft and Mozilla are nearly ready to release new versions of their browsers. In September, Mozilla launched Release Candidate 1 (RC1) of Firefox 2.0 but was beaten to the punch by Microsoft, which launched RC1 of IE 7 a month earlier.
As organisations now have a chance to take a closer look at both browsers, the industry has been waiting to see which one holds the most promise and the early signs seem to indicate a split in opinion.
The worrying news for Microsoft comes in market share figures from Net Applications, one of the most widely used compilers of browser stats, which show Firefox's share reaching 12.4 per cent in September, its highest total since the launch of version 1.0 of Firefox. Safari held onto its third-place spot, also with an increasing share at 3.5 per cent.
These increases appeared to come at the expense of Microsoft, which saw IE remain way ahead of everybody else but with a slightly smaller share, 82.1 per cent, down from 84.4 per cent in June.
But not everybody agrees with that. According to the web metrics company, OneStat, IE grew its market share of the browser market by 2.8 per cent between July and September.
In the same period, Firefox's market share dropped 1.4 per cent according to the same company, to 11.5 per cent. On the face of it, it shows a clear difference of opinion between two sets of researchers but the figures only really differ by around one per cent - within the margin of error.
But some analysts do believe Microsoft is seriously fighting back to increase its own dominant share. James Governor, of analyst house Red Monk, said he was not surprised to see figures suggesting Firefox's fast growth in market share was beginning to slow a little as Microsoft returned to growth.
Governor said: "IE 7 is a much better product again. It has some good new features, such as the way it works with RSS feeds, for example."
Microsoft is "taking the browser seriously again", he added. "They didn't for a while."
According to Governor, Firefox "needs to up its act again" and address some technical issues. "If you have a browser that has memory leaks all the time, it is very difficult to work with," he said.
Colin Barker writes for ZDNet UK
Why not compare apples to apples... It all depends...
Mike Cahill
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Anonymous
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Anonymous
Well I've certainly seen memory leakage and CPU sp...
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Governor is crazy if he thinks IE7 is a much bette...
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