The turn of the tide?
2003-02-05 18:39Or, Lies, Damn Lies, and (browser) Statistics
As part of my day job, I'm involved in determining the browser support policy for the websites we produce. So I watch browser usage stats.
I've noticed something in the last couple of months' figures. Some sources have started to show a drop in the total market share of Internet Explorer. Only a very small drop, which could just be a statistical blip, but the other sources are also levelling off, to a greater or lesser degree.
The culprit? Well, that's where it gets fun, because there's more than one. Leading the charge1 are Mozilla and Netscape 7, which are both gaining users steadily, but there's also a small crowd of Mozilla spin-offs, Opera and others. Apple's Safari browser is doing pretty well for something that only had its first public beta release a month ago, too. Taken individually, most of these browsers have a tiny market share, but add them together and they seem to be gaining users faster than Netscape 4 is losing them.
It looks like 2003 could be a very interesting year.
1OK, it's actually more of a slow saunter.
[Disclaimer: browser usage statistics can mislead. Browser caches, proxy servers, proxy caches, poor browser detection, user-agent masking, cookie blocking, audience demographics of the website(s) being measured, the phase of the moon and the number you first thought of. All of these factors, and more, can screw the figures up.]
Sources:
If anyone has any better (or even just other) sources, I'm all ears.
My main analysis is based on the EWS figures (I did my own analysis of their raw data)
As part of my day job, I'm involved in determining the browser support policy for the websites we produce. So I watch browser usage stats.
I've noticed something in the last couple of months' figures. Some sources have started to show a drop in the total market share of Internet Explorer. Only a very small drop, which could just be a statistical blip, but the other sources are also levelling off, to a greater or lesser degree.
The culprit? Well, that's where it gets fun, because there's more than one. Leading the charge1 are Mozilla and Netscape 7, which are both gaining users steadily, but there's also a small crowd of Mozilla spin-offs, Opera and others. Apple's Safari browser is doing pretty well for something that only had its first public beta release a month ago, too. Taken individually, most of these browsers have a tiny market share, but add them together and they seem to be gaining users faster than Netscape 4 is losing them.
It looks like 2003 could be a very interesting year.
1OK, it's actually more of a slow saunter.
[Disclaimer: browser usage statistics can mislead. Browser caches, proxy servers, proxy caches, poor browser detection, user-agent masking, cookie blocking, audience demographics of the website(s) being measured, the phase of the moon and the number you first thought of. All of these factors, and more, can screw the figures up.]
Sources:
- The Engineering Workstations Server (EWS) at The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- w3schools.com
- TheCounter.com
If anyone has any better (or even just other) sources, I'm all ears.
My main analysis is based on the EWS figures (I did my own analysis of their raw data)