DesktopLinux
home  |  news  |  articles  |  forum  |  polls  |  directory  |  buyersguide  |  search
Search the DesktopLinux.com sponsors database ...
Keywords: Match: Sort by:
ZD
Let the Browser Wars begin
Firefox 2.0 is almost here, and Microsoft is expected to start pushing out Internet Explorer 7 to users via the Windows Automatic Update software-distribution mechanism by year's end. In short, the browser wars are about to begin again.

Spread the word:
digg this story
Depending on whose numbers you believe, Firefox has been continuing to erode IE's (Internet Explorer's) lead.

According to Janco Associates, Internet Explorer has continued to lose market share in 2006. It bottomed out to 75.88 percent share in July, which was down from 77.01 percent in January, and from 84.05 in July of 2005.

OneStat.com, meanwhile, reported earlier this week that the global usage share of IE has grown to 85.85 percent. That's a jump of 2.8 percent since July, by their counting. Firefox, on the other hand, is at 11.49 percent, a decrease of 1.44 percent since the web analytics specialist reported its July data. The rest of IE's gain came at the expense of Opera and the other browsers.

NetApplications, however, sees a very different picture. According to Ars Technica's reporting, IE hit a two-year low at 82.10 percent in September, while Firefox grew to a 12.46 percent market share. Safari, the Mac OS X browser, came in third with 3.53 percent.

As for Linux and browsers, DesktopLinux's recent survey of Linux users found that Mozilla's Firefox browser dominates the field. Firefox came in with 58.2 percent usage, followed by Konqueror at 16.3 percent, and Opera at 12 percent. Of all the other browsers, only Mozilla, at 4.7 percent and Epiphany, GNOME's default browser, at 2.7 percent, grabbed more than 2 percent of the users.

With new browser versions coming out from both Mozilla and Microsoft in the coming weeks, however, we can expect to see dramatic changes in the overall browser market.

Both browsers face challenges of their own. IE 7 is already causing, as Windows technical writer and editor John Mueller puts it, "developer heartburn." That's because many of the changes will break existing IE applications.

In particular, Mueller notes that the change in how ActiveX controls are handled "is going to break many applications; everything from shopping carts to data collaboration." Another potential problem is that some IE developers have also been dragging their feet in getting ready for IE 7.

As for Firefox, the recent rebellion of some open-source developers over the use of the Firefox trademarked name and icon has resulted in a fork, IceWeasel. This split has been led largely by Debian Linux developers.

Not everyone who is pro-Debian has cared for what they see as a totally unneeded fork. Indeed, Ian Murdoch, the founder of Debian and head of the Linux Standard Base, said, "This is so maddeningly stupid I'm embarrassed to be even remotely associated with this."

Problems and all, though, the new browsers are on their way. Will Firefox 2 continue to dominate outside of Windows, and eat away at IE 7's lead within Windows? With big changes from both browsers on the way, it's too early to tell.


-- Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols



Related stories:
 
This sponsor's articles:
Firefox 2.0 RC 2: better, not perfect
What's the best Linux for beginners?
Seven Linux distros fight over one old ThinkPad
Desktop Linux distributions -- from A to Z
Welcoming MS Windows users to Linux
The Linux killer app: KDE's Konqueror
Results from the 2006 Desktop Linux Survey
An early look at Freespire
Reincarnating a discarded laptop with Linux
Hot Topic: The "One Laptop Per Child" project
Logging your kids off your Linux desktop
Ubuntu 6.06 is current desktop Linux champ
A first look at SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 10
A simple Linux backup method
Linux desktop distributions headed in the wrong direction
A first look at MEPIS's new Ubuntu-based Linux
First impressions of Google Earth for Linux
Installing operating systems the safe way
First impressions of Google Browser Sync
Ubuntu 6.06 LTS first impressions
Setting up a Moodle education server
Making SUSE Linux 10.1 the perfect desktop OS
Get ready for the Vista/SUSE smackdown!
Singing the OpenSUSE package manager blues
Banshee -- the next best thing to Linux iTunes
Keeping Thunderbird from breaking
Giving desktop Linux a try
Freespire: Great idea? Awful idea?
Making sense out of SUSE's delta releases
Student research report: Desktop Linux in Government
Curmudgeon deems SUSE 10.1 "really cool and solid"
A Linux desktop fairy tale
Top 10 reasons Linux pwns your OS
Repeat after me: No more Linux desktop forks
The other big Linux office suites
Old OEMs, new Linux tricks?
Can Novell lift the Linux Desktop to the next level?
OpenOffice is ten years behind MS Office? That's just fine!
Opinion: Why Windows Vista will suck
Why Photoshop tops most-wanted Linux app list
WordPerfect for Linux lives on
Why we need Windows apps ported on Linux
Getting scanners to work with Linux
Choosing a desktop Linux distro
How one reviewer approaches the art of reviewing
Reviewer finds Ubuntu good, but not good enough
Hunting for the perfect Linux Media Center
The Great Drupal Web blogging project, Part 1
Using a liveCD as your Linux Desktop
A sneaky Linux present for a Windows-using friend
Taking KDE 3.5 for a ride with SUSE
Damn, I like Damn Small Linux
Hacking OpenSUSE
Installing SUSE Linux 10.0 on a laptop
The Desktop Linux Book Roundup
First look: SUSE 10 -- where's the dot-one?
First look: SUSE 10, on the Road
Linux thin clients revitalize student desktops
Introducing "Linux Made Easy"
An introduction to Zenwalk 1.2
The enterprise desktop PC is obsolete: what you should do about it
Opinion: Vista opens doors for Linux desktops
A conversation with the creator of Puppy Linux
A Linux newbie's introduction to Minislack
Joseph Cheek speaks about Mandriva's acquisition of Lycoris
Using Rexx for easy Desktop Linux scripting
Getting to know Puppy Linux
Results from the 2004 Desktop Linux Market survey
Choosing an upgrade path from Windows 98
The role of WINE in Linux desktop enterprise migration strategies
Guest Editorial: A constructive critique of Debian Linux
Using DSL with Linux
The Best Free Desktop Linux . . . and how to make it better
Manufacturing pioneer saves time, money with Linux management tool
Desktop Linux: A VB/Access developer’s view
Looking into the future of Linux
An introduction to "Open Source: Open for Business"
Free whitepaper helps enterprises migrate to Linux desktops
How to Build a Free Enterprise Linux Desktop
UserLinux: An Important Step
Product Review: Fedora Linux Core II
Desktop Linux: New Linux users changing the face of community
Bitstream and Lycoris: Taking Linux fonts to the desktop
Real world case study: Linux thin client savings exceed 37% in just 8 months
Book review: O'Reilly's Pocket Guide to Linux
Timing Perfect for Sun's Java Desktop System
My Linux Desktop Odyssey, 2004
Extending the Linux desktop with business intelligence
Inside Lineox Linux
StarOffice 7 -- the best and worst of Office
Doctor prescribes Linux for more reliable networks, lower cost
Linux from the trenches: A frank analysis of Linux as it moves toward critical mass
An alternative to so-called "Open Source Bills"
Computer Associates' Open Innovation Strategy takes Linux to enterprise
Desktop Linux Breaking Ground
Astaro integrated security solution fueled by open source Linux
ELX Linux: Moving businesses to Linux
The Future of the Linux Desktop
Looking for Linux apps? Try rpmseek.com
I have a Linux Desktop dream
 

home  |  news  |  articles  |  forum  |  polls  |  directory  |  search  |  aboutus  |  contactus
 
Use of this site is governed by our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Except where otherwise specified, the contents of this site are copyright © 1999-2006 Ziff Davis Publishing Holdings Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. All other marks are the property of their respective owners.