News
Firefox Held Nearly 10 Percent Share at Year’s End
- By Stuart J. Johnston
- January 04, 2006
Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser slowly but surely lost significant
market share to Firefox over the past year, according to the latest monthly
traffic report released Wednesday by Web metrics tool vendor Net Applications.
“[IE] ended 2004 with 90.31 percent browser usage market share, and steadily
lost ground, ending 2005 with 85.05 percent market share,” Net Applications
said in a statement announcing the year-end stats.
It continued that while Microsoft intends to have a new version of IE out this
year, the Redmond company is also cutting support for the Mac.
Meanwhile, Mozilla Firefox started 2005 with a 4.64 percent share, slumped during
the summer months, and then surged ahead towards the end of the year when Firefox
1.5 was released, to finish with 9.57 percent, the Net Applications statement
said.
Interestingly, Apple’s Safari browser cut ahead of Netscape to hold third
place, with 3.07 percent, in the year-end rankings. Netscape climbed as high
as just over 2 percent during the summer, but finished down almost half of that
at a mere 1.24 percent.
Firefox’s ascendancy reinforces signs all year that it is catching
on with users.
One wild card in 2006 will be the upcoming release of Apple Mac computers based
on Intel CPUs. Additionally, Microsoft is hard at work on versions of IE for
both the pending Windows Vista as well as for Windows XP.
About the Author
Stuart J. Johnston has covered technology, especially Microsoft, since February 1988 for InfoWorld, Computerworld, Information Week, and PC World, as well as for Enterprise Developer, XML & Web Services, and .NET magazines.