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        Windows 7, Internet Explorer Tracked in Report
        
        
        
			- By Anne Watkins
 - February 23, 2010
 
		
        
		A marketing report released this week profiled two important  Microsoft products, with mixed results. 
The good news for Microsoft is that Windows 7 is quickly  gaining in popularity. However, Internet Explorer's share of the browser market  has continued to wane in the last year. 
IE still retains its lead among Web browsers with a 64.8  percent market share in February of this year, according to a report by Park City, Utah-based Janco Associates. Still, IE has lost more than 6  percent compared with its position in the market in February of 2009. Meanwhile,  Windows 7 has gained 12 percent of the operating system market in less than  seven months since its release.
"The last six months have been a mixed bag for  Microsoft," M. Victor Janulaitis, CEO of Janco Associates, wrote in the report announcement.  "Their browser market share has fallen to [the] level that they [were at]  back in 1998 with no end in sight." However, the popularity of Windows 7 has  been a major factor in Microsoft's improved earnings, Janulaitis wrote.
"Windows 7 is viewed by many users as one of the better  product releases that Microsoft has created in the last few years," Janulaitis  noted.
Second in line in the browser competition space is the Mozilla  Foundation's Firefox browser, which has remained steady at 17.4 percent in the  last year. Google Desktop and the Chrome browser have a 5.8 percent market  share (a 2.12 percent increase). Mozilla SeaMonkey and Apple Safari each have  less than 2 percent, representing a slip for SeaMonkey and an increase for Safari.
Figures in the Janco Associates report tracked somewhat with  those measured by Net  Applications. According to Net Applications' online database, IE's market  share was 62.1 percent in January 2010, having slumped from 69.2 percent in February  2009.
The browser market may soon stabilize, according to Janco  Associates' report, particularly since interest in Google Desktop and Chrome  has decreased with the release of IE 8.
"We feel that Microsoft will continue to see an erosion  of its IE market share until it stabilizes at a level that sets a market  equilibrium with room for Firefox, Chrome and the other browsers,"  Janulaitis wrote in an e-mail interview. "We do not yet know what that  level will be -- perhaps a good guess would be between 55 and 60 percent."
While Firefox has challenged Microsoft's dominance, the  report found that adoption of Firefox has stalled as IE and Chrome now offer  many of the same features. Still, the report suggests a few reasons Google  could gain greater browser market share. First, Chrome has a "clean" user  interface. For enterprises looking for alternatives to Office 2010 and Office  Web Apps, Chrome offers a way to integrate the desktop apps with the Internet.  Nonetheless, the report still portrayed Google's Chrome results as disappointing. 
"The door was open for Google with both Desktop and  Chrome -- however, we think that door is closing," the report states.
Data from Net Applications provides a different view,  showing that Google's browser market share had more than tripled over a year's  time. Chrome had a 5.2 percent market share in January 2010 vs. 1.5 percent in  February 2009 -- a sign of success.
Microsoft faces some stumbling blocks in the browser market,  such as the release of a browser "ballot  option" for the European Union, Janulaitis noted by e-mail. In  addition, Microsoft must deal with equipment manufacturers aiming to get their  own customized browsers loaded on new PCs.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Anne Watkins is a freelance journalist based in Brooklyn, New York.