Rising browser powers: Chrome, iOS, mobile
10/01/2010 08:09:00 PM
kenmouse
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Browser usage statistics for September provide a look at who's gaining clout on the Web: Google's Chrome, the twin mobile powerhouses of Apple's iOS and Google's Android, and a dash of Microsoft's IE9.
Google's Chrome browser continued its steady rise in usage on NetApplications' network of thousands of Web sites, which get tens of millions of visits monthly, increasing from 7.5 percent in August to 8 percent in September, the analytics firm said.
Microsoft's Internet Explorer remains the top-ranked browser, but its share dipped back below 60 percent, sinking from 60.4 percent to 59.7 percent. Second-place Firefox was essentially flat at 23 percent. Apple's Safari rose from 5.2 percent to 5.3 percent, and Opera kept its 2.4 percent share.
Chrome is a rising force, a fact that's very useful for Google's ambitions. Not only does it help spread the Google brand, but it also serves as a vehicle to disseminate Google technologies. For example, on Thursday, Google said it will add support for its new WebP image format to Chrome in an effort to speed browser graphics. And it's working to improve the browser: Chrome 7 is geting Google Instant search abilities, some hardware accleration, and WebGL 3D graphics support by default.
Microsoft, after a long dormant period, is back in fighting trim for the browser wars with IE9, though, which in today's beta form features more extensive hardware accleration than Chrome. IE9 is notable for its support of Web standards, including a host of newer ones Web developers are eager to implement.
Net Applications' September statistics showed a look at how widely used IE9 is now that it's in beta: with share of 0.25 percent for the last two weeks of September, that's a respectable one of every 400 Web pages.
But for years, Microsoft's IE was the technology for which developers coded their Web sites. To deal with this legacy of non-standard Web pages, IE uses a "compatibility mode" by which it renders pages using its older rendering rules. For the IE9 beta, this compatibility mode is used for about one of each eight pages, reflecting how much work it will be for Microsoft to move to its "same markup" holy grail in which Web developers only have to write one version of a Web page to accommodate all browsers.
Some of the most interesting trends in the browser market are with mobile devices, a much less mature market than browsing on personal computers.
Mobile browsing is exploding in usage with a new generation of devices. In October 2009, it accounted for 1.1 percent of all browsing, but by September 2010, that figure grew to 2.8 percent, Net Applications said.
A new class of smartphones and mobile is dominating that usage.
Apple's iOS devices--the iPhone, iPod Touch, and iPad--account for 1.2 percent of browser usage. That's up from 0.4 percent in October 2009.
Google's Android operating system, which is chiefly used in mobile phones but beginning to arrive in tablets that compete with the iPad, lags well behind but is growing. Its share of browsing rose from 0.02 percent in October 2009 to 0.24 percent in September 2010.
The statistics don't reflect a large element of mobile Net usage through applications, however. Although iOS and Android browsers outclass mobile browsers that came before, they're still slower than on PCs and hard to use with small screens in many cases. Many companies therefore choose to make their Net-connected services accessible through applications rather than just Web sites.
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