Jump to content

Microsoft Surrendering to Google Chrome Is No Surprise Given These Figures


The AchieVer

Recommended Posts

Microsoft Surrendering to Google Chrome Is No Surprise Given These Figures 

Everybody knows that Google Chrome is the leading browser on the market, but monthly statistics show that its share keeps increasing, no matter what the others are doing.

Everybody knows that Google Chrome is the leading browser on the market, but monthly statistics show that its share keeps increasing, no matter what the others are doing.

In January, for instance, Google Chrome managed to improve its market share from 67.18% to 67.29%, and while the increase isn’t overwhelming, it just shows how popular this browser has become.

And when looking at its competitors, everything becomes even more obvious. Firefox is currently the runner-up, and despite an increase in January, it remains very far behind leader Google Chrome. Mozilla Firefox is running on 9.92% of the world’s PCs, according to NetMarketShare.

Internet Explorer is third in the charts with 6.81%, followed by nobody else than Microsoft Edge with 4.61%.The Microsoft Edge transitionMicrosoft announced in late 2018 that it gives up on its own EdgeHTML engine for Microsoft Edge and instead ports the browser to Chromium, the same platform that powers Google Chrome. And just by looking at these figures it’s pretty clear that Microsoft understood that surrendering to Chrome is the only way to go despite the criticism that the company could be facing given this decision.

Microsoft Edge has never been considered a truly powerful rival to Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox, and this market share shows that its adoption hasn’t even matched the one of Internet Explorer.

For context, Edge has already replaced Internet Explorer as the default browser in Windows. And what’s more, Internet Explorer is no longer receiving new features, but only security updates.

Microsoft is projected to release a preview of its Chromium-based Microsoft Edge browser sometime in early 2019, while the fully-featured version should land later this year or possibly in 2020.

For now, however, it just seems like the browsing world is all about Google Chrome, and Firefox continues to be the only one considered a capable alternative.
 
 
Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Replies 1
  • Views 548
  • Created
  • Last Reply

These figures haven't stopped Apple from closing up shop for Safari. And those guys seem more concerned with figures than our code-masters at Redmond. Just look how often them Apple folks talk statistics at their keynotes.

 

MS look like they realized they can't win in all fronts by forcing a work-in-progress product to users the same way they did with their latest desktop operating system. Perhaps things weren't going this direction with Windows to begin with had there been stronger market presence by the alternatives.

 

It still amazes me that MS ever expected a warm welcoming wagon for a web browser that 1) has no bookmark manager; 2) barely has any plugins; 3) rarely gets updated, and 4) works inconsistently across the web. What do MS' business analysts smoke really? I want some!

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...