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Adrian Kingsley-Hughes

Highlights from NetApplications data for December ‘08 - Home users dominate data

By | January 2, 2009, 4:43am PST

Summary: NetApplications has released data for December so it’s time once again to dig through the trends.

NetApplications has released data for December so it’s time once again to dig through the trends:

Note: I know that many of you distrust NetApplications data, but remember that we are only using the data to examine trends.

Also worth noting for December is NetApplication’s own disclaimer:

The December holiday season strongly favored residential over business usage.  This in turn increases the relative usage share of Mac, Firefox, Safari and other products that have relatively high residential usage.Therefore, all December usage statistics should be read in that context.

  • Internet Explorer usage slides again, down to 68.15% from 69.77% the previous month.
  • Firefox market share up to 21.34%, the second month where Firefox has broken the 30% barrier.
  • Safari and Chrome usage also up (7.93% and 1.04% respectively).
  • Opera remains flat at 0.71%.
  • IE6 usage lower in December than Firefox, at 20.46%.
  • Mac share creeps closer to the 10% mark, with 9.63%.
  • Windows usage falls nearly 1% from previous month, down to 88.68%.
  • Linux market share up to 0.85%.
  • iPhone market share up to 0.44%.

Let’s now take a quick “year in review” look at the trends, comparing data for December 08 with December 07:

  • Internet Explorer market share drops 7.89%
  • Firefox market share increases 4.54%
  • Safari market share up 2.34%
  • Windows market share drops 3.11%
  • Mac market share increases 2.32%
  • Linux market share up 0,22%
  • iPhone market share up 0.32%

Other interesting factoids:

  • Dominant screen resolution is still 1024×768, but higher resolutions such as 1280×800, 1280×1024, 1440×900 and 1680×1050 have gained significant traction over the past 12 months
  • Comcast Cable, Road Runner, SBC Internet and Verizon Internet maintain the top ISP spots, but AOL drops from 5th place to 7th and Cox Communication takes AOL’s place

The most significant tidbit of info in this data is how Internet Explorer’s market share has tanked over the past twelve months. This is a serious problem for Microsoft and I don’t see anything in IE8 helping to buck this trend during 2009 - yes, IE8 is better, faster and more reliable, but there are other better, faster and more reliable browsers out there. If Microsoft had released a browser as good as IE8 two years ago things might be different now, but as it stands IE8 is too little, too late.

Thoughts?

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Adrian Kingsley-Hughes is an internationally published technology author who has devoted over a decade to helping users get the most from technology.

Disclosure

Adrian Kingsley-Hughes

All opinions expressed on Hardware 2.0 are those of Adrian Kingsley-Hughes. Every effort is made to ensure that the information posted is accurate. If you have any comments, queries or corrections, please contact Adrian via the email link here. Any possible conflicts of interest will be posted below. [Updated: February 23, 2010] - Adrian Kingsley-Hughes has no business relationships, affiliations, investments, or other actual/potential conflicts of interest relating to the content posted so far on this blog.

Biography

Adrian Kingsley-Hughes

Adrian Kingsley-Hughes is an internationally published technology author who has devoted over a decade to helping users get the most from technology -- whether that be by learning to program, building a PC from a pile of parts, or helping them get the most from their new MP3 player or digital camera.

Adrian has authored/co-authored technical books on a variety of topics, ranging from programming to building and maintaining PCs. His most recent books include "Build the Ultimate Custom PC", "Beginning Programming" and "The PC Doctor's Fix It Yourself Guide". He has also written training manuals that have been used by a number of Fortune 500 companies.

Adrian also runs a popular blog under the name The PC Doctor, where he covers a range of computer-related topics -- from security to repairing and upgrading.

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RE: Highlights from NetApplications data for December ???08 - Home users dominate data
Ez_Customs 5th Apr 2009
Well I can't say that I am happy about Windows 7 right now. I have downloaded the Build 7000 Right from MS FTP on the public beta. I was one of the first downloading it in the first 2 ours of it's public release. Well today I desided it was complately stable and fail safe. BLAH MS Fights back on a Perfect opinion when I install it to my main rig. Yep you guessed it, MS thinks that my Windows 7 Build 7000 is a illegal copy. I am using the same KEY with the very same image. I know this because it is in the same folder for the image. There is no way I ahve tried to use the wrong key which was originally used with this image.


So whats up with this. How can a beta version start to tell the user to buy a OS that isn't available for purchase yet, and not to mention even have a for sure release date. So what, they plan late summer, but really come on.


Are there any Ideas about this? Why would the Windows 7 integrety check tell me to buy a OS that I can't? Does this beta have restrictions on the Key for the system it was originally used? If so, how could it know any better if the PC wasn't even attached to a Ethernet card to have access to the internet?


I AM VERY BORTHERED BY THIS, SO DOES ANYONE HAVE ANY IDEAS ON THIS OR HOW TO LOOK IT UP! The software is honestly downloaded off MS, and I didn't download the software off the torrents anywhere. I dispise people who download off torrents to obtain the software that pushes the technology. Especially the ones that use it full time with no intent to buying. Testing torrent links okay, but to never plan on buying they should be shot. NEway this OS is authentic, but Windows 7 is telling me it isn't before it was even connected to the internet!!
0 Votes
+ -
resedintial
bannedfromzdnetagain 2nd Jan 2009
"Firefox market share up to 21.34%, the second month where
Firefox has broken the 30% barrier."

you mean the 20% barrier?

and yes december favors mac, safari and firefox, but have a
look 2006 and 2007, they kept their hights in january and
went from there. so it is probably not a seasonal one month
change.
0 Votes
+ -
Worthless Stats really...
Gnutella Updated - 2nd Jan 2009
It's interesting to look at the OS metrics as a
snapshot but to think that OSX is anywhere near 5% let
alone 10% worldwide is ludicrous.

As far IE goes...until they do something out the box
they will be limited to the users who think Internet=E
icon. How else can you explain IE6's marketshare...
0 Votes
+ -
Worthless Stats really...
SamYeager 2nd Jan 2009
"As far IE goes...until they do something out the box they will be limited to the users who think Internet=E icon. How else can you explain IE6's marketshare... "

Perhaps large enterprises that have mandated IE6 because that's what their intranet requires? Certainly high time these intranets were updated but that may not be a priority at present.
0 Votes
+ -
(NT)
0 Votes
+ -
Not entirely...
Sleeper Service 3rd Jan 2009
...most of the traffic will still be commercial it's just that December has less commercial traffic than any other month.
0 Votes
+ -
Apparent typo
Anton Philidor 2nd Jan 2009
Quoting:

Firefox market share up to 21.34%, the second month where Firefox has broken the 30% barrier.
0 Votes
+ -
Trends
sparkfarmer 2nd Jan 2009
I think everyone believes the new level of competition is a
healthy sign. Balance inevitably had to come at the cost of
Windows 95% share.
Well I can't say that I am happy about Windows 7 right now. I have downloaded the Build 7000 Right from MS FTP on the public beta. I was one of the first downloading it in the first 2 ours of it's public release. Well today I desided it was complately stable and fail safe. BLAH MS Fights back on a Perfect opinion when I install it to my main rig. Yep you guessed it, MS thinks that my Windows 7 Build 7000 is a illegal copy. I am using the same KEY with the very same image. I know this because it is in the same folder for the image. There is no way I ahve tried to use the wrong key which was originally used with this image.


So whats up with this. How can a beta version start to tell the user to buy a OS that isn't available for purchase yet, and not to mention even have a for sure release date. So what, they plan late summer, but really come on.


Are there any Ideas about this? Why would the Windows 7 integrety check tell me to buy a OS that I can't? Does this beta have restrictions on the Key for the system it was originally used? If so, how could it know any better if the PC wasn't even attached to a Ethernet card to have access to the internet?


I AM VERY BORTHERED BY THIS, SO DOES ANYONE HAVE ANY IDEAS ON THIS OR HOW TO LOOK IT UP! The software is honestly downloaded off MS, and I didn't download the software off the torrents anywhere. I dispise people who download off torrents to obtain the software that pushes the technology. Especially the ones that use it full time with no intent to buying. Testing torrent links okay, but to never plan on buying they should be shot. NEway this OS is authentic, but Windows 7 is telling me it isn't before it was even connected to the internet!!

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