Microsoft's browser market share hits a record low

midian182

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In brief: When it comes to browser market share, Chrome is king. And while there are other, arguably better options than Google’s product, it seems Microsoft’s offerings don’t appeal to the masses, with Edge and IE user numbers falling to record lows.

The results come from Net Applications, which shows that Microsoft’s total browser share for September fell 1.8 percent to an all-time low of just 12 percent—down from a high of 14 percent in April. Most of the decline was due to IE, which fell 1.4 percent to a record low of 6.1 percent. Edge, meanwhile, was down slightly to 5.9 percent.

Microsoft last week issued an out-of-band security update for internet explorer after a critical vulnerability was discovered, which likely convinced more people to abandon the aging browser.

With Edge being pre-installed in Windows 10, one might have expected to see the browser’s market share increase, especially as the OS is continuing to make gains while Windows 7 declines, but that isn’t the case. Instead, more people are turning to Chrome, which was up another 1.3 percent to take a 68.5 percent share.

The news comes after Microsoft’s Chromium-powered, reimagined Edge got a beta release in August. The company will doubtlessly be hoping the revamped version of the browser can capture some of Chrome’s users when it releases in full, but we’ll just have to wait and see.

Looking at other browsers, Firefox saw very slight growth last month, reaching an 8.7 percent market share, though it has declined by almost an entire percentage point over the last 12 months.

Chrome might be sitting at the top of the pile right now, but ComputerWorld notes that it still has a way to go before reaching IE’s share from January 2005, when it boasted a massive 89.4 percent of the market.

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With the remaining marketshare, Safari has less marketshare than IE with hundreds of millions of iPhones in use? This must be about desktop browser market share.
 
Yeah, time to go straight to the funeral, but save money and just have it cremated!
 
I wanted to use Internet Explorer again and the websites got stuck most of the times. I tried many versions until Edge and all of them behaved the same.

The best browsing experience is offered by Chrome, there is no doubt about it.

Also, with the search engine war, I tried Yahoo, ask Jeeves, Bing and none of them showed the right info I was looking for. I googled the same sentence and the info popped right in front of my eyes. It is like google is reading our minds, IT IS AMAZING!!!
 
I work on Xerox machines. ALL of our manuals, EVERYTHING is tied into IE. You really can't do squat without IE. The only time I use IE is when I work on one of the machines.
 
With the remaining marketshare, Safari has less marketshare than IE with hundreds of millions of iPhones in use? This must be about desktop browser market share.
It's probably is, otherwise Chrome would also shoot up as well since there are literally BILLIONS of Android phones using Chrome.
 
...[ ]...The best browsing experience is offered by Chrome, there is no doubt about it.
I would beg to differ. Opera is based with the Chrome engine, and shouldn't differ substantially from Chrome itself, and Google is the default search engine

Also, with the search engine war, I tried Yahoo, ask Jeeves, Bing and none of them showed the right info I was looking for. I googled the same sentence and the info popped right in front of my eyes. It is like google is reading our minds, IT IS AMAZING!!!
"Reading your mind" is a bit exaggerated, but damned close to what happens. Google will return accurate results with fairly complex and specific requests. They've already read billions of minds, and at this point, they all look alike to Google's AI and servers.

Well, uh, yeh, they practically do, really.
At least they only probe your pocketbook, and unlike alien visitation probes, they limit themselves to non physical interventions.
 
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I've been using the new version of Edge since March, before it was in Beta and I've actually uninstalled Chrome now. They've added the ability to sync bookmarks, passwords etc... to a Microsoft account so now I have no need for Chrome or a Google account.

On my personal machine at home I still use Chrome, but I think I'll probably change to the new version of Edge when it releases, Just one less thing to have to install and worry about.
 
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