Here are the browser stats from the last month, and the same period 1 & 2 year's ago:
Type | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 |
---|---|---|---|
IE | 70% | 65% | 58% |
Firefox | 22% | 27% | 27% |
Safari | 4% | 5.4% | 8.6% |
Chrome | - | - | 3.1% |
Opera | .93% | 1% | .96% |
Looking at the underlying data I'd draw the following conclusions:
- IE use is on the decline generally, and IE users are the slowest at upgrading
- Firefox usage appears to have plateaued (and they are the fastest to upgrade)
- Most growth is in new browser entrants.
- There is greater market fragmentation (more choice for consumers)
Type | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 |
---|---|---|---|
Windows | 91.8% | 90.4% | 86.6% |
Macintosh | 7% | 8% | 10.7% |
GNU/Linux | .98% | 1.3% | 1.83% |
iPhone | - | .06% | 0.33% |
Around 73% of Windows users still use XP, and only 56% of Mac users are on OSX 10.5. The lower rate of Mac upgrades could limited by hardware restrictions.
For many website developers these figures will represent a significant challenge - you can no longer design your website for any one browser or OS. The days of 'best viewed in browser X' are gone.
And yes, I still see sites that only work in IE. I went to get an on-line quote for something last week, and the site simply would not work in Firefox or Safari. I took my business elsewhere. The average punter isn't going to know why - they'll just think the site doesn't work. Is this the branding message you want to send to visitors?
Based on these stats, failing to design cross-platform websites will give at least 15% of your users an inferior experience. That is a lot of lost traffic (and business).
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