ITPRO

Printed from www.itpro.co.uk

Register to receive our regular email newsletter at http://www.itpro.co.uk/reg/register.

The newsletter contains links to our latest IT news, product reviews, features and how-to guides, plus special offers and competitions.

Skip to navigation

    Internet Explorer: Is there any way back?

Rivals aren’t quite snapping at its heels yet, but can Internet Explorer 8 arrest the decline of Microsoft’s browser?

By Simon Brew, 18 Mar 2009 at 11:43

The recent web browser usage statistics don’t make friendly reading for Microsoft. Where once upon a time its Internet Explorer browser absolutely dominated its market, with a share of a staggering 95 per cent, it’s been in gradual decline for years. And with faster-moving and less bloated competitors, most specifically Firefox, arriving in the past few years, it’s been under steady and effective attack.

The numbers for February 2009, as compiled by Net Applications, see Microsoft’s continued struggles with Internet Explorer brought into focus. The browser has been in decline continuously for some time, and right now, it holds 67.51 per cent of the market.

In contrast, Firefox – which barely registered five years ago – has grown to 21.73 per cent of the market, and it’s continuing to escalate. Apple too is resurgent, with its Safari browser now accounting for eight per cent of the market, and then there’s the small matter of Google Chrome too.

It’s already overtaken Opera to snare itself 1.15 per cent market share. With Google expected to give Chrome a major push in the next twelve months, it’s fair to say that the browser marketplace has never been tougher.

And that shifts the onus very much onto Microsoft’s upcoming Internet Explorer 8, from which much is expected and hoped for. But can it turn the tide back in Microsoft’s favour?

Meet number eight

Right now, Internet Explorer 8 is available in beta, and digging into the detail of IE’s market share, it already accounts for 1.17 per cent of the entire browser market – the most used version of Internet Explorer is 7, with 47.32 per cent share, followed by the 18.85 per cent who are still using IE6. That said, beta versions have been swimming around for a year already, so perhaps that number’s not too impressive.

However, IE8 has been attracting some positive feedback. Certainly the early reviews of the beta were complementary, and Microsoft’s move towards standards-compliance is both welcome and long overdue.

For too long, the firm has been able to get away with bending standards to suit its own product, so dominant was it in the marketplace. Thus, rivals got a browbeating for seemingly being incompatible with certain web pages, when it was actually Microsoft in the wrong.

Ironically, it’s Microsoft that’s on the receiving end of that now, but its about-turn shouldn’t be sneered at. Backwards-compatibility is inevitably going to be a crucial part of Internet Explorer 8 – to the point where a specific feature to render IE7 pages is being built into it – and once over this current hurdle, web developers the world over will be able to cater for one set of standards alone. That has to be a good thing.

Yet despite this, and the generally warmly-received feature set of Internet Explorer 8, there’s still a problem that’s hampered the latest iteration of Microsoft’s browser. And that’s time.

Too long?

The first betas of IE8 got positive reviews last year because they were implementing new ideas, were loading pages in some cases faster than their rivals, and were dealing with Flash content well – something that browsers struggle with most of all, it seems.

Previous
1 2

Email to a friend

Print this page

< Previous   Networking : Analysis & Insight Next >

1 comments

You need to Login or Register to comment.

By choice, or by default?

The usual phases for an Internet Explorer version will be passed through, with it finally ending up as a pushed update with opt-out. If the drive towards standards support works, then there will be less reason to stay with the blue e. It seems that while IE is slowly assimilating features that were pioneered by others, eg. tabbed browsing, the key leverage of pages coded for IE's rendering will be fading. Unless MS are compelled to remove IE from default installation, it will still be the browser of default.

By Ip_nonsense574f8 on Friday Mar 20

2 people out of 6 found this comment useful.

Did you find it useful?

    You may also like...

 Sponsored Links

advertisement

    You may also like...

    Latest Networking Tutorials

Internet Explorer 8

Internet Explorer 8 in action

As the Internet Explorer 8 release candidate becomes available to download Mary Branscombe looks at what your users are going to be making support calls about, from rich search results to anonymous browsing.

Read more

 
advertisement

    Latest Analysis & Insight Videos in Networking

Q&A: Mikko Hyppönen, chief research officer, F-Secure

Play Q&A: Mikko Hyppönen, chief research officer, F-Secure   Play

We ask one of the leading experts on cyber crime for an assessment of the recent spate of cyber attacks and the growing threats to companies...

 
Sponsored Links
Advertisement