Google’s Chrome Web browser enjoyed its biggest monthly market share boost ever and could pass Mozilla’s Firefox browser in early 2012, according to the latest data from Net Applications.
The market researcher put Chrome at 17.6 percent through October, an impressive 1.4 percent gain from the fledgling browser’s September share of 16.2 percent. The only other time Chrome grew more than one percent month-to-month, by Net Applications calculations, is when the browser grew from 14.3 percent to 15.5 percent.
Mozilla Firefox, meanwhile, rose from 22.48 percent in September to 22.51 percent last month. But Firefox’s share is falling more often than it gains and Chrome today is within five percent of Firefox. Last August, analyst firm Starcounter stated that Chrome had already overtaken FireFox in its calculations.
Chrome’s rapid iteration cycle – it is on version 15 – is largely responsible for the growth, though online and TV ads have helped spread the word.
Google CEO Larry Page said, during Google’s third quarter earnings call on 13 October, that Chrome has more than 200 million users worldwide. “Turns out people really care about getting to the Web quickly and securely, and having a whole ecosystem of apps at their fingertips,” Page said.
Microsoft Internet Explorer was the biggest loser for the month, dropping from 54.4 percent in September to 52.6 percent last month. Apple’s Safari browser jumped from 5 percent in September to 5.4 percent last month.
Safari grew even more on the mobile browser/tablet front, which Net Applications began counting separately last month after acknowledging the “combination of mobile and tablet usage has continued to rise dramatically”. Safari share of mobile jumped from 55.6 percent in September to 62.2 percent in October.
Google’s Android platform also grew, going from 16 percent two months ago to 18.7 percent, knocking Opera Mini from the No. 2 spot and sending that browser’s share spiralling down from 18.9 percent to 13 percent for the period.
Indeed, Safari and Android together account for 80 percent of the market, a sign of just how much the mobile Web market has become a two-horse race between Apple’s iOS-based iPhone, iPad and iPod touch and smartphones and tablets based on Android.
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