Microsoft’s Internet Explorer (IE) web browser reversed years of declines and posted a net gain of 1.2 percent usage share globally over the past five months, according to a report from measurement firm NetApplications.
As of March 2012, IE claimed 53.83 percent of web browser market share, followed by Firefox with 20.55 percent, Google’s Chrome browser with 18.57 percent and Safari with 5.07 percent. Opera placed fifth with 1.62 percent, and other web browsers claimed the remaining 0.36 percent.
“With a gain of .99 percent last month and a net gain of 1.2 percent global usage share over the last five months, Internet Explorer has stabilised and even reversed its usage share declines of the last few years,” the company wrote.
Chrome witnessed its third straight month of declines after falling from its peak of 19.11 percent market share in December 2011. Although Apple’s Safari browser slipped in market share from February to March, the browser’s overall market share rose .07 percent for the five-month period.
The IE8 browser was the most used desktop browser, comprising 25.4 percent of the market, followed by IE9 with 15.17 percent. Chrome 17 took third place with 14.73 percent, while Firefox claimed fourth place with 7.79 percent market share. IE6, which Microsoft had been making a big fuss about the death of in the US, rounded out the top five with 6.9 percent.
As of December, that total stood at 7.7 percent, most of it in mainland China. However, according to the January NetApplications report, use of IE6 in this country has dropped to below 1 percent. Early in 2011, Microsoft started a website, The Internet Explorer 6 Countdown, which used data from Net Applications to detail IE6 usage around the world.
Microsoft is intent on creating browsers that leverage Windows and hardware in order to more quickly deliver fully rendered websites. With Internet Explorer 10, Microsoft plans on further embracing that theme. To that end, the next-generation browser will come to the upcoming Windows 8 in two versions: one for the desktop, and another “Metro”-style one for tablets. The desktop version will fully support plug-ins and extensions, while the Metro-style browser will be plug-in free.
On the mobile browser side of things, Safari continued to dominate, grabbing 60.54 percent of market share in March, compared with 18.3 percent for Google’s Android Browser, 15.39 percent for Opera Mini, 1.73 percent for BlackBerry and 1.56 percent for Symbian. The “other” category comprised 2.48 percent of mobile browser market share, according to the report.
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