Firefox Grabs 20% Market Share

By | December 1, 2008


For the first time in history, Firefox has reached and stayed above 20% market share mark. This is a great victory for both, developers and its fans.

Next stop is 50%

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About (Author Profile)


Vygantas is a former web designer whose projects are used by companies such as AMD, NVIDIA and departed Westood Studios. Being passionate about software, Vygantas began his journalism career back in 2007 when he founded FavBrowser.com. Having said that, he is also an adrenaline junkie who enjoys good books, fitness activities and Forex trading.

Comments (9)

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  1. Emil Ivanov says:

    I think the next milestone is 30% as I remember that was said by Mozilla.

  2. wut says:

    Net Applications?

    LOL.

    Those guys EDIT THEIR STATS to make them look like they want them to look. According to them, Opera had 5-6% a year ago or so. But suddenly they changed it and edited the stats manually to move Opera down to 0.something% instead.

    People need to stop listening to the liars at Net Applications

  3. Tiago Sá says:

    Well, most people and websites rely on them. You’d think they’re reliable…

  4. Swenson says:

    But it is true that they edited their stats, also their historical figures, in a major way without leaving any kind of notice what happened.

    Not really a scientific approach to statistics.

    Lots of people trusted GWB too, was that a reason to trust him?

  5. nobody says:

    state your stats site then

  6. wut says:

    Who is “nobody” talking to?

  7. nobody says:

    to you, the man that claims net applications are not reliable. state ‘reliable’ stats then

  8. Swenson says:

    Since when did it become obligatory to have a better alternative every time you criticize something?

    The point is that net applications statistics are published everywhere on the net, without any questioning. It just seems like everyone trust them “because they are the most relied on source”.

    But noone knows how they calculate their stats. Changing historical figures without saying beep makes them look like they just make the numbers up.

  9. wut says:

    @nobody

    That’s the point. No stats are reliable. NO ONE has a representative sample. All of these claimed global browser stats are STATISTICALLY USELESS.

    Statistics 101, people.