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Chrome Grabs 1% in One Day!

Sep. 3rd 2008

According to research conducted by StatCounter, Google’s new browser, Chrome, has taken 1% of the global browser market within a day of launch. Google’s unusual step of publicizing the Chrome browser on its notoriously clutter-free homepage is an indication of the plans that Google has for this browser… “This is a phenomenal performance” commented Aodhan Cullen, “this is war on Microsoft but the big loser could be Firefox.” While Google may have the Internet Explorer market share in its sites, the fact that many Firefox users are more “mobile” as far as browser use is concerned, may impact on the current Firefox market share.

Note: The StatCounter analysis was conducted today, Wednesday, 03 September 2008, and was based on a sample of 18.5 million page views globally. The analysis identified that Internet Explorer holds 70% of the global browser market followed by Firefox with 22%.

Credits: Stat Counter

Posted by BajaCreator | in Internet, Web Browsers, Websurfing | Comments Off

New Firefox 3.0 breaks records

Jun. 20th 2008

According to the Mozilla foundation that released the new browser, the software was downloaded 8.3 million times in its first 24 hours of release starting Tuesday morning.

The downloads were so popular that they initially crashed the servers running the operation. At their busiest, the servers were handling more than 9,000 downloads per minute and within five hours had surpassed the initial daily download of 1.6 million set by Firefox 2.0 in October 2006. But the success was tempered by reports from a software security company that Firefox 3.0 contained a serious security flaw! Within five hours after the official release, security tool vendor TippingPoint noted a “critical vulnerability” affecting Firefox 3.0 and 2.0 and reported it to Mozilla. (remark by publisher: I’m not aware of security flaws being reported before on FF 2.0 - so they found that in just 2.0 just now???)

Mozilla on its security blog stated that, “There is no public exploit, the details are private, and so the current risk to users is minimal. We are investigating the issue. At Mozilla we appreciate any report of security issues because that is how we make the browser stronger and more secure. The best way to keep Firefox users safe is to report the issues directly to Mozilla as TippingPoint has chosen to, and to wait to release details until a fix is available.

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Posted by BajaCreator | in Web Browsers, Web Development | Comments Off