Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 21st Nov 2008 00:11 UTC, submitted by Moulinneuf
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RE[3]: Grasping at straws...
by Adurbe on Fri 21st Nov 2008 16:45
in reply to "RE[2]: Grasping at straws..."
Its 'catch up' in the respect it included tabs, rss and security :-p
IE7 is good enough that many people done HAVE to switch to firefox or anything else
My point was really that Microsoft only inovate when they have competion and 'something to beat'
IE 6 is an example, in my opinion, of a product that was allowed to stagnate because of the lack of anything credible to compete against at the time
Remember that firefox (Phoenix) wasnt even yet around when ie 6 came out and netscape were basically dead
RE[4]: Grasping at straws...
by StaubSaugerNZ on Fri 21st Nov 2008 19:32
in reply to "RE[3]: Grasping at straws..."
Remember that firefox (Phoenix) wasnt even yet around when ie 6 came out and netscape were basically dead
Utter rubbish. Plenty of us were using 'Mozilla' long before Firefox was split off. Just because The Followers didn't know about it doesn't mean the Early Adopters weren't aware of it.





Member since:
2007-02-17
IE6 is in decline. IE7 picks up some of the losses, but not all, so that the rate of increase of IE7 is only about half to one third of the rate of decline of IE6.
Therefore the overall share IE6 + IE7 is decreasing. Firefox, Google Chrome, Opera and Safari are all increasing share. Firefox enjoys the bulk of the increases.
IE8 is too low to be measured at this time, since it has not yet been released to a wide audience.
I don't know where you get this notion of IE7 being a "catch up" ... it is a long way behind firefox and losing ground.