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August 3rd, 2009

Revamped NetApplications data: Bad for IE and Mac OS, good for Chrome

Posted by Adrian Kingsley-Hughes @ 8:11 am

Categories: In the news

Tags: Apple Macintosh, Apple Safari, Operating System, Apple Inc., Microsoft Internet Explorer, NetApplications, Web Browsers, Apple Mac OS, Operating Systems, Internet

Web metrics company NetApplications has released revamped data that’s good news for Google and the Chrome browser, and bad news for Microsoft and Apple.

NetApplications has introduced a new weighting methodology that’s based on the estimated size of each country’s Internet population. This new methodology, which has been applied retrospectively to the old data, has meant that some companies have gained ground, while others have lost.

The biggest hit has been taken by Apple’s Safari browser. Its share has gone from 8.4% in May (based on the old methodology) to only 4.1%. That’s a major knock. The reason is simple - the data was too US-oriented, and normalizing that meant that Apple’s place in the world was put into context. This drop has hit Apple’s OS and Safari share hard.

Things are also bad for Microsoft. While IE6 has seen its share rebound dramatically (from around 17% to around 28%, so despite what anyone says, IE6 lives on, unfortunately), IE’s overall share has slipped. Again, the US-bias in the data skewed the global importance of IE.

But the change in methodologies has been good for some. Take Google Chrome. Now that Safari’s importance has slipped, Chrome is only 1.5% behind taking third place. Heck, even Opera is in with a chance of taking third place.

The shift in OS data is also interesting. While Windows is up there with a 93% usage share, with Mac at 4.9% and Linux at 1%, you begin to realize that Apple’s ads make the company seem like a much bigger player than it really is globally.

It’ll be interesting to see how the companies affected take this information and spin it. My guess is that it’s a stark reminder of how different things are when you look at things globally. Funny how some of the biggest global names look smaller when looked at from a global standpoint.

Adrian Kingsley-HughesAdrian is a technology journalist and author who has devoted over a decade to helping users get the most from technology. He also runs a popular blog called The PC Doctor. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations

Want to get in touch? Got a tip? Feel free to drop me a note! I ALWAYS respect anonymity. I'm also on Twitter (@the_pc_doc)

Right to Reply: Should any industry representatives wish to comment on any posts on Hardware 2.0, I will be happy to publish their reply verbatim on this blog.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 12 Talkback(s)
Windows at 93% usage share, with Mac at 4.9% and Linux at 1%,
With the rest of them using... err... this might seem silly. What are the rest of them using? (Read the rest)
Posted by: goff256 Posted on: 08/07/09  (Edited: 08/07/09 @ 12:30) You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Finally Properly Weighted Statistics ...  MisterMiester | 08/03/09
Finally.  Gnutella | 08/03/09
Silence is Deafening ...  MisterMiester | 08/03/09
This is the best quote I've read for ages...  Scrat | 08/03/09
This isn't surprising  NonZealot | 08/03/09
Multiple OSes per household?  Ben_E | 08/03/09
Marching orders from who?  Ken_z | 08/03/09
Why not just show the data Adrian?  tonymcs@... | 08/03/09
I'm confused about this whole thing.  Macintoshtoffy | 08/04/09
You are comparing todays numbers...  mrlinux | 08/06/09
So...  Fred Fredrickson | 08/04/09
Windows at 93% usage share, with Mac at 4.9% and Linux at 1%,  goff256 | 08/07/09

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