Market adoption of Mozilla Firefox

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Mozilla Firefox
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Since its initial release in 2004, market adoption of Mozilla Firefox has increased rapidly. Firefox is the second-most popular browser worldwide, after Internet Explorer.

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[edit] Usage share

Usage share of alternative web browsers (non-IE browsers):        Firefox      Safari      Opera      Netscape      Mozilla      Other
Usage share of alternative web browsers (non-IE browsers):[1]
     Firefox      Safari      Opera      Netscape      Mozilla      Other
See also: Usage share of web browsers

Web-surfers have adopted Firefox rapidly, despite the availability of Internet Explorer on almost all Microsoft Windows NT PCs. Internet Explorer has seen a steady decline of its usage share since Firefox's release. As of May 2008, according to NetApplications, Firefox had 18.41% worldwide usage share of web browsers, making it the second most-used browser, after Internet Explorer.[2]

Europe, according to a study released by the firm XiTi in March 2008, generally had higher percentages of Firefox use, with an average of 28.8%. The highest usage is in Finland (about 45.9% as of March 2008).[3]

[edit] Download count

A graph of Firefox 1.x and 2.x cumulative downloads in millions
A graph of Firefox 1.x and 2.x cumulative downloads in millions
A graph of Firefox 1.x and 2.x download rate in thousands per day
A graph of Firefox 1.x and 2.x download rate in thousands per day

Downloads have continued at an increasing rate since Firefox 1.0 was released in November 2004. No other Mozilla Foundation product has experienced such growth.[4]

Downloads of Firefox 1.x and 2.x since November 9, 2004
Date Number of days Downloads (millions)
November 10, 2004 1 1[5]
February 16, 2005 99 25[6]
April 29, 2005 171 50[7]
July 26, 2005 259 75[8]
October 19, 2005 344 100[9]
March 3, 2006 479 150[10]
July 31, 2006 629 200[11]
November 11, 2006 732 250[12]
February 12, 2007 825 300[13]
September 7, 2007 1032 400[14]
February 21, 2008 1199 500[15]

These numbers do not include downloads using software updates or from third-party websites. They do not represent a user count, as one download may be installed on many machines, or one person may download the software multiple times. According to Mozilla, Firefox had about 180 million users as of May 2008.[16]

[edit] Industry adoption

Since the pre-1.0 stages, several well-known websites and web applications, including Gmail, have supported (and in some cases, required) the use of Firefox. Since March 30, 2005, the Google search engine has utilized the link prefetching feature of Firefox for faster searching. Google, Inc. also recommends Firefox as the browser for its Blogger.com weblog service.[17] On May 18, 2005, eBay announced support for Firefox for its eBay Picture Manager.[18] In 2006, Microsoft released a Firefox-compatible Windows Genuine Advantage browser plug-in.[19]

Search engine companies including Google, Yahoo! and A9.com now also offer Firefox extensions for accessing their services, in addition to their original Internet Explorer add-ons. Google has released four Extensions for Firefox,[20] further affirming the company's interest in Firefox.

In addition, some software packages, such as the Ubuntu distribution of Linux, are bundled with Firefox.

[edit] Institutional adoption

During the FOSDEM 2005 conference, Tristan Nitot, president of Mozilla Europe, noted that Firefox has had more success in the consumer market than with institutions.[21] He also theorized that pressure from Microsoft caused institutions who had adopted Firefox to remain silent about it.

I know companies that are deploying Firefox or Thunderbird, but they aren't talking about it as they don't want to see an increase in their [Microsoft] Office licence price.

Some observers, such as Serdar Yegulalp of TechTarget[22] and Jim Rapooza of eWEEK[23] note that Firefox does not provide tools that make institutional deployment easier, such as a client customization kit (which Mozilla has since released[24]) or Microsoft Installer (MSI) packages. Yegulalp also notes that although Firefox does not natively support ActiveX plugins, which are sometimes used in institutional environments, third party bridges are available.

While institutions may not be actively deploying Firefox in large numbers, more and more are allowing their employees to install Firefox, according to JupiterResearch. They found that in 2006, 44% of companies with more than 200 employees allowed Firefox on their employees' systems, compared with 26% in 2005.[25]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Market share for browsers, operating systems and search engines
  2. ^ Browser Market Share (2008-06-01). Retrieved on 2008-06-01.
  3. ^ Relaunch of Mozilla Firefox’s visit share in the European countries at the end of 2007. XiTi.com (2008-01-29). Retrieved on 2008-02-18.
  4. ^ Firefox and more: the graphs (part 1). Asa Dotzler's weblog.
  5. ^ 1,000,000+ downloads on day 1
  6. ^ firefox 25,000,000
  7. ^ celebrating 50 million firefox downloads
  8. ^ Firefox Exceeds 75 million Downloads
  9. ^ firefox hits one hundred million downloads
  10. ^ 150 million and counting!
  11. ^ Firefox 200 Million Downloads - what it means
  12. ^ 250000000 downloads!
  13. ^ Firefox: 300 million+ downloads
  14. ^ Four Hundred Million Firefox Downloads
  15. ^ 500+ Million Celebration
  16. ^ Larry Greenemeier (2008-05-27). The latest version of the Firefox Web browser: Fast and secure. Scientific American. Retrieved on 2008-06-01.
  17. ^ Where can I upgrade my browser? Blogger Help.
  18. ^ eBay Picture Manager Enhancements. eBay.
  19. ^ Genuine Microsoft Software (HTML). Windows Genuine Advantage: Frequently Asked Questions. Microsoft Corporation (2006). Retrieved on 2006-11-06.
  20. ^ Google Firefox Extensions
  21. ^ Firefox sneaks into the enterprise. ZDNet UK.
  22. ^ Serdar Yegulalp. How to switch an enterprise from IE to Firefox. TechTarget. Retrieved on 2006-10-08.
  23. ^ Jim Rapooza. Mozilla Firefox 1.0. eWEEK. Retrieved on 2006-10-08.
  24. ^ Firefox 1.5 CCK (Client Customization Kit) Wizard. Retrieved on 2006-09-22.
  25. ^ J. Nicholas Hoover. IE7 vs. Firefox 2.0: Why This Browser Battle Matters To Businesses. InformationWeek. Retrieved on 2006-10-17.
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