Internet
Explorer 6 is very nearly dead in the United States.
According to
research firm Net Applications, use of IE6 in this country has
dropped to beneath 1 percent. This is good news to Microsoft, which has been
anything but private about its all-consuming desire to have users switch from
the 10-year-old browser to a newer version.
“IE6 has been
the punch line of browser jokes for a while, and we’ve been as eager as anyone
to see it go away,” Roger Capriotti, a member of Internet Explorer’s marketing
team, wrote in a Jan. 3 posting on The Windows Blog. “We hope this means more
developers and IT Pros can consider IE6 a ‘low-priority’ at this point and stop
spending their time having to support such an outdated browser.”
A number of
countries have also dropped below that 1 percent mark, he added, including
Austria, Poland, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Norway.
Early in 2011,
Microsoft even started a Website, The Internet Explorer 6 Countdown, which used data from Net Applications to detail
IE6 usage around the world. As of December, that total stood at 7.7 percent,
most of it in mainland China. In addition, Microsoft has encouraged users to
spread the word about upgrading to a new browser, and offered Website owners
code for displaying a “You are using an outdated browser” banner to visitors
using IE6.
Despite that
push, a number of users have stuck with IE6 as part of Windows XP, another
legacy platform that Microsoft desperately wants the world to abandon in favor
of Windows 7. Some enterprises and SMBs have also historically depended on IE6
in order to run older, proprietary applications.
Microsoft is
intent on creating browsers that leverage both Windows and local hardware in
order to more quickly deliver fully rendered Websites. It is currently prepping
two versions of Internet Explorer 10 for Windows 8: one a more traditional
desktop application, the other a “Metro”-style one for tablets running the
upcoming operating system.
According to
Net Applications, the combined versions of Internet Explorer hold some 51.87
percent of the desktop-browser market, followed by Firefox at 21.83 percent,
Chrome at 19.11 percent and Safari at 4.97 percent.
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