Mozilla Firefox, the open-source challenger to Microsoft's Internet Explorer, passed the 1-billion download mark on July 31, with a Website and Twitter feed marking the occasion. Although Firefox has managed to seize an increasing percentage of the consumer market since its original rollout in 2002, its gains have been somewhat slower in the enterprise, where a variety of factors have kept Internet Explorer as the browser of choice for many IT administrators.Mozilla's Firefox browser hit 1 billion downloads on July 31, with
the open-source foundation using the occasion to trumpet itself as a
viable alternative to Microsofts Internet Explorer.
On Aug. 3, Mozilla plans to launch a Website
to mark the achievement; details of the site content are under wraps,
but the foundation plans on highlighting "how global and diverse our
community has become," according to a posting on a corporate site. Mozilla also set up an account on Twitter counting towards that 1-billion mark.
At the moment Firefox hit that milestone, the browser was being downloaded some 24 times per second.
Since its original release in 2002, Firefox has slowly managed to gain
market share in the consumer market. A report by research firm
StatCounter in early July found that the various versions of
Microsofts Internet Explorer held 54.4 percent market share, down from
65.8 percent in March 2009, while the next-to-newest version of
Firefox, 3.0, held a 27.6 percent market share.
Those numbers doubtlessly have shifted since Mozillas release of Firefox 3.5,
which included new features such as support for HTML 5, JSON and Web
worker threads, on June 30. It followed the release by announcing an
upcoming patch, Firefox 3.5.1, that would include fixes to the
JavaScript engine, TraceMonkey, and adjust how the browser wins in
Windows XP. Since its release, more than 8 million copies of Firefox
3.5 have been downloaded.
But Firefoxs adoption by the consumer market seems much more
assured than for the enterprise, where IT administrators have voiced
concerns about whether their specialized business applications will run
on browsers aside from the "approved one" that many corporations
select.
IT administrators may also have issues with general compliance and
browser security, particularly if the enterprise in question engages in
secure online transactions. The use of a non-approved browser that
becomes compromised could also potentially open an enterprise to
lawsuits.
However, although Internet Explorer continues to dominate the
enterprise market, with a 78.0 percent market-share by December 2008,
Firefox managed to increase its own share to 18.2 percent during that
same period, according to StatCounter.
Firefox remains well ahead of Google Chrome, which StatCounter
estimated as having a 2.0 percent market share, and Apple Safari, which
owned a 1.4 percent market share. The research firms accompanying
report to those numbers suggested that enterprise integration of new
browsers could lead to increased productivity, as workers utilized
those applications latest enhancements to better leverage Web-based
applications.
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