Google's
Chrome browser lost usage share for the fifth time in the last seven
months, while Mozilla's Firefox gained share for the second consecutive
month, a Web measurement company said Wednesday.
Net Applications, which calculates browser usage by tracking unique
visitors to approximately 40,000 Web sites, pegged Chrome's share for
July at 18.9%, a two-tenths of a percentage point decline from June.
Chrome has been in decline this year: Of the six months in which Chrome
went into the red since Net Applications began tracking the browser,
five were in 2012.
Firefox's share grew by one-tenth of a point to end the month at
20.2%, Net Applications declared. The open-source browser is up nearly
half a point since its four-year low of 19.7% in May 2012.
But Net Applications' numbers were again disputed by rival
StatCounter, which tallies browser share differently, counting page
views, not unique visitors, for about 3 million websites. And unlike Net
Applications, StatCounter does not weight the results by each country's
pool of online users.
The Irish analytics company said Chrome's share climbed 1.1 points to
33.8%, and that Firefox fell eight-tenths of a percentage point to
23.7%.
And while both companies agreed that Microsoft's Internet Explorer
(IE) relinquished share and that Apple's Safari gained ground, they
clashed when it came to the numbers. StatCounter said IE lost more, and
Safari gained more, than did Net Applications.
Their estimates for IE were simply irreconcilable. Net Applications
said IE had a July share of 53.9%, but StatCounter pegged the browser at
32%, a 21.9 point difference. The gap between their July results was
larger than the month before.
Chrome's share, too, was in dispute, with StatCounter's figure 14.9
points higher than Net Applications' assessment. That disparity was also
greater than June's results.
The companies' diverging data triggered an argument several weeks ago
about which delivers the more accurate estimate, especially for IE and
Chrome, where their differences are starkest. In June, each defended their methodology even as Google's top Chrome executive claimed his browser was the planet's most popular.
Not surprisingly, the companies disagreed on nearly everything,
including how the four supported editions of IE split Microsoft's share,
and how effectively Firefox's silent update process had pushed users to
the newest version.
Net Applications, for example, said IE8 accounted for 49.4% of all
copies of IE used during July, and was the most-used edition of any
browser. StatCounter put the 2009 application's share of all Microsoft
browsers at 41.4%, low enough to fall to second place behind the newer
IE9.
They could also not agree on whether Firefox 14 had been widely adopted.
Net Applications said Firefox 14's 2.9% overall share for July
represented 4% of all copies of Mozilla's browser, indicating that the
nearly-silent, background update mechanism that debuted in April had
failed to boost Firefox 14's uptake.
That contradicted StatCounter, which last month tracked a very rapid transition to Firefox 14: The Irish metrics company said that edition accounted for 22.2% of all copies of Firefox for the month.
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