Or it may be the strongest signal yet that Microsoft’s browsers may have a share basement beyond which they won’t sink.Įxhibit A for the latter: For the first seven months of this year, IE+Edge lost four percentage points, representing a 15% reduction from their Jan. July’s loss was the smallest since March, and the second smallest since December 2014.Īt times, browser share data is too fickle for illustrating short-range trends, so the five-month slow-down in IE+Edge declines could be an artifact of the metrics company’s methodology. analytics vendor Net Applications, the user share of Internet Explorer (IE) and Edge - an estimate of the proportion of the world’s personal computer owners that ran those browsers - dipped by three-tenths of a percentage point, ending at a combined 22.2%. ![]() To wit: Even as Microsoft’s browser share again declined during July, at least it was a smaller contraction than of late, perhaps giving those in Redmond hope that the worst is behind them and at some point the downward lines on their charts will flatten.Īccording to data from U.S.
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