Internet Explorer loses market share
The Internet Explorer is fast losing its market share, according to figures by Dutch based traffic outfit OneStat.com.
Apparently only 88.9 percent of known world use the browser indicating that its time is up and Vole should surrender entirely.
Niels Brinkman, OneStat.com co-founder, said in a statement that the defections from IE were to the new look Firefox or Mozilla.
Read the complete story here. (The Inquirer)
Torvalds rails against European Union
- VIA pitches chipset at multi-display applications
- Gigabyte intros SLI mainboard
- Seagate ships new generation of 15K RPM Cheetah drive
- Infineon announces 18 nm carbon nanotube transistor
- Sources: Prices for 30" LCD-TV panels fall to new low
- Albatron K8X890 Pro mobo supports 939-pin Athlon 64 CPUs
- Spam and virus shields beefed up
- Bill Gates sees spam "under control" in two years
- Google muscles into Microsoft's turf
DRM investor could swing EU Microsoft enquiry
- Firefox excites web browser world
- Kazaa offers unlimited free Internet phone calls
- ICQ joins webmail battle
- ATI launches mobile PCI Express GPUs for performance and mainstream notebooks
- Google sued by nude photo website
- Fast-Internet use doubles in U.S.
- Market research firm: Monitor-panel ASPs drop to new low
- Samsung to intensify SDRAM competition in 2005
- Asustek to launch own-brand LCD monitor, BTX barebone system and WL-HDD
Sponsored
See more
Latest news
Miscellaneous Previous news
Partners




