Microsoft: IE 9 Approaching 10 Percent Usage Share on Windows 7
Microsoft reports this weekend that its recently-released Internet Explorer 9 web browser continues to race up the usage share charts, achieving almost 10 percent share for Windows 7 users in April. (The company cites market research from NetApplications.) This month’s share report from Net Applications continues to show some great momentum around Internet Explorer 9 on Windows 7, with share about to pass 10% for the last day in April. For the entire month this averages 7.5% usage share on Windows 7– doubling the usage share number of 3.6% in March. With Windows 7 selling more than 350 million licenses in the 18 months since its release, more and more people every day are enjoying better web experiences with Windows 7 and IE9. NetApplications, for its part, semi-rhetorically wonders whether Microsoft’s strategy of skipping Windows XP support in IE 9 makes sense. And then decides it does. After one month, Internet Explorer 9 is benefiting from Windows 7 momentum and has doubled its usage share on Windows 7 from 3.6% last month to 7.5% in April. Also, Internet Explorer 9's daily usage share for the last day of the month (April 30th) hit 9.95% worldwide on Windows 7. I think I’ve been clear about this, but to reiterate: Speaking general, Microsoft’s biggest problem these days is not moving aggressively enough, and that’s true whether you’re talking about Windows Phone updates, Windows Live Essentials, Windows-based tablets, or virtually anything else. So is Microsoft “skipping” XP support the right thing? Duh. Of course it is. I wish more of the company would take this cue from the IE guys and move as aggressively in their own markets.
May 1, 2011
Microsoft reports this weekend that its recently-released Internet Explorer 9 web browser continues to race up the usage share charts, achieving almost 10 percent share for Windows 7 users in April. (The company cites market research from NetApplications.)
This month’s share report from Net Applications continues to show some great momentum around Internet Explorer 9 on Windows 7, with share about to pass 10% for the last day in April.
For the entire month this averages 7.5% usage share on Windows 7– doubling the usage share number of 3.6% in March. With Windows 7 selling more than 350 million licenses in the 18 months since its release, more and more people every day are enjoying better web experiences with Windows 7 and IE9.
NetApplications, for its part, semi-rhetorically wonders whether Microsoft’s strategy of skipping Windows XP support in IE 9 makes sense. And then decides it does.
After one month, Internet Explorer 9 is benefiting from Windows 7 momentum and has doubled its usage share on Windows 7 from 3.6% last month to 7.5% in April. Also, Internet Explorer 9's daily usage share for the last day of the month (April 30th) hit 9.95% worldwide on Windows 7.
I think I’ve been clear about this, but to reiterate: Speaking general, Microsoft’s biggest problem these days is not moving aggressively enough, and that’s true whether you’re talking about Windows Phone updates, Windows Live Essentials, Windows-based tablets, or virtually anything else. So is Microsoft “skipping” XP support the right thing? Duh. Of course it is. I wish more of the company would take this cue from the IE guys and move as aggressively in their own markets.
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