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The top two are obviously IE and Netscape but which one is third? Is it Opera? Does the much loved AOL make up the top three? Or is it another one of the lesser used browsers?
Thanks,
luke
On those sites where I check the stats, I see IE, then AOL, then NS as the top 3
Could depend on the target audience of your site though. Opera would be more likely on a technically sophisticated site
BTW, see Googles Zeitgeist page [google.com] for details of browsers used to query Google (mostly different IE versions). Look at the IE6 trace. Scared yet?
They had #1 IE #2 Netscape #3 Opera
This is all I could scrape from the email (they made you go to there site for exact stats)
Microsoft and Netscape Still Dominating Browser War, but Opera Holds Its Own, According to WebSideStory's StatMarket.Opera Browser Accounts for Less Than 1% of the Global Market, But Has a Significantly Higher Usage Share In Some European Countries…
I might be missing something, but what's so hard about sorting Opera hits from Explorer hits? My web tracker identifies User Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 5.0; Windows 98) Opera 6.0 [en] as Browser: Opera 6.0 (MSIE 5.0 Emulation). Are you saying that Opera uses a straight MSIE agent with no reference to Opera?
They just don't get it right KM. There was a post around here a bit ago from ExtremeTracking of one of my client sites that I visit daily - not an Opera hit to be seen in the tracking.
The 5 faces of Opera:
Opera/6.01 (Windows 98; U) [en]
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows 98; U) Opera 6.01 [en]
Mozilla/4.78 (Windows 98; U) Opera 6.01 [en]
Mozilla/3.0 (Windows 98; U) Opera 6.01 [en]
Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 5.0; Windows 98) Opera 6.01 [en]
Additionally, when set in IE mode, it runs IE javascript. Thus triggering IE js counters.
When in Mozilla mode, it runs netscape code. Triggering NS counters.
When in native Opera mode, it runs the Opera code first, and if not present, it runs the Netscape code next. Again triggering Netscape counters again.
Thus, unless the code is fairly intelligent, they screw it up right at the js level and count Opera as something else.
i've noticed a tiny increase in the number of webtv users on my sites over the last year. i think this could be big within the next couple of years or so, but i also think that webtv "browsers" will have to fall into line with existing website design practices rather than websites having to be built for webtv.
As far as Opera hits go on my site, it usually runs 1.5 - 2 percent of my visitors, consistently. WebTV visits can run equal percentages but the visits are erratic and I think this service is on the decline (slated for the DOTCOM MORGUE).
I have seen a big increase in PDA browsers. It's hard to connect each user agent with a specific device though.
Before I give my stats on which browser comes in 1st, 2nd, or 3rd. Lets look at it this way. I bet it has to do with site content which browsers are used.
Example:
How many everyday people (lets call them "Users") How many users know about Opera? Not many!
How many techie aware people know about Opera? Many!
So based on this information, we have to think about site content. If I ran a techie site like Perl programming and such - I bet more Opera browsers would show more. If I my website was all about Martha Stewart *LOL then I would be willing to bet that Opera would not be as popular as say AOL.
So lets look at my findings..
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I have several clients I develop sites for, one (record company) which gets over 300,000 hits a month. I show #1. Internet Explorer, #2. Netscape a close second. #3. is AOL! and that depends on the month - some months AOL comes in a number 2.
I would be interested in seeing what a tech sites hits show for browser access? Anyway have that info to show?