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Now, a few days back, I saw a news article about OS marketshare. The numbers were pretty similar to what you usually hear, but with Windows continuing to slowly gain ground. As I recall, the numbers were 93.8% Windows, 2.9% Mac, and about 1% Linux, with the rest being a variety of systems.
95% marketshare for IE would represent 98.2% marketshare on Windows and the Mac. 98% overall marketshare would be 101.3% marketshare on those platforms.
100% marketshare would be a literal monopoly. During the antitrust case, the term "virtual monopoly" was widely used to mean something close to 100%. So my question is this: what's the proper term for 101%? Super Monopoly? Hyper Monopoly? Bogusstatsfromwebcountersopoly?
These statistically propaganda wars are a little freaky to me. Someone in another forum recently went so far as to take the Google graph of browser usage and count the pixels in order to estimate marketshare percentages from that, leading to a figure of about 5% for Mozilla and 88% for IE. Personally, my sites get higher percentages for both, around 8% Mozilla and 90% IE.
You just cannot throw a bunch of numbers together and call it statistics. I mean you can, but it has no meaning. There are theories with meaning behind statistics.
But if I didn't have a site yet and was deciding if I should spend the extra 'vigilance' money to make my future site look good in all browsers, I would probably look up some silly statistics like that.
Truthfully though, they would be enough for me to make a decision even if not scientifically significant. They're pretty overwhelming and consistent where-ever I find them.
shasan.
From what I see with my music business contacts, however, Mac users often have a "toolkit" of several browsers available, just out of self-defense. They're used to switching browsers just to make a website work.
we've got 1 client who's M$ % is less than 50%
The Bottom Line: Ignore "general" statistics from Google, TheCounter.com and the like, and always go by your statistics. Browser (and OS) usage can vary widely depending on the type of site you have.
...most Mac users have several browsers installed on their computer
Exactly. It's not uncommon to see the same IP address come in on mac/IE5 and then switch to mac/Safari, for instance.
Just last week I caught a problem on a set of pages
exactly that way. I wondered why and discovered that
IE5/mac was not drawing scrollbars for those pages.
And the only fix I could find was to use <center>
tags (oh, the shame of it!)