Exactly an year ago, Google announced the launch of its web-browser, Chrome! And since then we have discussed about the browser wars and the impact of Google Chrome on the browser industry on a consistent basis.
When we tried making sense out of the numbers and stats last year, many believed its way too early to judge the browser-kid. And then, we had a look again during April 2009 on where each browser stand. I believe its the right time to have a re-look at the numbers now, when Google Chrome is 1 year old.
Google Chrome Stats – Straight from Google
Google Chrome’s commemorative blog post on the eve of its first birthday reveals some interesting facts and stats about the browser Nice stats, aren’t they? Damn, who cares about the developmental stats? what matters is the industry/market share. So in 12 months, how much ground has Google made? Well, not much! According to stats from Market Share/Net Applications, Chrome only has 2.84% of the market, far behind Internet Explorer’s 66.87% or Firefox’s 22.98%. – 51 developer releases, 21 beta releases or updates, and 15 stable releases or updates – Over 20,600 bugs filed (4367 of them were duplicates, 3505 have been fixed, which leaves a whole lot left to go!) – 11 external committers and bug editors, 46 external code contributors – 50 Chrome Experiments – 26 posts on the Google Chrome (Google Chrome) blog – 12 Chrome Shorts, a collection of short films about Google Chrome – A sequel to the comic in Japanese More importantly, we’ve improved by over 150% on Javascript performance since our initial beta.
Some might argue that Chrome is still an year old and a baby in front of Uncle Microsoft IE and Aunt Firefox. But hey! We are talking about Google, who is looked upon as the “Dad of the Internet”, someone who can capture any market on the web with ease! In that sense, isn’t the numbers way too dull? As a practice, let us have a look at 3 million+ visitors to TechPP during August 2009 and how the stats compare to April 2009 Firefox – 40.61% [was 43.66% in April 09] Internet Explorer – 38.56% [was 42.16% in April 2009] Safari – 12.23% [was 6.54% in April 2009] Chrome – 5.79% [was 4.37% in April 2009] Opera – 1.66% [was 2.37% in April 2009] Though it’s not right to give too much importance of the stats of one site, it is surely indicative of the trend and the browser war going on at present. More time is needed before we know whether Chrome was a smart project or a failed endeavor. With some big developments, like the the Google/Sony deal to pre-load Chrome on Sony PCs might boost its market share. Let’s wait and watch. [via]Mashable