Chrome Browser Shows 4.62% Growth In Market Share on www.chromevoice.com
September 23, 2008 by admin · Leave a Comment
(see chart below)
Looks like the world is jumping on the reports of the Google Chrome browser’s small market share drop over the last week.
The news was the opposite for “The Chrome Voice”.
Here at www.chromebrowser.com, we saw an increase of 4.62% for Chrome.
Sure we’re a small site with a very targeted topic, but the change has been significant.
Since last week, the numbers actually show an increase for both Chrome and Safari, but a loss for IE, Firefox, Opera, Mozilla and Seamonkey.
Since I last measured on 9/17/08, here’s how things have changed:
- Chrome usage rose from 45.69% to 50.31%
- Firefox usage fell from 34.01% to 33.07%
- IE usage fell from 15.74% to 12.23%
- Safari usage rose from 2.03% to 2.66%
- Opera usage fell from 1.52% to 1.41%
- Both Mozilla and Seamonkey dropped from 0.51% to 0.16%
The 9/23/08 stats for www.chromevoice.com are:
| 1. | 50.31% | |||
| 2. | 33.07% | |||
| 3. | 12.23% | |||
| 4. | 2.66% | |||
| 5. | 1.41% | |||
| 6. | 0.16% | |||
| 7. | 0.16% | |||
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It will be interesting to watch both the trend here at www.chromebrowser.com and the larger trends tracked by others world wide.
Chrome Usage: Did 90% of Last Week’s “tire kickers” come back for more?
September 23, 2008 by admin · Leave a Comment
The world is now looking at how the browser market share of Chrome is changing week to week.
Reports are coming in that Chrome usage dropped since last week.
Gregg Keizer writes in Computerworld that users who originally abandoned IE and Firefox are now returning citing Network Applications report that of the 40,000 sites it tracks, this week showed Chrome’s share to be 0.77% of visitors versus last week’s number of 0.85%.
This means 0.08% less Chrome browser visits to the 40k sites.
Doesn’t sound like much to me, but I don’t discount the report. Clearly a huge number of people got excited about Chrome when it first came out and now that they’ve tried it, 10% decided to go back to IE or Firefox.
Another way to look at it is that 90% of the people who tried it during the previous week are still using it now.
It will be interesting to watch the market share as the weeks progress.
Gregg’s full article is here.

