Web metrics company NetApplications has released revamped data that's good news for Google and the Chrome browser, and bad news for Microsoft and Apple. NetApplications has introduced a new weighting ...
Web analytics company NetApplications said that Apple’s Safari and Mozilla Firefox Web browsers both gained ground against Microsoft Internet Explorer in 2005. The news comes as NetApplications ...
Web traffic for a major new operating system typically grows at a consistently faster pace than its predecessor. That's not true for Windows 8, however -- NetApplications now estimates that Windows 7 ...
The iPod touch had a strong month outpacing its iPhone cousin in "marketshare gains according to NetApplications after being relatively flat since the holidays. It isn’t certain what caused the spike ...
Firefox's market share grew to 8 percent last month--up from 7.38 percent in April and 5.59 percent in the beginning of the year, according to a report released Wednesday by NetApplications, an Alisa ...
The data in this post is fresh, raw, possibly in flux*, and interesting. If you can put on your big kid pants and read on with that knowledge, let’s have some fun. According to new data from ...
NetApplications has just released its browser market share stats for the month of April, and there is something notable here: Internet Explorer has fallen to a "historic low" of 59.95 percent market ...
Say, what would happen if in October 2008, a polling firm released an Election poll that had oversampled the Southeastern United States? They might have reported that John McCain held a sizable lead ...
StatCounter has declared Google Chrome the king of all desktop browsers based on recent market share data, but observers should take this claim to the throne with a grain of salt. As my colleague ...
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