One of the hottest topics today is Internet browsing. New versions of both Firefox and Internet Explorer have been appearing more rapidly in recent years. Since all of us use the Internet almost daily ...
The rhetoric coming from Microsoft and Mozilla has heated up in recent days on who is doing a better job on web browser security. I'd prefer to frame the debate in terms of who is doing worse than the ...
We put Internet Explorer 7 up against Firefox 2 in a memorable prizefight to see which browser is the king of the Web In the blue corner we have Internet Explorer 7. There's a lot expected of this ...
New browser market share data shows that both Internet Explorer and Firefox lost ground in April. While Microsoft and Mozilla trumpet their latest browsers, publicly trade jabs, and beat their chests ...
And, of course, Explorer lacks Firefox's giant, free marketplace for plug-ins, which lets power users supercharge their Web experience. But the truth is, I can live without my Firefox apps.
Internet Explorer, you're fired. That should have been said a long time ago. After Microsoft cemented a monopoly of the Web-browser market, it let Internet Explorer go stale, parceling out ho-hum ...
Alternative Web browsers Mozilla and Firefox experienced another month of growth at the expense of Microsoft's dominant Internet Explorer, according to an online study. The percentage of Americans ...
The results are out from the latest Net Applications survey of Web browser market share, and Google continues to capture market share and headlines with its Chrome Web browser. Drilling down into the ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Google’s recent announcement that it has updated its ...
Suddenly it feels like 1998 again. That's because the browser wars are back. Last week, Microsoft released the long-awaited update to its Web browser, Internet Explorer 7, ending a five-year drought.
It was almost two years ago to the day that we reported on Internet Explorer's first-ever drop in browser market share. At the time, IE usage had dropped from 94.8 percent at the beginning of 2004 to ...
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