In last month's browser trends report, Internet Explorer 8.0 tripled in the USA. How does it fare in the latest figures from StatCounter?…
Worldwide Desktop & Tablet Browser Statistics, December 2014 to January 2015
The following table shows browser usage movements during the past month.
Worldwide Desktop & Tablet Browser Statistics, January 2015 to January 2015
The following table shows browser usage movements during the past twelve months:
Despite extensive investigations we have not found any evidence of bot or other invalid activity in the December stats. This spike in IE 8.0 may have been a seasonal issue as stats have now returned to levels more commonly seen earlier in 2014.
If it was a seasonal issue, why didn't it occur in Canada, Europe, Australia or anywhere else with similar festive celebrations? There have been spikes in the US before -- IE8 increased from 8.37% to 13.91% between July and September 2013 -- but that wasn't close to the same magnitude and occurred over several months. We may never discover the real reason behind IE8's phantom jump. Perhaps it's just a statistical blip -- unless you can concoct a better conspiracy theory? The anomaly means this month's figures look terrible for Internet Explorer but, overall, it's only lost 0.34% during the past couple of months. The other loser was Safari on the iPad which is strange given the recent gift-giving season and Apple's record-breaking $18 billion profit for the last quarter. It's possible the new and larger iPhone 6+ is cannibalizing some of the iPad's market share. Chrome's figures look impressive but, in reality, the browser has increased by just 0.11% since November 2014. Firefox and Safari gained a little ground but the biggest winner was Opera with a 10% increase in users. The numbers are comparatively low so small changes are magnified but the browser is maturing and it's a snappier alternative to Chrome.
Worldwide Mobile Browser Statistics, December 2014 to January 2015
Mobile usage in January dipped by three-quarters of a point to reach 33.24% of all web activity. It's the first drop since April 2014 but is unlikely to be a long-term trend.
Continue reading %Browser Trends February 2015: The US IE8 Rebound%
by Craig Buckler via SitePoint
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