Posted by Mitch Mitchell on Oct 2, 2011
You know, back in July when I wrote the post talking abouttesting Chrome & coming back to Firefox I thought that all discussions about chrome would probably be over. Little did I know that discussion would open up again via a conversation I had with someone on Twitter.
First I have to address the “old” issue. I would doubt that age would have anything to do with what browser anybody decided to use except for possibly IE, and then only because it’s the default browser that comes with Windows. Whereas younger people might learn from their friends later on that there are better browsers, older participants might not hear that information, and thus will stick with what they know.
Old? Let’s look at old for a minute. I first got on the Internet December 1995. Back then, there weren’t a lot of choices when it came to browsers. The first one I remember using came with America Online, and everybody was using that because AOL was everywhere. Later I discovered IE, but learned that there were security issues with it. All the “cool kids” were using Netscape, and when I gave that a try I said “wow”. That was my browser of choice until it was bought by whomever (can’t remember right now but I’m sure it will come to me later) and Mozilla decided to go out on their own.
The first Firefox was wonderful. The only thing I lost in switching to it was the ability to code within the browser. But since I had another program for that I didn’t mind so much. The best thing about Firefox is always been customization. You can pretty much customize it to do whatever you want to do. For instance, I have a bunch of extensions that allow me to do things such as change what websites look like, change the functionality of my browser, give me information and immediately so that I don’t have to go elsewhere, and a host of other things I’d rather not get into right now. True, adding all those extensions will slow things down a bit, but since I added the extra RAM to my computer things have been running beautifully.
My friend believed that speed and clean browsing is more important than customization. I will agree with that to an extent. If my browser slow down the files I wanted to download I’d probably have a gripe. The browsers have nothing to do with that, IP’s do. If speed was the only thing my friend really cared about he wouldn’t be using Chrome at all, he would be using Opera, which even now is the fastest browser I’ve ever seen. Not only that but Chrome, which is a Google product, tracks pretty much everything you do online. Everybody knows it, but there is something about younger people who really don’t care that their tracks and really don’t care about their privacy as much as us “older” people, who had to deal with things such as the red scare, communism and all that other garbage that we’ve proven really was a flawed model.
That’s enough of the “old” talk. Let’s talk about the demographics of browser use when it comes to webpages. As you saw in his quote above, he stated that Chrome was the top browser being used by people who visited all of his websites. With the caveat being that there is no way I can determine the age of the people who visit all the websites that I have in the websites I manage, let me show you the numbers that I see for all of my websites based on Google Analytics; by the way, if you care, you can view this information under Visitors, then look at the bottom under “technical profile”:
Firefox 37.55%
Chrome 25.97%
Internet Explorer 17.94%
Safari 11.36%
Internet Explorer 32.48%
Firefox 28.57%
Chrome 18.86%
Safari 11.83%
Firefox 38.61%
Chrome 26.19%
Internet Explorer 22.92%
Safari 7.91%
Firefox 30.57%
Internet Explorer 26.57%
Safari 17.43%
Chrome 13.71%
Firefox 57.39%
Chrome 20.87%
Internet Explorer 7.83%
Safari 5.22%
Firefox 31.78%
Internet Explorer 31.01%
Chrome 26.36%
Safari 4.65%
Internet Explorer 57.81%
Firefox 19.20%
Chrome 10.93%
Safari 6.44%
Firefox 45.59%
Internet Explorer 27.94%
Safari 13.24%
Chrome 8.82%
Internet Explorer 51.25%
Firefox 23.75%
Safari 10.00%
Chrome 10.00%
Internet Explorer 40.00%
Firefox 32.31%
Safari 10.77%
Chrome 9.23%
Internet Explorer 79.13%
Firefox 9.88%
Chrome 5.62%
Safari 3.34%
Internet Explorer 36.86%
Chrome 19.49%
Safari 17.37%
Firefox 16.95%
Internet Explorer 53.95%
Firefox 21.31%
Safari 8.59%
Chrome 7.90%
Internet Explorer 32.04%
Firefox 30.10%
Safari 15.53%
Chrome 13.59%
Internet Explorer 40.32%
Firefox 29.03%
Chrome 14.52%
Safari 8.06%
Internet Explorer 54.21%
Firefox 17.37%
Safari 13.68%
Chrome 6.84%
Internet Explorer 64.66%
Firefox 18.10%
Chrome 7.76%
Safari 4.74%
There’s a couple other websites I manage, but I didn’t want to bring those clients into the mix. However, their numbers are pretty much the same as all the others I’ve shown you above. Since the only one where Chrome actually beats Firefox for my sites is my anti-smoking site, I can probably conclude that only sites that addicts visit tend to use Chrome more often than Firefox, but that would be pretty silly.
Anyway, those are my numbers. I don’t necessarily expect that everybody who has a website will end up with numbers like mine, but I wanted to paint kind of a broad brush because I guess the “old” thing was something I felt I needed to address. But it would be interesting to hear from some of the rest of you what your analytics look like when it comes to browsers that visit your sites, especially those of you who are younger than 35, since I believe my young friend is actually younger than that. Seeing as how in 1995 I was 36 years old, that means that I was older than he is now, which could mean that in his eyes I’ve always been old. But that’s okay because I’m feeling pretty old myself these days; good thing I’ve got that Vegas trip coming up.
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