microsoft-watch.com — The monster is driving away customers. Enterprise IE adoption dropped from 88.7 percent to 78.7 percent in 2007 with gains mainly going to Firefox, according to a new report. Forrester published the data on March 27, but only released it publicly today. Forrester surveyed a whopping 50,000 users at over 2,300 large to very large enterprises through
Apr 1, 2008 View in Crawl 4
perlamouseApr 2, 2008
Buried for overplayed s**tty catchphrase.
Closed AccountApr 2, 2008
I hope so. That'll mean more pages will be accessable without the IE-tab plugin.
Closed AccountApr 2, 2008
Again: IE-tab.
Closed AccountApr 2, 2008
<a class="user" href="http://digg.com/odd_stuff/Bingobongony_Trolls_all_day_long">http://digg.com/odd_stuff/Bingobongony_Trolls_all_ ...</a>
jpittawaApr 12, 2008
You left out that you missed the lights because you were texting on your cell phone while listening to hip-hop on your iPod. :-)
guywithcableMay 16, 2009
I'm really happy IE finally added tabs with 7. I'm also really happy 8 is a lot more standards compliant. I'm a solid Firefox user, and I hate having to write messy code to make things work in IE, so it's a great thing Microsoft is finally waking up. Maybe now when I'm on the phone and I say "Open a new tab," the novice on the other end won't go "What's a tab?" But, we should all realize that Firefox and Linux are for experienced people. IE and Windows are for novices. Most of the world is made up of novices, so IE should be the dominant browser. For some people, even tabs are too complicated...