April saw the sixth full month of IE11 availability with Windows 8.1, as well as the release of Chrome 34 and Firefox 28. The latest numbers from Net Applications show that Chrome was once again the only major winner last month, cementing its second place position over Firefox.
Between March and April, IE dipped 0.08 percentage points (from 57.96 percent to 57.88 percent), Chrome gained 0.40 percentage points (from 17.52 percent to 17.92 percent), and Firefox fell 0.26 percentage points (from 17.26 percent to 17.00 percent). Safari meanwhile slipped 0.02 percentage points to 5.66 percent and Opera slipped 0.06 percentage points to 1.14 percent.
Seriously, it's 2022. It's time to find a new browser.
Mozilla is bringing Firefox to Microsoft’s Windows store today. Firefox is one of the first third-party alternatives available in the Microsoft Store, and it’s using its own Gecko browser engine instead of Chromium alternatives like Opera or the many other alternatives that leverage Microsoft’s Edge webview.
Internet Explorer is dead, long live... Edge Chromium? Microsoft is finally retiring IE, moving its support to Edge.