Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
E-Commerce

Chrome's Tiny Market Share Dwindles as Experimenters Head Home

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Chrome's Tiny Market Share Dwindles as Experimenters Head Home

Use of Google's Chrome browser has declined since its launch a month ago, but that hardly seems surprising, given that a certain number of those who downloaded it were undoubtedly checking it out with no real intention of making a long-term commitment. With just a month of usage statistics available, it's too soon to draw any conclusions about Chrome's real market potential.


Is Your Website Killing Customer Confidence?
Your Website's privacy policy can be a key factor in a customer's decision to do business with you, and it is vital to ensuring you don't run afoul of your online legal and regulatory responsibilities. Need more reasons? Read on.

Google's (Nasdaq: GOOG) new Web browser, Chrome, is key to the company's push to connect its myriad Web offerings and become an integrated online service provider. That said, writing it off a month after its release -- based partly on figures that show a decline in downloads -- seems more Schadenfreude than sober analysis.

Chrome's share of the overall market peaked on Sept. 4 at 1.16 percent, according to NetApplications. By Oct. 5, that number had dropped to 0.81 percent. Taking into account day-to-day fluctuations, the usage appears to have stabilized at .7 percent after the initial surge of downloads from both Google fans who were ready to switch and the merely curious.

Snapshots of Usage

Other metrics hint at Chrome's place in the browser universe: Three weeks after its debut, nearly 2 percent of traffic to Telegraph.co.uk, the Web site of the British newspaper the Daily Telegraph, came via Google Chrome, according to WebTrends, an analytics firm that has incorporated Google Chrome into its on-demand reports.

Chrome's appeal is based mainly on its performance; the browser able to speedily process a request no matter how many tabs are open.

"I love its speed, its URL space as search space, its ability to render pages quickly, and it keeping my top nine most visited pages right up front and more," David Murrow, director of Allison & Partners, told LinuxInsider.

It's not perfect, though, he added. "I also notice that different Web forms -- event listings submission forms and such -- are not yet Chrome-compatible and tend to freeze up or do not work sometimes."

Chrome's Drawbacks

Chrome faces criticism on a number of scores. Even leaving aside the performance glitches -- something that can be expected in any new app -- Chrome's approach to privacy and content ownership strikes many as downright creepy.

OmniBox -- Chrome's address and search bar combo -- is said to track user keystrokes. The browser's end-user licensing agreement, or EULA, gives Google "a perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and nonexclusive license to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute any Content which you submit, post, or display on or through the Services."

None of this -- from the speedy performance to the Big Brother tracking -- has escaped Chrome's early adopters, said Kristin Coffin, client service officer for Grail Research, which has conducted its own survey on Chrome use during its first month of existence.

"Most users have had a good initial experience with Chrome," Coffin told LinuxInsider. "There are some things that could be improved, and many are uncomfortable with the privacy issues."

Other missing features that users would like to see in a Chrome 2.0 release, according to Grail, include more security protection, a faster autofill feature, a fix for the memory leak problems identified in the first version and the lack of a bundled product. Right now, Chrome is a standalone browser.

Also notable in the Grail report is that the number of negatives about Chrome far exceed the limited number of negatives listed about competing browsers.

Still, it is too early for most people who experimented with Chrome to decide whether they will permanently shift away from their current browser -- a state of affairs reflected in the slight drop in usage from 1.16 percent to .7 percent, Coffin said.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Erika Morphy


Talkback: Join the Discussion.
Speed! Java Rendering! Speed!
FichenDich
Posted 2008-10-08
For myself, all of the detractions pale into insignificance simply due to two things. Chrome is ...
Schadenfreude ?
bpmmx
Posted 2008-10-08
What's Schadenfreude..?
what is schadenfreude?
just4kicks
Posted 2008-10-08
Schadenfreude is defined as "enjoyment obtained from the troubles of ...

Related News Alerts

Google Activate Alert | Search Archives

More by Erika Morphy

Roku Channel Store Hangs Out Shingle
November 23, 2009
Roku's new channel store is based on a "one screen in the cloud" business model, said Michael Gartenberg, vice president of strategy and analysis with Interpret. "Essentially, what they are doing is taking the TV set -- whether it is a standard appliance or a high-def monster -- and enhancing it with content the consumer wants to see."
Ballmer Gives Shareholders - and Dell - Cause for Optimism
November 20, 2009
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer was all smiles at the company's shareholders meeting, as he touted the early success of Windows 7. Ballmer's cheer may have been contagious; after posting a massive earnings decline for the third quarter, Dell needed some good news to latch onto, and the prospect of broad enterprise adoption of Windows 7 could spur PC sales.
AA.com Sucks the Fun Out of Trip-Planning
November 20, 2009
Using AA.com to book a flight was a painful experience. Densely packed, disorganized information was displayed in an unattractive format. On the plus side, it did seem as though the deals American Airlines advertised were real and not mere bait-and-switch lures. For anyone who wants a travel-planning Web site to inject a little pleasure into the experience, though, I say look elsewhere.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network