Home

New Tech Heroes

New Media and Social Publishing

Navigation

  • Home
  • About
    • Site rules
    • Privacy policy
    • Contact
    • About Tom Kephart
Home

Tag cloud

Acquia Adobe AIR amateurs Apple blog blogger blogging blogs browsers buyout chris brogan CMS content management Drupal Facebook Firefox flashback funny Gmail Google history HTML Internet Internet Explorer jobs Joomla Microsoft movies new media online Open Source patch Plone privacy radio reputation Safari security SharePoint SilverStripe social social media social networking social publishing spam standards TechCrunch television Tom Kephart upgrade venture capital video virtual conversation Vista vulnerability web WordPress XP Yahoo

Show the world you know
what you mean
when you say
"When all else fails,
you can always fsck."

Hats, shirts and other gear for the discriminating consumer.

Mozilla

Monday's featured links - March 24, 2008

Submitted by Tom Kephart on Mon, 03/24/2008 - 3:01pm.
  • Apple
  • Firefox
  • Mozilla
  • new media
  • newspapers
  • Safari
  • WordPress

Newspapers' New Owners Turn Grim - by David Carr from The New York Times - "Critics of newspapers say that part of the problem is that the industry has lost its ability to surprise. Tell that to the guys who have just bought in.... These are all smart businesspeople, with significant success in other endeavors, who took a hard look at the wave-tossed publishing sector and appointed themselves as life savers. And very soon after jumping in, they too began foundering in the tall waves."

Moving from WordPress.com to Self-Hosted WordPress in Plain English - by Michael Martine from Remarkablogger - "Sooner or later, you find out that out of all five billion themes available, you don’t really like any of them, but you have little to no say (or skill) in customizing all but a very few of them. Sooner or later, you discover that all the cool functionality other blogs have from something called plugins is verboten to you on WordPress.com."

Mozilla CEO says Apple's Safari auto-update 'wrong' - by Martin LaMonica from CNET News.com - "A lot of people appear to be bent out of shape about Apple using its auto-update service to distribute the Safari Web browser on Windows. The CEO of Mozilla, which makes the rival Firefox browser, calls it bad business."

Bookmark/Search this post with:
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Magnoliacom
  • Newsvine
  • Google
  • Technorati
  • Icerocket
  • Add a comment

Firefox and Safari keep taking Microsoft browser share

Submitted by Tom Kephart on Wed, 01/09/2008 - 6:08pm.
  • Apple
  • browsers
  • Firefox
  • Mac
  • Microsoft
  • Mozilla
  • Safari

Browser market share - December 2007Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser lost market share again in December to Mozilla's Firefox and Apple's Safari browsers. IE held 75.8 percent of the browser market in December, down from 77.1 percent the previous month, according to data from Net Applications. Firefox increased its market share from 15.6 to 16.4 percent during the same period, while Safari went from 4.6 to 5.1 percent.

An interesting side note in Net Applications' data is the speed of adoption of new browser versions. Firefox 2 was officially released in late October, 2006, and just over a year later, nearly all Firefox users have upgraded to the newer version (96.5 percent use Firefox 2 versus 3.5 for Firefox 1.5). Internet Explorer 7 was released just ahead of Firefox 2, but it took until last month for the majority of IE users to have switched to version 7 (53.4 percent now use IE7, with most other IE users still on version 6, although some older versions are also still in use).

The New Tech Heroes have used the Firefox browser since its official introduction in November, 2004, and I continue to recommend it to our friends and clients for its security features and overall ease of use. Its growth in market share is largely due to its reputation as a more secure browser, as many of its innovative features are now part of Internet Explorer 7, including tabbed browsing.

Regardless of which browser you choose to use, it's vital to upgrade to the most recent version and, as with any software, make sure any security patches are downloaded and installed regularly. The browser has become the most common computer application, increasingly used to replace traditional desktop-based software, so its security is paramount to any home or small business computer.

Bookmark/Search this post with:
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Magnoliacom
  • Newsvine
  • Google
  • Technorati
  • Icerocket
  • Add a comment

New Tech Heroes

Editor: Tom Kephart

Grab the RSS feed
or subscribe by email

Add to Technorati Favorites

View Tom Kephart's profile on LinkedIn

Popular content

Today's:

  • Going organic with Google's search results
  • Angry journalists have an online place to vent
  • Social publishing across the Digital Divide

All time:

  • JavaScript vulnerability in Drupal prompts 6.1 release
  • Drupal issues maintenance upgrade to 5.7
  • Scoble cries; blogosphere freaks; Jesus returns

Blogroll

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

© 2008 Kephart & Associates, Marine City, Michigan. Our privacy policy.
Powered by Drupal. Customized theme based on Tapestry by RoopleTheme.
Web hosting by pair Networks.

Kephart & Associates