• @k_o_t
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    44 years ago

    it really sucks that firefox has such low marketshare :/

    • @AgreeableLandscapeOPM
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      44 years ago

      And to make it worse, a lot of websites block Firefox saying that it’s not compatible, yet when you switch the useragent to say Chrome, it magically works just fine.

      Whether that’s intentional or incompetence, I’ll let you decide.

    • @ajz
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      3
      edit-2
      2 years ago

      deleted by creator

      • @tensor
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        34 years ago

        It is easy to detect from the user agent what type of device the incoming request comes from.

        Since nobody mentioned any specific measurement, I will use as an example the ones from StatCounter. They analyze user agent data from page hits in a couple million websites. If you go to their GlobalStats subdomain you see browser market share in a time series graph. Overall or platform-specific, that is already accounted. Even tablets are separate from phones despite running the same OS.

        Firefox on the desktop has a global market share of 10% according to GlobalStats, while on the average between all devices it’s only 4%.

        That data is flawed based on the fact that not data from the entire web is being collected (though 3 million common pages is a large enough sample size) and that absolute page hits are accounted rather than unique visitors. But, there is no reason that users of one browser would hit pages more often than users of the others. Anyways, those are the 2 facts that come to my head right now that may distort the true data.

        And, as you can expect, you can’t reliably measure ‘market share’ of things that are not in the ‘market’.

    • @LofenyyM
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      14 years ago

      True, though my preference is GNU Icecat. I’m a bit of a skeptic of the points in the video, but Firefox seems to be the best we have right now. I just hope an alternative shows up.