We are in the era of the modern browser - market share analysis January 2016
 
                We're on the cusp of a new age - the era of the "modern browser".
As older IE versions are effectively mothballed by Microsoft (bar a few holdouts in the UK public sector and elsewhere, because they weren't able to get their act together with 2 years' notice), I thought we'd take one final snapshot of our browser market share analysis, based on the traffic from a couple of sites: one that targets global Devs, CIOs & CTOs, and another that targets English ABC1s.
Global Developers, CIOs and CTOs
| Browser | % Share | 
|---|---|
| Chrome | 69.09% | 
| Firefox | 12.51% | 
| Internet Explorer | 7.86% | 
| Safari | 5.60% | 
| Edge | 3.27% | 
| Opera | 0.79% | 
| Opera Mini | 0.18% | 
| Safari (in-app) | 0.18% | 
| Android Browser | 0.10% | 
| UC Browser | 0.09% | 
Developers still heavily favour Chrome - almost 70% of you! Firefox is in at number two with 12%, and IE is hanging on in there with a shade under 8%. Microsoft's 10% share amongst developers is, however, maintained, by the 3% usage of Edge we now see.
Looking at IE Versions
| Version | % Share | 
|---|---|
| 11 | 87.23% | 
| 9 | 6.92% | 
| 10 | 4.31% | 
| 8 | 1.22% | 
| 7 | 0.24% | 
| 6 | 0.08% | 
Basically, everyone is on IE11. There are a few devs being punished with Vista and XP (And still an IE6 holdout there somewhere, the poor lost soul.)
English ABC1s
| Browser | % Share | 
|---|---|
| Safari | 48.52% | 
| Chrome | 32.66% | 
| Internet Explorer | 9.82% | 
| Firefox | 5.19% | 
| Safari (in-app) | 1.23% | 
| Edge | 0.91% | 
| Android Browser | 0.76% | 
| Amazon Silk | 0.51% | 
| Opera | 0.17% | 
IE Versions
| Version | % Share | 
|---|---|
| 11 | 70.20% | 
| 9 | 15.12% | 
| 10 | 9.16% | 
| 8 | 4.65% | 
| 7 | 0.87% | 
Firefox's decline continues, as does IE's. Edge has just appeared. Safari on IOS continues to dominate with nearly 50% of all browser visits - though this has peaked over the year.
IE's share is now utterly dominated by IE11. A few Vista diehards are on IE 9, and a tiny rump of XP diehards are on IE7 and 8. The number of visits is so low as to be ignorable (fewer than 3% of all visits)
In summary - we really are in the age of the modern browser; not just by dictat, but by consumer behaviour. It's time to forge ahead, and stop specifying IE7/8/9/10 fallbacks in our site designs.
 
                 
         
         
        