Gartner Says it's a 2-Browser World 409
prostoalex writes "In its advisory to the IT managers Gartner says that even though the factors that drive the current Firefox growth are not sustainable, IT departments better get used to a two-browser world. "Concerns about security currently favor Mozilla Foundation's Firefox, but the market tide can shift if security breaches result from increased usage of Firefox", says Gartner and ZDNet adds that "Microsoft must deliver an improved version of its browser in Longhorn if it is to "determine the outcome" of the browser war.""
New & Improved (Score:5, Insightful)
Foo.
Improved is such a generalization, and it will be interpreted and realized in that manner. Microsoft will undoubtably continue to bundle more crap into it, tie proprietary formats to it, ignore generally accepted practices of composition (delivering their own, which break pages on rival browsers, a la the Opera Bork-Bork-Bork fiasco), uselessly incorporate it into all their product lines (regarless if it makes any sense, i.e. XBox 3, all games played through a browser) and continue with the practice of patenting and copyrighting everything they can think of to fend off competition.
We've seen all this before.
"isn't that another tentacle around your throat?"
"yes, but it's an improved tentacle and i'm certain i feel better about it than the last one."
Re:New & Improved (Score:4, Funny)
"yes, but it's an improved tentacle and i'm certain i feel better about it than the last one."
Let me guess, this is some anime reference I'm not getting.
New & Improved = Drop ActiveX (Score:3, Insightful)
It's time to dump ActiveX.
Re:New & Improved = Drop ActiveX (Score:3, Informative)
Re:New & Improved = Drop ActiveX (Score:5, Informative)
From what I've understood, ActiveX is similar to Java - an ActiveX control is placed into a web page, and it is then used to enhance that page in some way. I could be wrong here - I don't use Windows for anything but gaming nowadays.
Mozilla's XPI files, on the other hand, are browser extensions. They give the browser new functionality in a modular way. For example, I have currently installed a Nuke Anything extension, which adds a "Remove this object"-option to the right-button menu, which allows me to remove the object being clicked.
This is one of the basic ideas behind Firefox: make the basic browser have only a few features, and let people extend it as they please.
So, in short: ActiveX controls are web applets, XPI files are browser addons. And since XPI files aren't installed unless the user specifically requests it (and certainly not from any random page), security is not a concern anymore than it would be for installing any other program.
Re:New & Improved = Drop ActiveX (Score:3, Informative)
Java, on the other hand, runs in a sandbox...
Re:New & Improved (Score:2)
They've already done this.
Where have you been?
Longhorn... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Longhorn... (Score:3, Funny)
Perhaps they're already testing it on cell processors...
Re:Longhorn... (Score:2)
Re:Longhorn... (Score:2, Funny)
Markup-Chip Demodulator
Andium coated flux capacitor
DXRDG Drive
Enough Keltic Cycles
Ultimate Power Booster
Process Certification
Re:Longhorn... (Score:2)
What is all that stuff that you mentioned?
That's a misapprehension (Score:5, Informative)
I don't actually know the minimum requirements for Longhorn. I do know that it will require a lot of horsepower and a high-end video card, because they're playing catchup with OS X (both in terms of eye candy and in terms of useful features such as Expose').
So I expect that Longhorn will run perfectly well on today's mid- to high-end systems, since they're trying to take advantage of video power currently going unused. Today's bottom-range systems may not run it at all, or will do so pokily.
Re:That's a misapprehension (Score:3, Insightful)
So in a year, a top end system of today will be less functional then an average system from a year from now?
We live in two worlds very different worlds or at least we have different definitions of a top end system.
My top end system of a year ago is still leagues better then today's average desktop PC. It will be slightly more humble in a year and in need of a major gamers overhaul in a year.
Re:That's a misapprehension (Score:3, Interesting)
Microsoft is expected to recommend that the "average" Longhorn PC feature a dual-core CPU running at 4 to 6GHz; a minimum of 2 gigs of RAM; up to a terabyte of storage; a 1 Gbit, built-in, Ethernet-wired port and an 802.11g wireless link; and a graphics processor that runs three times faster than those on the market today.
So that's what Microsoft Watch says Mi
Re:Longhorn... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Longhorn... (Score:3, Informative)
Last I heard, IE 5 was the last version of IE made for the Mac, because future browser enhancements required the "sophistication" of Longhorn. Whether this decision was the result of or the cause of Safari is an exercise left to the reader.
It's funny in a way... CSS requirements for Safari made Apple radically improve system-wide typography services in Panther (drop shadows, et cetera).
With the loss of Avalon as a direct feature of Longhorn, one has to wonder what "manditory" features in the next generat
Re:Longhorn... (Score:3, Informative)
Both browsers? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Both browsers? (Score:2)
Simple: Country is where you whine about your dead wife, Western is where you talk about how you shot your wife.
Johnny Cash - Delia's Gone
Delia, oh. Delia
Delia all my life
If I hadn't shot poor Delia
I'd have had her for my wife
Delia's gone, one more round
Delia's gone
I went up to Memphis
And I met Delia there
Found her in her parlor
And I tied to her chair
Delia's gone, one more round
Delia's gone
She was low and trifiling
And she was cold and mean
Kind of evil make
No surprise ... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not a bad thing if Microsoft wants to innovate with their web browser - more competition is a good thing. It will make everyone's internet experience better. Having two competing browsers is definitely a better playing field than just one monopolistic browser.
Re:No surprise ... (Score:3, Insightful)
I think it's an important message that a Microsoft kiss-ass is acknowledging the existence of a competitor.
GARTNER == RENTRAG
Re:No surprise ... (Score:2)
Re:No surprise ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No surprise ... (Score:5, Insightful)
It was a Gartner article. Have they ever said anything useful? Clueless articles for clueless dweebs who are looking for CYA material.
Re:No surprise ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Now you have an established and respected source (at least to those who are in charge) pretty much putting every IT department in the world in the position of, "Code only for IE and you ass is on the line." When the higher ups find out they are losing 7-10% of their customers because of that active-x plug-in or non-standard html/javascript the CIO and the gang can't plea ignorance anymore. This is good for standards.
Re:No surprise ... (Score:2, Funny)
Key concepts: Having two is better than ONE. Only if there was a single browser would it be monopolistic. Having TWO makes it so there's NOT a single monopolistic browser.
Wow, kneejerk response to a buzzword there? "Me see word 'monopolistic', me must post that there no such thing." Your plutocratic handlers are doing a good jo
Concise version of report (Score:3, Informative)
No need to read article now.
Re:Concise version of report (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Concise version of report (Score:3, Interesting)
Nah, actually, the first 10% is the hardest. Once 10% of the people (and that's a 60 million people or so out of 600,000,000 computer users) know about a product, it becomes mainstream enough for most people to feel confortable trying it. most people are sheep and don't want to get in front where the wolves are. (nothing wrong with this strategy by the way)
True. It's like the saying, "the first million dollars is the hardest".
As to what the article said about Firefox's growth being unsustainable. Ha
Re:Concise version of report (Score:3, Insightful)
The last 50% is also easy. Most people will 'follow the herd' and just keep using whatever everyone else is using, without really giving it much though.
In the 20-50% zone, there is an 'acceptance gap'. In here there is a 'critical mass' - the people who want to change, but need to 'stay compatible' with their offices, the die-hards who don't want to change, and will actively try to prevent the wider adopt
Re:Concise version of report (Score:2)
Re:Concise version of report (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft will not repeat the Netscape mistake. Mozilla and Firefox are good for them because they can claim they no longer have a monopoly (and giving away browsers for free is okay). After all, browsers are no threat to Microsoft's main revenue sources.
Re:Concise version of report (Score:4, Insightful)
The first 10% (Score:5, Insightful)
For all its advantages, Firefox growth is driven mainly by the way Microsoft keeps tripping over its own feet when responding to security issues. It's not so much that they were careless in designing the browser to begin with. What hurts them is that they can't seem to keep up with the problem. Patches take forever, and often introduce new problems. And many people can't even install the patches! IT people are looking at Firefox simply because they can't continue to live with Internet Explorer.
I just had a thought. I've long suspected that the IE codebase is a real mess, and may have already reached "critical mass", where every bug fix creates, on average, more than one new bug. If Firefox's challenge to IE's supremacy ever becomes an issue, MS will have to consider a scorched-earth strategy: abandon the IE codebase and build a new browser from scratch. A horribly expensive strategy, but then MS can afford it.
Determine the OUTCOME?! (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a "war" that isn't going away. Ever. (Well... until something supercedes browsers)
Re:Determine the OUTCOME?! (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, I thought that was interesting, too.
This isn't ever going to be "over" because even if Goodger and his band of merry maintainers get ticked off and give up, the code is still out there, and it's still open source! Anyone and everyone willing to comply with the license has the freedom to fork their own version and do their own thing with it.
In a very real sense, that's Microsoft's biggest obstacle here - the fact that there is no controlling entity to buy off/defeat/take over/etc, because open s
Re:Determine the OUTCOME?! (Score:3, Insightful)
(The point is of course that any new OS is adopted gradually, so the suggestion that MS's position can be improved via the channel of Longhorn is ludicrous).
Re:Determine the OUTCOME?! (Score:3, Interesting)
The only way I see people dumping IE on Longhorn, would be if they already used to and loved Firefox.
So, if Firefox is to combat IE on Longhorn, they will have to push and take as much of the marketplace as they can before Longhorn hits the market.
Then, the users, who are creatures of habit, will download Firefox the moment they get that long horn system on the INTARWEB.
But
Re:Determine the OUTCOME?! (Score:3, Interesting)
One has to wonder if users will even pick up Longhorn all the quickly. The upgrade from ME to XP was a nobrainer. 95/98/ME barely worked at all for many people. XP is stable enough that I think a good chunk of people will either stick with it or maybe try a Mac. What is Longhorn's major selling point? What does it stand to offer the average user? MORE features
Re:Determine the OUTCOME?! (Score:3, Insightful)
He shouldn't.
Firefox exists because the horrible nature of IE has created a demand for it. IE5 was just barely good enough to drive Netscape Navigator into oblivion when bundled with Windows. IE6 made some marginal improvements, but also introduces a whole new set of problems.
The fact is that most people were simply not very happy with any browser prior to the Phoenix/Firebird
2 browsers? (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe 2 browser engines world.. But with AOL Browser coming out (who has its own userbase already) And Netscape 8, and continued development on firefox, and IE, and continued development on opera, two browsers seems like a bit of a stretch, two major browsers even seems like a stretch in the not so distant future..
Re:2 browsers? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:2 browsers? (Score:2)
Re:2 browsers? (Score:2)
Don't forget Safari. With Apple seeming to gain momentum, their browser could potentially start making a dent in market share as well.
Re:2 browsers? (Score:4, Informative)
Bummer for Opera (Score:2)
the more sensible approach be to avoid all browser specific
hacks? You would think that would make every IT depts life
a heck of a lot easier.
Re:Bummer for Opera (Score:3, Informative)
Sure. But people want flashy, spiffy web sites -- or at least that's what the web site creators generally think, and so they spend as much or more time on how the information looks rather than on the information itself. And they may very well be right about what people want.
Having several meetings about which _font_ your home page uses are _not_ unheard of, and the same goes for their use of java, dhtml, javascript, ActiveX
as the de facto sysadmin of my family... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:as the de facto sysadmin of my family... (Score:2)
Oh to show the brain power of their friend - he said he could convert their laptop (in less then 1 minute) to utilize the hebrew character set. It wouldn't need a special keyboard because the screen would be a touchscreen...i was willing to bet my c
Bah, just a sound bite (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Bah, just a sound bite (Score:2)
-- Average Trolling Slashdotter
Re:Bah, just a sound bite (Score:2)
Gartner is a well respected firm - let's give them some credit.
The only good outcome of the 'Browser war'... (Score:5, Interesting)
...is no outcome at all. I hope IE, Firefox, and all other browsers have a long lifetime ahead of them.
Any competition will make things better ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Has anyone ever noticed that in Windows XP, a normal user can create/write new files/dirs to the root of C:\? It's things like this that will need to be corrected if MS really wants to meet their goals of maintaining a secure, stable OS solution. ActiveX controls need to be revisited. Default NTFS ACLs as well
Sure, there have been improvements. And for all of our sakes, it would be best not to rest on the laurels, but to continue the improvements.
Competition is good. Especially in this case. Granted, if I was forced to choose, I may not choose MS for the majority of software I use (if any at all), but I refuse to close the book on them (perhaps I'm just optmistic)-- I think they could someday arrive and live down their bad reputation.
Sociologists have proven it takes a minimum of 3 generations for social change. How long will it take for security to be cultured into MS?
Re:Any competition will make things better ... (Score:2)
As simpleminded as Gartner is... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:As simpleminded as Gartner is... (Score:3, Informative)
I would have no problem with two browsers (Score:5, Interesting)
They could fix a few bugs too, it's getting old that you still have to jump through hoops to make PDFs open correctly in every version of IE from 4.0 to 6.
Re:I would have no problem with two browsers (Score:2)
Or how about something much simpler, like allowing me to print a standard-width webpage on a 8.5" x 11" sheet of paper without the right edge getting cut off. Seems like it should be pretty easy, and I can do it in Firefox
I don't get it (Score:5, Insightful)
Who are these "gartner" people, how do they make money by stating the obvious, and how do I get in on that action?
IT people should have gotten used to a multi-browser (i.e. more than 2) world 10 years ago. And by "getting used to a multi-browser world," I mean, "welcoming the benefits of a heterogeneous software environment by writing standards compliant code, validating that code, and testing it against multiple browsers".
"Determine the outcome?" (Score:5, Insightful)
War metaphors don't work. If anything, IE will have to coexist peacefully with Mozilla, for trying to fight it makes no more sense than a single man trying to fight a mountain by climbing it. That's not the world's most beautiful metaphor either, but it works much better than those related to battle.
Re:"Determine the outcome?" (Score:3)
Mozilla and its derivatives can't "lose" the next browser war per se, because they're open source and protected by the GPL.
Nitpick: not by the GPL, but by the Mozilla Public License. The two are similar, but not compatible. And the MPL is less readable... (source: cliking About Mozilla in my current browser, and http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/license-list.html [gnu.org])
Re:"Determine the outcome?" (Score:5, Insightful)
When the Netscape threw in the towel that should have been it, but they open sourced their browser and it has arisen like an evil dead zombie. Microsoft can shoot it, knife it, dismember it, and bury it, but as long as someone somewhere wants it to live, it will crawl out of its grave to work its evil once more.
Re:Slight correction in metaphor... (Score:3, Funny)
Ixnay on the oenixphay! Didn't you get the memo about the name change?
Re:"Determine the outcome?" (Score:3, Interesting)
(A) software can come from someone other than MS
(B)That the MS brand means Yugo, and not Rolls Royce
This news means point, and very possibly (B) also. (A) above has been reached.
As soon as they realise that MS is not the only company selling software, People start to ask if they can have an OS that is not 0wned in 3 minutes or less.
Anyone who asks me to fix a spyware infested computer is told that it would not have happen
Here's a question or two... (Score:2)
What are the growth factors that are unsustainable?
Does that mean that Firefox will never take over IE's dominant share of the market? Would anyone really want to see that happen?
More importantly, what's to prevent Microsoft from releasing a new and improved IE as a service pack, instead of waiting for Longhorn, as a way to blunt the threat?
allegiance to standards (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft's unwinnable war (Score:5, Interesting)
And day by day (country by country), that space is getting bigger as countries adopt opensource or recognize the risk of supporting a US-based corporation exclusively. Will Firefox continue to make inroads into Windows? Most likely. Will it be necessary for competition to be restored? I don't believe so.
In the end Microsoft's own policy of a Windows-only world will limit their ability to fight the battle let alone win the war.
not sustainable (Score:3, Funny)
At its current rate, every elementary particle in the Universe will be using Firefox by 2010. Clearly, that's not sustainable.
IE will be improved Longhorn... (Score:2)
What war? (Score:5, Insightful)
What browser war? Some of us have taken our guns and gone elsewhere.
Re:What war? (Score:2, Insightful)
oh no (Score:2, Insightful)
Corporate IT mindset... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a very Gartner "quadrant" thing to say, to be so deterministic. It's as if Gartner can only see a world in which one company drives the web.
No mention of W3C or standards or the state of plugin specifications, or anything about frameworks for interoperability.
These three analysts are Ray Valdes, David Mitchell Smith and Whit Andrews. I question the assertion that the growth of Firefox is based on unsustainable market conditions? Like what? That IE is insecure? If IE becomes "secure" will that immediately revert to the IT paradigm these guys are familiar with, where one technology emerges and drives standards?
Could it POSSIBLY be that Gartner analysts just don't see a larger force at work, that when open source products compete on quality and stability and unify their distribution methods, they are INHERENTLY more desireable, even on closed operating systems, than proprietary browsers? Because the standards can't be wrested into corporate control and the IT industry is waking up to the benefits of open source?
This is why I prefer Burton to Gartner. Burton papers tend to see things more how I see them. I have no axe to grind, nor do I work for Burton. I just encourage you, as the reading IT professional or hobbyist, not to revere the Gartner name blindly.
I pulled some very old Gartner papers out the other day, and they were laughably wrong about web standards 5 years ago. I don't trust them anymore now.
Wake up to Non-techies (Score:4, Insightful)
The fact that Gartner is saying this has more to do with business and the stock market than it does about technology.
Geeks pay attention to Torvalds and other techies about the technical merits. Suits pay attention to Wall Street and other business oracles about the financial merits.
Microsoft is more about business than it is about technology. I care about technology, they care about money. When you understand that, you learn to tune out 80% of the crap that's out there.
There's another browser besides Firefox/Mozilla? (Score:2)
Competition is good? (Score:5, Insightful)
Then we hear all these analysts talk about how competition drives innovation, competition is good, it keeps companies agile, blah blah blah.
Then we have groups like Gartner floating articles which in essence say Microsoft needs to win the "browser war" so that companies only have to deal with ONE browser. It's sounds an awful lot like winning the browser war means completely wiping out the competition instead of just holding a commanding lead. Why is it that there's a war anyway? I wish corporations would stop running campaigns against each other as if they were trying to channel G.W. Bush.
Why isn't Gartner promoting companies focusing on a standard vs. a product. While I understand their profit model is based of of referring people to specific products that they review and track shouldn't part of their advice be to not rely on a specific product because of the potential for competing products to take the lead. Isn't part of the analysis they do predicting what might come in the future and how to leverage current products and allow for flexibility when markets change.
Or are they really saying "There's no need or room for competition within the browser market. Just use IE if you can, until it becomes too unsafe. Firefox can't hold out forever, it will fail. Just keep waiting for Longhorn."
Re:Competition is good? (Score:2)
It's been referred to as a browser "war" since back in the days of Netscape 4 and IE 4. I agree with your comment about the word war being overrused (it seems like every campaign is a "war on $foo" - we've even had a war on salt here in the UK), but this one predates your country's current administration by a fair margin.
Re:Competition is good? (Score:4, Insightful)
Plus you get into situations where instead of competing to build a better product a company simply purchases the competitor and kills the product. The purchasing company continues with their main product and the lesser product prevails. The consumer loses.
War without End (Score:5, Interesting)
Has any analyst considered that there can be no winner to the "browser war?" Good gravy, war is certainly an easy metaphor to understand but its applicability to emerging and evolving technologies is tenuous. Better to call the competition by browser makers for the hearts of consumers a Red Queen's race. Do species stop competing for resources? Only the "stable" ones (i.e. thost that have become extinct) do.
As for bracing for the horrors of a two-platform web world, that call is many years too late. Apple's Safari is likely to be the dark horse that IT folks will have to adapt to. I think Steve Jobs means to make a big play for the PC pie. The Mac mini is as reasonable desktop as any from Dell, Gateway or Newegg (at least for corporate use).
In a perfect world, it wouldn't matter one jot what web client software is used. Browsers ought to be a whole lot stupider than they are. Just follow the meticulously defined W3C specs and lets all stop caring about "owning the platform." It's the applications that are far more interesting and carefully contrieved browser inoperabilities only stall the inevitable demotion of the underlying operating system to something akin to a really bloated BIOS.
Two browser world? Lunacy...
MS doesnt care (Score:2, Interesting)
Foo (Score:4, Interesting)
This is crap. The media fuels this idea of one player as much as anyone does.
"Better get used to a two-browser world." (Score:2, Informative)
I officially proclaim us at (or beyond) the point where we can say "screw people with Netscape 4.0 or IE 3 or whatever".
The existing differences between the rendering on the current versions of the main browsers (and most minor browsers too) are so trivial that a completely standards-compliant page can be made to look good in any of them, even if they might look slightly different in each.
IE misinterprets the box mode
How Do I Get Sex? (Score:3)
His question is that since Firefox [getfirefox.com] came out he is able to get significantly less sex due to their computers having less spyware and viruses. Firefox also has tabbed browsing. He is worried that if the Mac Minis catch on then he will be completely celibate. Do you have any advice for my friend?
Gartner says 0.9 probability water is wet (Score:2)
I remember interviewing there more than 10 years ago and they tried to impress me with their onsite valet service because their people work 1400 hrs a day and are too busy to go home.
To do what? Tell me that the #1 and #2 browsers will indeed remain the #1 and #2 browsers for the near and yet indistinct future of some given and arbitrary timeline? And that sinc
You know what's funny.... (Score:2)
My thoughts (Score:2)
It just got so annoying I dumped it for good and went to IE. IE by comparison was lean and mean.
However, wh
Don't hold your breath (Score:2)
No, LT., your men are already dead."
MSFT will junk it up with DRM, proprietary media formats and way too many people are dependent on that security horror ActiveX for them to just abandon it. ActiveX is bloatware for your browser.
If this is a browser war, then what we're seeing now is FireFox: Son of Mozilla. The browser that ate New York.
Gartner, again crowd favorite (Score:3, Insightful)
Gartner gets ridiculed when they make comments "the crowd" does not like and gets exhaulted when they make comments that are liked. This is inconsistant, either Gartner is good at analysis or not, just to agree with them when they make predictions "the crowd" likes is not right.
Longhorn (Score:5, Funny)
Fortunately, by the time that Longhorn is released, everyone will be running Firefox on Google's forthcoming operating system.
Standards Dammit! Standards! (Score:5, Interesting)
Ideally, we would all be coding to standards. Is your html compartible with the defined standards? XHTML, CSS, and so on?
After all, my cable company doesn't think of this as a '137 television world'... they are concerned about video standards.
Does the NBC Nightly News start up with a banner ad saying, "This broadcast best viewed on RCA Televisions"? No. That is just absurd.
How often do you fall back to IE? (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyhow, I switched back to IE for something today, basically I was downloading and installing new firmware for my mobile phone, it wanted pop-up windows, and while I could have probably gotten it with Firefox, I like to do things by the book when the alternative might be an expensive paperweight!
But besides this, in the last quarter, for example, I think I've used IE only once, when a terminal server was down and I had to fall back to an ActiveX version of the software I was using.
(Gosh, could that be why MS keep activeX around?)
It seems to me these are very specialist circumstances. Hell, I use a TN5250 emulator more than I do IE, and I'm a Windows-only SA with no Linux in my organization (Calm down dear, I'm working on it, I'll have a production FreeBSD box in every office in 2 months). So for me it is a one browser world.
next browser virus (Score:5, Funny)
Not two....Three (Score:3, Interesting)
Ain't choice wonderful?
Anti-monopoly move (Score:3, Informative)
Sure, I'd love it if an open-source browser took over. But I don't think it's going to happen.
Re:Not Longhorn (Score:2)
People will say Yes and after that there is no protection.
Re:Exactly (Score:2)
Or just googled Firefox news where this story has been covered 1600 time
Friefox news [google.com]
Dillo! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The Browser War? (Score:2)
It's not just a US thing...