The Browser Wars Are (sort of) Over

gaming console and DVD format wars we’ve seemed to have forgotten the browser wars, but it seems as though that has come to an end, or at very least an amicable ceasefire. At the Web 2.0 Expo this week Microsoft, Mozilla, Opera and Google took center stage to discuss what’s really going on. The main topic of discussion was security and I’d like to think that’s a very good start. I could care less about market share, but I will say I loathe IE.

Brendan Eich, the chief technology officer at Mozilla, said that security was hard and always will be.

I don’t think we should take security lightly; it’s an end-to-end problem and we have to step outside the current model to win on this front,’ he said. For his part, Chris Wetherell, a software engineer at Google, said one of the scenarios that kept him awake at night was offline access to the browser and what that meant from a security perspective, particularly on the user-to-user front.

  •   

4 Comments/Pingbacks so far

 
no image
Mark (Who am I?)

Yay Firefox, you’re gettin’ there!

 
no image
simon (Who am I?)

Whose data is that? It doesn’t seem to match with what I’ve been seeing on other sites, such as wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usage_share_of_web_browsers

 
no image
Pastco (Who am I?)

What’s the point of a chart more than a year old?

 
no image
Peter Ha (Who am I?)

The chart has nothing to do with the post, it was only meant to be a visual, nothing more.

Trackbacks/Pings

Leave a Comment

« Back to text comment

Comment template by SezWho

CrunchGear Sponsors