Yesterday I proceeded to download the newest version of my favorite browser (Firefox). Firefox 3.5 has many improvements such as speed, security, and features.
I was proudly telling people to upgrade via Twitter and Facebook, when someone made a great comment. It stated,
“I don’t want to hear about Firefox advances! Not until I know IE has caught up! Slow down FF!”
Now, I still enjoy the neat things that Firefox is doing, but seeing IE6 fade into the oblivion would make me more excited. Frankly, Firefox 3.5 is light-years better than IE8 – never mind comparing it to IE6. Remember we as developers can’t really use the new features until it works across all browsers anyways.
Here are the latest browser statistics according to W3Schools,
IE – 41%
Firefox – 47.7%
IE8 – 4.2%
IE7 – 21.3%
IE6 – 14.5%
3.0 – 44.3%
2.0 – 2.9%
Is there a reason that pretty much all Firefox users upgrade to the newest version, and IE doesn’t? Well I think there are a couple reasons:
Will Microsoft ever learn from their mistakes? Maybe they should focus on their operating systems…
Instead of dwelling on the negatives, let’s focus on some of the cool new Firefox features!
Have you ever found it annoying in the past when you go to view a sites web source and you need to copy and paste a URL just to check it out? Firefox 3.5 now converts these URLs into actual links that you can click on. It is such a little thing, but should save me a TON of time!

Private browsing is a nice security feature that Firefox has added. When you select this mode (Tools>>Start Private Browsing) no history will be recorded. This is a feature that mirrors in some ways what Google Chrome did with its “incognito window”.

Perhaps the most talked about feature is the dramatic improvement in performance. We as internet surfers don’t read the web, we SCAN. We are creatures that want information as quick as possible, and nothing is ever fast enough.
Firefox’s new “TraceMonkey” JavaScript engine keeps the JavaScript executing at top speeds.

This feature allows Firefox to determine your location using your IP Address. It will then allow websites to tailor their sites depending on what location you are browsing their site from.
Flickr is one site that has already implemented this. It determines your location and then shows photos from other people in your local area.

Firefox 3.5 now supports @font-face which allows a designer to add a fancy font to an element using CSS. Remember IE is still trying to figure out the box model, so they haven’t added this feature yet.
HTML 5 is also the new standard projected in the near future. Firefox likes being ahead of the curve as you probably have noticed. HTML 5 includes audio and video tags, along with supporting the <canvas> element which essentially is a drawing surface.
I hope this review of Firefox 3 has encouraged you to upgrade, and if you are on IE6 maybe it is time you upgrade?
If I missed any neat features please leave a comment below.
W3Schools only reports hits on their own website, not the world at large. Net Applications has more accurate stats.
There are three reasons IE users don’t upgrade, none of which are what you postulated:
1) Corporate environments can be several versions behind and users are not allowed to upgrade IE.
2) Upgrading from IE6 requires a legal copy of Windows XP/Vista (or a hacked Windows Genuine Authentication). People who don’t have a legal license can’t upgrade, and those who can don’t always bother
3) People keep supporting it. I say pull the plug and watch it die.
Reason that IE 6 is still around is that certain companies are still have intranets developed for IE 6 and upgrading would brake the existing solutions.
Other companies (that I worked for) are stuck with Windows 2000 and Microsoft does not provide any newer version of IE for them.
I will repeat my comment on dzone here:
When Microsoft finally stops supporting the ancient lumbering beast that is XP, IE6 will finally die… alas, this will not happen for a while…
Let’s hope that with the release of Windows 7 there will be a decrease in IE6 users.
A very important and obvious fact that I think has been missed is that a copy of XP is not required for users of people stuck with Windows 2000 if you are upgrading from IE 6 to another browser that is not IE, including Firefox (or Opera, or Safari, or whatever tickles you).
For Firefox, there’s also the IE Tab extension which will save most of those sites that don’t work without IE.
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