(This happened with the release of iPadOS 13, the first version with the name “iPadOS”.) You can see the apparent uptick in StatCounter’s numbers for “MacOS” starting in September 2019. Update: Alexandre Dieulot reminded me that in 2019 Apple changed Safari’s default user-agent string on iPadOS to look like Safari’s for MacOS. Google Analytics can be a quick and free way to measure screen resolutions, devices, and the browsers your sites. Chrome dominates the desktop overall, but second place appears to be a very tight three-way race between Safari, Edge, and Firefox.Īlso worth noting: mobile browsing is so profoundly popular that only Chrome (63%) and Safari (20%) register above the baseline when you look at all browsing across all platforms. StatCounter pegs MacOS’s share of North America desktop usage at 26%, which suggests that roughly one-third of Mac users use Chrome (or Edge or Firefox - but probably Chrome). No pun intended, but even limiting the stats to “desktop” is not an apples-to-apples comparison, because Safari is available only on the Mac (but, has the enormous advantage of being the default). These stats are desktop-only - Safari comes in much higher on mobile, of course. While Edge may be catching up to Safari worldwide, in NorthĪmerica it’s a different story, as Apple’s browser is used onġ6.87% of desktops compared to Edge’s 11.93% market share. Still holds the top spot at 65.38%, with fellow challenger Mozillaįirefox now trailing in behind with 9.18%. Microsoft Edge is now used on 9.54% of desktops worldwide, justīehind Safari at 9.84%. State of the Desktop Browser Battle: Microsoft Edge Is Moving UpĪnthony Spadafora, writing for TechRadar:Īccording to data from web analytics service StatCounter,
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