Browser War
Declared Over
November 8, 1999
By Michael Pastore
Editor, CyberAtlas - Web
Developer News Archives
The so-called browser war over which
software would be used to navigate the World Wide Web has
been declared over by Zona
Research, a market research firm that has been
conducting browser studies since January of 1996.
In its final browser study of 236
respondents, Zona found that Microsoft's
Internet Explorer was the primary browser choice for 64
percent of the respondents, while 36 percent indicated Netscape
Navigator. In the first browser study in January of
1996, Zona found there were nine players on the browser
frontier battling for a slice of a $200 million market. Now
there are two players for $0 market.
"The battle for the hearts and minds
of the browser market coalesced around two dominant
vendors," said Clay Rider, vice president and chief
analyst of Zona Research. "In striking similarity to
the cola wars of the 1980s, shelves that primarily were
filled with a preponderance of competing brands have all but
given way to the reality of a Coke and Pepsi dominated
marketplace. Likewise, brands such as Quarterdeck Mosaic,
Wollongong Emissary, and NCD Mariner, have fallen by the
wayside in a market controlled by Microsoft (MSFT)
and Netscape."
The success of Internet Explorer and
Navigator are reflected in the growing number of companies
with browser policies. Nearly three-quarters (73 percent) of
companies have a corporate browser policy, up from 69
percent in April 1999. Of the companies with a browser
policy, 69 percent dictate the use of IE, while 31 percent
require the use of Navigator. According to Zona, no other
browser has been named as part of a corporate browser
policy.
"We are witnessing a shift away from
the importance of the browser technology to the content on
the Internet," Ryder said. "It is not surprising
that the two dominant browser vendors now play a significant
role in the burgeoning content marketplace. The question is
how will the content war play itself out?"
The latest browser study also found that
36 percent of companies monitor Internet content based on a
list of approved sites. Twenty-three percent monitor based
on the user's job function, 19 percent monitor based on the
size of the transmission, and 14 percent monitor Internet
content based on the time of day. Monitoring based on a list
of approved sites and the user's job function increased
slightly from the last browser study from 33 percent and 20
percent, respectively.
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