Author Topic: IE market share rising?!  (Read 5357 times)

Kudistos Megistos

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IE market share rising?!
« on: 2010-08-04 04:40:40 »
netmarketshare.com, which seems to be more trusted by the media than any other site of its type, has come out with the most extraordinary set of statistics: apparently, IE's market share has risen for the last two months. Some might say that this is because people are buying computers with Windows 7 and IE preinstalled, but they've been doing so for months whilst IE's market share has fallen. This statistic is very strange indeed; perhaps Microsoft's ads are responsible. The site also says that Windows 7 has finally overtaken Vista and XP's enormous share is falling. Some good news, then.

statcounter comes out with more settling news of IE's market share continuing to fall, along with news of XP's share falling and 7 overtaking Vista. Unfortunately, it claims that Vista has over 30% of the market share in the UK and its share is rising; it might overtake XP before 7 does and become the country's favourite OS. Further proof that we are retarded. :'(

Both sites do have one piece of good news, however; the Mac market share is falling. Apple can't seem to do anything right at the moment* ;D

*some people would say that they haven't been able to do anything right for a long time, but it's taken until now for the general public and the media to notice.

Covarr

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Re: IE market share rising?!
« Reply #1 on: 2010-08-04 04:54:36 »
For every ten percent IE's marketshare rises, an innocent baby dies. Just sayin'.

sl1982

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Re: IE market share rising?!
« Reply #2 on: 2010-08-04 05:10:24 »
The only thing I use IE for is to download firefox.

Cupcake

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Re: IE market share rising?!
« Reply #3 on: 2010-08-04 05:18:40 »
Both sites do have one piece of good news, however; the Mac market share is falling. Apple can't seem to do anything right at the moment* ;D

*some people would say that they haven't been able to do anything right for a long time, but it's taken until now for the general public and the media to notice.

Yep, a solid UNIX based OS is a horrible idea.  As is a kickass phone, albeit with antenna issues that are present on just about any phone, just a tad (read: much) easier on theres, that can be fixed easily (granted, it took apple WAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY too long to roll out the solution).  As far as the iPad...well...  alright, the iPad is kinda pointless.  Although my systems-architect of a brother got one, hasn't jailbroken it, and has gotten a lot of use out of it.  So I can't say for sure that it's pointless.

I just hate all the bad press apple gets.  I mean, yeah, the computers are over priced, but the hardware tends to last forever and a half.  I have a first gen iMac which is still running, and kicking ass, an iMac G4 which is still kicking even more ass (despite being HORRIBLY abused by the secret service.  The only real issue, is the dead backlight...and the wifi card they snapped in half).

Can someone please explain to me why Macs are bad computers?  iPhones are bad phones, or iPods are bad DMPs?

I'd really like to know

sl1982

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Re: IE market share rising?!
« Reply #4 on: 2010-08-04 05:23:17 »
The only problem i have with apple anything is they try to dictate how I use it. If i buy a piece of hardware I should be able to use it anyways i please. Oh and the prices are horrible, except for maybe the iphone compared to android phones.

Cupcake

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Re: IE market share rising?!
« Reply #5 on: 2010-08-04 05:57:49 »
The only problem i have with apple anything is they try to dictate how I use it. If i buy a piece of hardware I should be able to use it anyways i please. Oh and the prices are horrible, except for maybe the iphone compared to android phones.

Because Microsoft doesn't dictate how you use their 360, or Sony doesn't dictate how you use the PS3, or Nintendo doesn't dictate how you use the Wii.

Also, as I said, prices are horrible, but worth while, in my opinion, because the hardware lasts on apple computers far longer than anything else I've ever used.

Kudistos Megistos

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Re: IE market share rising?!
« Reply #6 on: 2010-08-04 06:13:09 »
For every ten percent IE's marketshare rises, an innocent baby dies. Just sayin'.



Can someone please explain to me why Macs are bad computers?  iPhones are bad phones, or iPods are bad DMPs?

I'd really like to know

Most of the hate for Apple is hate for Apple as a company and a "community" rather than the products it produces. The Apple fanbase borders on a cult, despite Apple not requiting their love; I can think of no other company in the whole world with such a large proportion of truly obsessive fans with such a large sense of their own superiority, who defend their company to the death and who think (hilariously) that they are independent-minded left-wing rebels for buying the products that are the greatest examples of conspicuous consumption in the world today. Their advertising has traditionally gone way too far and has crossed the line many times from exaggeration and bias to outright misrepresentation. Steve Jobs is a horrible human being. He's clearly an egotistical megalomaniac who's the closest we have to a real-life Bond villain ;D. Whilst Bill Gates is giving billions to charity, Jobs is stealing livers. 8-)

That said, I'll answer your question. Apple products are ridiculously overpriced. Their desktops and laptops use the same shitty rebranded components that you get in a Dell, the Chinese sweatshop workers who make Foxconn motherboards for Apple are committing suicide, and yet their computers cost much more. Does an aluminium case cost hundreds of pounds? For the price that differentiates Apple computers from PC rivals with the same components, I'd expect the case to be made out of gold. And that's only the default configuration; adding 200 MHz of clock speed to the processor, putting in a few extra GB of RAM or adding another hard drive to your Mac Pro can cost hundreds of pounds; enough to buy a netbook. :roll:

What else? They're usually hard to upgrade and not designed for people to fix on their own. They're locked down (this applies more to their mobile operating systems; Jobs' authoritarianism really shows when he dictates what apps can be made for the iPhone according to his moral views and tells developers how to develop). They have useless features; everything they make gets turned into a little computer. I've also seen evidence that the failure rate of Apple laptops in the first three years is higher than that of some PC laptops (namely Asus and Toshiba). So much for Apple products just working and PCs BSoDing every half hour and constantly having to be repaired (which is what Apple's advertisers would have you think). They also make the least secure software, despite claiming to be the most secure.* :D

The iPhone doesn't function as a phone. Some people believe that phones are designed to make phone calls, but not Apple, apparently. They have antenna issues that are orders of magnitude more severe than those seen in other smartphones, and until they were forced to give out free bumpers, the bumpers you had to buy to make your phone work as a phone cost the same as a phone that would actually make phone calls when you held it in a normal way. I once heard a stand-up comedian say that all of the apps on the iPhone are designed to distract you when the phone part wasn't working; he was right. I don't know why Apple doesn't just drop the "phone" aspect of the iPhone and call it an iPad nano. To an extent, this applies to all smartphones, but the iPhone is the most egregious example of this faggotry. ;D

Dunno 'bout the iPod. That doesn't seem to have any massive problems. It also doesn't seem to have such bad press. :-\

*True, Windows might be less secure in practice because criminals invest more time in it than on the Mac, but that's because they know that, after buying an Apple product, people don't have any money left to steal. ;D

The only problem i have with apple anything is they try to dictate how I use it. If i buy a piece of hardware I should be able to use it anyways i please. Oh and the prices are horrible, except for maybe the iphone compared to android phones.

Because Microsoft doesn't dictate how you use their 360, or Sony doesn't dictate how you use the PS3, or Nintendo doesn't dictate how you use the Wii.

Game consoles aren't expected to be open, nor should they be. However, Apple's closed platform devices are marketed against, and competing with, open platforms such as Android (vs iPhone) and Windows and Linux netbooks (vs iPad). When Apple made a games console, no-one cared that it was locked down. Of course, people seemed to be bothered by other things about it.

Apple have no-one other than themselves to blame for their bad press, and it's been a long time coming. It's funny that they're complaining now that they're getting treated the way they used to treat Microsoft. ;D
« Last Edit: 2010-08-04 16:13:48 by Kudistos Megistos »

Bosola

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Re: IE market share rising?!
« Reply #7 on: 2010-08-04 22:35:00 »
Oh, Apple had a place. Three years ago, there really weren't any other options for an elegant desktop that 'just worked'. Vista had too many growing pains; Linux simply wasn't mature enough, and even with hardware support, GUI twiddling was the exception, not the rule. Now we have the stable and sleek Windows 6.1 7 and distros like Mint, which I've been running for about two months now without having to dip into the CLI even once (well, except when I wanted to). Mint has given me a solid Unix workstation that 'just works out of the box' and the freedom of Linux.

Even Apple will acknowledge that the core of their sales are electronics in the broadest sense - iPhones and iPods being the meat and bones of their revenue, and taking the lion's share of R and D redevelopment too. When a second-hand notebook running Puppy with Fluxbox is operationally identical to a flimsy £1000 Apple laptop, there's really no place for Apple and its closed-source zealotry in modern computing.

Kudistos Megistos

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Re: IE market share rising?!
« Reply #8 on: 2010-08-04 22:38:08 »
Now we have the stable and sleek Windows 6.1 7

I see what you did there