
What I find remarkable about these figures is that they demonstrate the difficulty of shifting mainstream perceptions and technological use. In almost any measurable manner, Firefox is superior to Internet Explorer. But IE comes pre-installed with Windows, and people are remarkably reluctant to shift their usage patterns. People in general do not want to install new software, and to learn a new manner of doing things is not a priority. When the average users learns how to use something, they will stick with it, even if there is something much better in the market.
I think that this demonstrates some interesting policy implications. For example, I think that official efforts to push a specific technological solution are doomed to fail, because users will not always choose what's best for them.
I'm a Firefox user, because I appreciate what it does for me. But as Lilian says, users will take convenience over security every time, and the second you say "You can use Firefox to surf the web, except for a few sites, which you'll have to use IE for." they say "Well I'll just use IE in the first place then."
ReplyDeleteThankfully less and less sites are IE-specific nowadays though. Soon enough we'll hit a tipping point and then Firefox use will be an accepted norm.
Hi Andrew,
ReplyDeleteSo very true! I hate that I can't pay my gas online with Firefox. I hope that all web developers can learn and stop using IE specific sites.
Andres