How Google's Chrome Browser Could Overtake Firefox

by Sam Dean - Apr. 05, 2010Comments (9)

For several months now, Google's Chrome browser has been posting larger market share gains, by percentage growth, than open source rivals. From February to March, preliminary Net Applications data showed that it jumped from 5.6 percent share to 6.1 opercent share. By contrast, Firefox rose from 24.2 percent to 24.5 percent over the sam period, and Safari rose from 4.5 percent to 4.7 percent.

Chrome has also been in the news in the wake of Google's and Adobe's partnership focused on building Flash Player 10.1 into the browser. Especially with Google's Chrome OS due to arrive later this year, there are good reasons to believe that Chrome could represent serious market share competition for Firefox.

Chrome OS essentially adds operating system plumbing to the Chrome browser interface, and has the potential to introduce the Chrome browsing metaphor to many new users. Google has already announced numerous hardware partners who will ship netbooks based on the new operating system, and there is also a good chance that many users will use it in conjunction with other operating systems, including Microsoft Windows.  These trends could give Google a pronounced distribution advantage when it comes to getting users used to Chrome browsing standards.

It's also true that Firefox is getting major updates at a much slower rate than the Chrome browser is. That's partly due to the fact that Firefox has a much larger user base, but Google has demonstrated that it can deliver improvements to its browser at a rapid-fire pace. No doubt, as Chrome OS receives upgrades and has more developers working on it, the basic Chrome browser can inherit functionality from it, helping to keep the rate of improvement high.

While some people don’t realize it, Mozilla makes the bulk of its revenues from Google. In fact, more than 90 percent of Mozilla’s revenue comes from search-related deals, and in Google’s case, that’s in exchange for a search box in Firefox that steers users of the browser into Google’s lucrative search-and-ad ecosystem. However, if Google's browser share continues to rise at a torrid pace, its deal with Mozilla may become more questionable. Mozilla's deal with Google is up for renewal in 2011.

The real wildcard in the race between the Chrome browser and Firefox is what impact Chrome OS has. Some predict that it could be substantial, and if Chrome OS becomes lucrative for Google, the sheer number of developers thrown at the core Chrome architecture could become daunting. For years, people predicted that browsers and operating systems would converge, and Google clearly has its eyes set squarely on that trend. Later this year, we'll see exactly what impact an open source operating system can have on its sibling browser.

 



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9 Comments
 

Er, I read the whole thing twice and I still have no clue "How Google's Chrome Browser Could Overtake Firefox".


If you meant in marketshare, that seems pretty unlikely anytime soon, since Chrome is about 6% and Firefox is about 30%. If you mean in another sense ... what was it?


0 Votes

Hi James, the arrival of Chrome OS and ongoing development of it are what strike me as potentially accelerating the functionality of the Chrome browser beyond competitors. With Chrome already being revised at such a rapid pace, comparatively, that could mean rapidly increasing market share for it. I agree that its market share is relatively low at this point, but adoption is growing faster than it is for other open source browsers.


Best,

Sam


0 Votes

Every body know that chrome is the part of Google and they also know that Google can't make any mistake about the browsing function. we can use the chrome effortlessly and chrome take few minutes for open the site...


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0 Votes

Every body know that chrome is the part of Google and they also know that Google can't make any mistake about the browsing function. we can use the chrome effortlessly and chrome take few minutes for open the site...


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0 Votes

No, I don't think so. Firefox has what is takes to be a good browser and Google chrome can't beat Firefox when it comes to speed.

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0 Votes

Google chrome is alot user friendly, more so than firefox. For noobies it's great, although it seems a bit too basic for my personal liking

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0 Votes

Until Google Chrome gets its privacy issue fixed (won't allow automatic deleting of all browsing history, etc. upon exit), it won't be a contender in my book. You have to manually delete items to get them wiped off your history. I downloaded Chrome, used it for a week, and I'm uninstalling it now.


0 Votes

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Regards,

John


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0 Votes

I'm using both Google Chrome and Firefox... Though I'm not absolutely sure you have made a case that GC is better than FF... I certainly do enjoy using Chrome much more.


Just like its clean-slate interface, and im certain that its "addons" are growing by the day.


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0 Votes
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