I think it will highly depend on the success of Windows 7. The same effect that happened with IE6 might happen with IE8 in a corporate environment: it might be deemed good enough so there will be no business case for installing anything else. Consumers will probably be pushed ahead to IE9 by the automated updates, if that is not significantly worse than Chrome/Firefox/etc. then the Windows crowd might largely stay with IE8/9. It will be a long time before any large site will stop supporting IE8.

OTOH: at least Firefox has made itself a bit of a name in the less computer-savvy crowd, which will make it easier for the technically inclined to push their friends over to some other browser. It doesn't even have to be Firefox, the main change is that the (Internet Browser == IE) equation has been broken in people's heads.

  Peter



On 20/05/10 17:51, Moandji Ezana wrote:
What I'm wondering is if IE9 is a great browser, will it boost Microsoft's market share? Or was IE's earlier market share an untenable anomaly anyway, which is now sinking to a more reasonable level?

Moandji
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