It's not precipitous. FF share has been steadily degrading at about 3 
percent points per year while Chrome has been building at roughly the same 
rate. We would expect that in 4 or 5 years FF will be somewhere between 
Opera and Safari in usage.

Given the big G's track record, once they have the entire market cornered 
they'll probably sell it to a company that makes fishing tackle.

Mark

On Thursday, November 30, 2017 at 5:50:23 AM UTC-8, @TiddlyTweeter wrote:
>
> In 2017, between January & the end of October Firefox's browser share 
> dropped from 15.4% to 12.1%.
>
> https://www.w3schools.com/browsers/
>
> Here on Tiddly Gossip we await the results of its "Armageddon" of 
> November--to see whether that is reflected in its stats. 
>
> Pensive moments like this recollect the debacle over "The Saddest Music In 
> The World" competition in which the outcome was initially ambiguous 
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6S6TPVLuYw, though definitive later.
>
> TiddlyAuntie
> On Tiddly News 24/7
>

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