Skip Links

Network World

John Cox

Opera reclaims number 1 spot for mobile browsers...or not

By John Cox on Wed, 06/03/09 - 3:47pm.
Newsletter Signup

[This is a repost of a news story elsewhere on our site]

Opera regained a slight lead over Apple to become the most-used mobile browser in May, according to data from StatCounter. Or maybe not.

It all depends on what’s being counted.

StatCounter tracks a sample of over 4 billion pageviews per month, across 3 million Web sites, and identifies what brand of mobile browser requested them. In May, just under 25% were requested by Opera, presumably Opera Mobile, a stand-alone downloadable browser for mobile devices, but not Opera Mini, which is a server-based browser designed for less powerful mobile phones.

Browsers on mobile devices increasingly are based on full-blown HTML rendering engines, either in the handset itself or on servers. Besides Opera Mobile, Firefox has a mobile browser in beta, Bitstream offers Thunderhawk, and Skyfire has a server-based offering. Microsoft is shortly releasing a much more capable mobile browser, to be called Internet Explorer Mobile 6.

We have a slideshow on the new browser generation.

Source: StatCounter Global Stats - Mobile Browser Market Share

According to StatCounter, the Apple iPhone Safari browser was second in May, with just over 22%. Remaining in third place, was the Nokia browser at nearly 18%.

But the mobile version of Safari also runs on the Apple iPod Touch, which is almost identical to iPhone but without a cellular radio: it has only the Wi-Fi connection. According to StatCounter, the “iTouch” made 15% of the May requests.

So if you look at the total of Safari mobile browser requests, that share jumps to 37%, a big lead over Opera. Still, that’s a decline from the highpoint of the combined count: 42% for Safari in April. Since then, the page request percentage for Safari on both devices has been declining.

Opera’s low point was in April with just over 21% of page requests.

Nokia has been hovering around 18% so far this year, with RIM’s BlackBerry browser showing steady growth, rising about 2 points to just under 7% of page request in May.

The Android browser has been holding steady so far at around 2% of all requests this year.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • You can use BBCode tags in the text.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <p> <strong> <i> <br /> <br> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <blockquote>

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Welcome, visitor. Register Log in
About John Cox on Wireless

Cox is a senior editor at Network World.