There might be times when you get confused on which browser you should use, or maybe you just stuck to one browser for years and didn’t really care about checking out the other browsers. Well it can actually get confusing as the browsers keep adding new features and try not to fall behind. Like I kept switching between Internet Explorer (also called IE) and Firefox. Well there’s been a great war over this in 90s, but not between IE and Firefox. It was between IE and Netscape Navigator.
Netscape Navigator was the most widely used browser in the 90s and Microsoft had just started working on IE 1.0 which was released later as part of Windows 95 Plus! Pack in the August of 1995. Both Netscape and Microsoft released new versions of their browsers as fast as they could. They added new features, but didn’t really care about fixing the bugs and so it was a time of unstable browsers. Microsoft started to win the first browser war as they supported scripting and CSS, IE was also the default browser in all Windows (95% of the people used Windows) and most of all, Microsoft was a bigger company than Netscape and that means, they had more money to develop their browser. And in 1997, IE was also the default browser on Macs for five years.
IE won the first browser war, Netscape fell from 85% to less than 1%. And IE is now being used by 95% of the people. Then the second browser war begun. Now it was between IE and Firefox. Firefox was basically an experimental project of Mozilla, started by Dave Hyatt and Dave Ross. Right now, we don’t know which browser will win the second browser war. But at the moment, IE is on the lead as Firefox has only about 16% of the market share (it’s the second most popular browser). And if you are thinking about Opera and Safari. Don’t worry, most people don’t even know they exist.
I think that IE is great for security while Firefox has some features like you can choose from about 2000 add-ons, change the theme and installing plugins are fast and easy. Firefox has it’s anti-phishing feature, but still it doesn’t make me feel as safe and secure as IE does. Plus, Firefox might have some privacy issues. Yeah because it sends out information to Google to check if the web page is safe to browse and that’s basically how their anti-phishing works. Well I’ll look into this and post more about it.
I would suggest that you go with Firefox if you are into web developing or like to do something more than just checking your email and surfing the web, because it has some really great add-ons. And it’s always good to keep both, IE and Firefox installed on your computer if you are web designer/developer, since you need to see if your pages work and look good on both browsers.
By the way, here is some interesting stuff. Okay in 1997, the IE team had a big party in San Fransisco to celebrate the release of IE 4.0 and they had this big 10 feet IE logo. And after the party they put the big logo in front of the Netscape office and it also had a sign saying, “From the IE team”. Then the Netscape team had their dinosaur mascot hold a sign reading, “Netscape 75, Microsoft 18″ (representing the market distribution at that time). Another interesting thing is that the IE team and Firefox team are so nice to each other. They worked together on making Firefox compatible with Vista, and IE team sent a cake to Mozilla to congratulate them on Firefox 2.0. Though Bill Gates criticized Firefox by commenting, “so much software gets downloaded all the time, but do people actually use it?”.