Decline of Netscape and entry of Firefox running on
Ubuntu displaying
Wikipedia At the start of Netscape Navigator's decline, Netscape open-sourced its browser code and later entrusted it to the newly formed non-profit
Mozilla Foundation — a primarily community-driven project to create a successor to Netscape. Development continued for several years with little widespread adoption until a stripped-down browser-only version of the full suite, which included new features such as a separate search bar (which had previously only appeared in the Opera browser), was created. The browser-only version was initially named
Phoenix, but because of
trademark issues that name was changed, first to
Firebird, then to
Firefox. Phoenix was chosen because "
Phoenix" implied that it would rise like a
phoenix after Netscape Navigator was killed off by Microsoft. This browser became the focus of the Mozilla Foundation's development efforts. Mozilla's
Firefox 1 was released on November 9, 2004, and it then continued to gain an increasing share of the browser market until a peak of around 24% in 2010. In response, in April 2004, the Mozilla Foundation and
Opera Software joined efforts to develop new open-technology standards which add more capability while remaining backward-compatible with existing technologies. The result of this collaboration was the
WHATWG, a working group devoted to the fast creation of new standard definitions that would be submitted to the
W3C for approval. The growing number of device/browser combinations in use, legally-mandated
web accessibility, as well as the expansion of expected web functionality to essentially require
DOM and scripting abilities, including
AJAX, made
web standards of increasing importance during this era. Instead of advertising their proprietary extensions, browser developers began to market their software based on how closely it adhered to standards. On December 28, 2007, Netscape announced that support for its Mozilla-derived Netscape Navigator would be discontinued on February 1, 2008, suggesting its users migrate to Mozilla Firefox. However, on January 28, 2008, Netscape announced that support would be extended to March 1, 2008, and mentioned
Flock alongside Firefox as alternatives to its users.
Internet Explorer In 2003, Microsoft announced that Internet Explorer 6 Service Pack 1 would be the last standalone version of its browser. Future enhancements would be dependent on
Windows Vista, which would include new tools such as the
WPF and
XAML to enable developers to build web applications. On February 15, 2005, Microsoft announced that
Internet Explorer 7 would be available for Windows XP SP2 and later versions of Windows by mid-2005. The announcement introduced the new version of the browser as a major upgrade over Internet Explorer 6 SP1. Microsoft released Internet Explorer 7 on October 18, 2006. It included tabbed browsing, a search bar, a
phishing filter, and improved support for web standards (including full support for
PNG) — all features already long familiar to Opera and Firefox users. Microsoft distributed Internet Explorer 7 to
genuine Windows users (WGA) as a high-priority update through
Windows Update. Typical market share analysis showed only a slow uptake of Internet Explorer 7 and Microsoft decided to drop the requirement for WGA and made Internet Explorer 7 available to all Windows users in October 2007. Throughout the two following years, Microsoft worked on
Internet Explorer 8. On December 19, 2007, the company announced that an internal build of that version had passed the
Acid2 CSS test in "IE8 standards mode" — the last of the major browsers to do so. Internet Explorer 8 was released on March 19, 2009. New features included
accelerators, improved privacy protection, a compatibility mode for pages designed for older browsers, and improved support for various web standards. It was the last version of Internet Explorer to be released for
Windows XP. Internet Explorer 8 scored 20/100 in the
Acid3 test, which was much worse than all major competitors at the time. In October 2010, StatCounter reported that Internet Explorer had for the first time dropped below 50% market share to 49.87% in their figures. Also, StatCounter reported Internet Explorer 8's first drop in usage share in the same month. Microsoft released
Internet Explorer 9 on March 14, 2011. It featured a revamped interface, support for the basic
SVG feature set, and partial
HTML video support, among other new features. It dropped support for
Windows XP, and only ran on
Windows Vista,
Windows 7, and
Windows Phone 7. The company later released
Internet Explorer 10 along with
Windows 8 and
Windows Phone 8 in 2012, and an update compatible with Windows 7 followed in 2013. This version dropped Vista and Phone 7 support. The release preview of
Internet Explorer 11 was released on September 17, 2013. It supported the same desktops as its predecessor. Starting in 2015 with the release of
Windows 10, Microsoft shifted from Internet Explorer to
Microsoft Edge [Legacy] (Commonly referred to as Edge [Legacy]). However, the new browser had failed to capture much popularity, thus Microsoft Edge switched from its own browser engine,
EdgeHTML, to Chromium's
Blink engine in 2020 for all platforms except for
iOS, where it kept relying on WebKit due to platform restrictions.
Competing desktop and mobile browsers , 2009–2021 Opera had been a long-time player in the browser wars, known for being lightweight and introducing innovative features such as
tabbed browsing and
mouse gestures. However, the software was commercial, which hampered its adoption compared to its free rivals until 2005, when the browser became
freeware. On June 20, 2006, Opera Software released
Opera 9 including an integrated source viewer, a
BitTorrent client implementation, and widgets. It was the first Windows browser to pass the
Acid2 test.
Opera Mini, a mobile browser, has a significant mobile market share. Multiple ports, such as
Opera 8.5 for the
Nintendo DS and Opera 9 for the
Wii, were also released. On October 24, 2006, Mozilla released Mozilla
Firefox 2. It included the ability to reopen recently closed tabs, a session restore feature to resume work where it had been left after a crash, a phishing filter, and a spell-checker for text fields. Mozilla released
Firefox 3 on June 17, 2008, with performance improvements and other new features.
Firefox 3.5 followed on June 30, 2009, with further performance improvements, native integration of audio and video, and more privacy features.
Apple created
forks of the open-source
KHTML and
KJS layout and JavaScript engines from the
KDE Konqueror browser in 2002. They explained that those provided a basis for easier development than other technologies by being small (fewer than 140,000
lines of code), cleanly designed, and standards-compliant. The resulting
layout engine became known as
WebKit and it was incorporated into the
Safari browser that first shipped with
Mac OS X v10.3. On June 13, 2003, Microsoft said it was discontinuing Internet Explorer on the Mac platform, and on June 6, 2007, Apple released a beta version of Safari for Microsoft Windows. On April 29, 2010,
Steve Jobs wrote an open letter regarding his
Thoughts on Flash, and the place it would hold on Apple's
iOS devices and web browsers.
Web developers were tasked with updating their
web sites to be mobile-friendly, and while many disagreed with
Steve Jobs's assessment on
Adobe Flash, history would soon prove his point with the poor performance of
Flash on
Android devices.
HTML4 and
CSS2 were the standard in most browsers in 2006. However, new features being added to browsers from
HTML5 and
CSS3 specifications were quickly making their mark by 2010, especially in the emerging
mobile browser market where new ways of animating and rendering for various screen sizes were to become the norm. Accessibility would also become a key player for the mobile web.
Google Chrome's entry Google released the
Google Chrome browser on September 2, 2008, using the same WebKit rendering engine as Safari and a faster JavaScript engine called
V8. Shortly after, an open-sourced version for the Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux platforms was released under the name
Chromium. According to Net Applications, Chrome had gained a 3.6% usage share by October 2009. After the release of the beta for Mac OS X and Linux, the market share had increased rapidly. During December 2009 and January 2010,
StatCounter reported that its statistics indicated that Firefox 3.5 was the most popular browser when counting individual browser versions, passing Internet Explorer 7 and 8 by a small margin. This was the first time a browser surpassed the Internet Explorer since the fall of Netscape Navigator. However, this feat, which GeekSmack called the "dethroning of Microsoft and its Internet Explorer 7 browser", could largely be attributed to the fact that it came at a time when version 8 was replacing version 7 as the dominant Internet Explorer version; no more than two months later Internet Explorer 8 had established itself as the most popular browser again. Other major statistics, such as
Net Applications, never reported any other browser having a higher usage share than Internet Explorer if each version of each browser was looked at individually: for example, Firefox 3.5 was reported as the third most popular browser version from December 2009 to February 2010, succeeded by Firefox 3.6 since April 2010, each ahead of Internet Explorer 7 but behind Internet Explorer 6 and 8.
Google Chrome's dominance and evolving web standards according to
StatCounter, 2008–2019 , initially released in 2008, had a rapidly increasing trend in usage share since its creation, dominating the browser wars in 2017. On January 21, 2010, Mozilla released
Mozilla Firefox 3.6, which introduced a new type of theme display, 'Personas'. This allowed users to change Firefox's appearance with a single click. Version 3.6 also improved JavaScript performance, overall browser responsiveness, and startup times. Google released Google Chrome 9 on February 3, 2011. New features introduced included support for
WebGL, Chrome Instant, and the Chrome Web Store. The company created another seven versions of Chrome that year, finishing with Chrome 16 on December 15, 2011. Google Chrome 17 was released on February 15, 2012. In April 2012, Google browsers (Chrome and Android) became the most used browsers on
Wikimedia Foundation sites. By May 21, 2012,
StatCounter reported Chrome narrowly overtaking Internet Explorer as the most used browser in the world. However, the market share between Internet Explorer and Chrome meant that Internet Explorer was slightly ahead of Chrome on weekdays up until July 4. At the same time,
Net Applications reported Internet Explorer firmly in first place, with Google Chrome almost overtaking Firefox as the second. In 2012, responding to Chrome's popularity, Apple discontinued Safari for Windows, making it exclusively available on
OS X. The concept of rapid releases established by Google Chrome prompted Mozilla to do the same for its Firefox browser. On June 21, 2011, Firefox 5.0 was the first rapid release for this browser, finished a mere six weeks after the previous edition. Mozilla created four more whole-number versions throughout the year, finishing with Firefox 9 on December 20, 2011. For those desiring
long-term support, Mozilla made an
Extended Support Release (ESR) version of
Firefox 10 on January 31, 2012. Contrary to the regular version, a
Firefox ESR received regular security updates plus occasional new features and performance updates for approximately one year, after which a 12-week grace period was given before discontinuing that version number. Those who continued to use the rapid releases with an active Internet connection were automatically updated to Firefox 11 on March 15, 2012. By the end of 2012, however, Chrome overtook both Internet Explorer and Firefox to become the world's most used browser. During this era, all major web browsers implemented support for
HTML video. Supported codecs, however, varied from browser to browser. Then versions of Android, Chrome, and Firefox supported Theora, H.264, and the VP8 version of WebM. Older versions of Firefox omitted H.264 due to it being a proprietary codec, but it was made available beginning in version 17 for Android and version 20 for Windows. Internet Explorer and Safari supported H.264 exclusively on March 14, 2011 with
Internet Explorer 9, and on March 18, 2008 with
Safari 3.1. However, Theora and VP8 codecs could be manually installed on the desktop versions. Given the popularity of WebKit for mobile browsers, Opera Software discontinued its Presto engine upon the release of
Opera 15 on July 2, 2013. The Opera 12 series of browsers were the last to use Presto with its successors using WebKit instead. In 2015, Microsoft discontinued the production of newer versions of Internet Explorer. By this point, Chrome overtook all other browsers as the browser with the highest usage share. Chrome had supported
Windows XP until the end of 2015. By 2017 usage shares of Opera, Firefox and Internet Explorer fell well below 5% each, while Google Chrome had expanded to over 60% worldwide. On May 25, 2017,
Andreas Gal, former Mozilla
CTO, publicly announced that Google Chrome won the Second Browser War. ==Aftermath==