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[News] Advice for Selecting Web Browsers in Windows

  • Subject: [News] Advice for Selecting Web Browsers in Windows
  • From: Roy Schestowitz <newsgroups@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 05 Mar 2010 11:18:12 +0000
  • Followup-to: comp.os.linux.advocacy
  • Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.advocacy
  • User-agent: KNode/4.3.1
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Web Browser Grand Prix: The Top Five, Tested And Ranked 

http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/firefox-chrome-opera,2558.html


'Select your browser' - which browser to choose in Microsoft's browser ballot? 

http://www.metro.co.uk/tech/814925-microsoft-browser-choice-ballot-which-browser-is-should-i-choose


Tech Weekly: Opera on the browser ballot, and open source offices

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/blog/audio/2010/mar/02/opera-browser-coworking


Recent:

Doing the Microsoft Shuffle: Algorithm Fail in Browser Ballot

,----[ Quote ]
| The story first hit in last week on the
| Slovakian tech site DSL.sk.  Since I am not
| linguistically equipped to follow the
| Slovakian tech scene, I didnât hear about the
| story until it was brought up in English on
| TechCrunch.  The gist of these reports is
| this: DSL.sk did a test of the âballotâ
| screen at www.browserchoice.eu, used in
| Microsoft Windows 7 to prompt the user to
| install a browser.  It was a Microsoft
| concession to the EU, to provide a randomized
| ballot screen for users to select a browser.
| However, the DSL.sk test suggested that the
| ordering of the browsers was far from random.
|
| But this wasnât a simple case of Internet
| Explorer showing up more in the first
| position.  The non-randomness was pronounced,
| but more complicated.  For example, Chrome
| was more likely to show up in one of the
| first 3 positions.  And Internet Explorer
| showed up 50% of the time in the last
| position.  This has lead to various theories,
| made on the likely mistaken theory that this
| is an intentional non-randomness.  Does
| Microsoft have secret research showing that
| the 5th position is actually chosen more
| often?  Is the Internet Explorer random
| number generator not random?  There were also
| comments asserting that the tests proved
| nothing, and the results were just chance,
| and others saying that the results are
| expected to be non-random because computers
| can only make pseudo-random numbers, not
| genuinely random numbers.
`----

http://www.robweir.com/blog/2010/02/microsoft-random-browser-ballot.html


How Random Is Microsoftâs Random Browser Choice Screen In Europe?

,----[ Quote ]
| More than once out of every four hits, the
| page would show Google Chrome on the far
| left, and Internet Explorer would only make
| it to the first spot in 13,8% of page loads
| (scoring well below all four other
| browsers). In fact, in over 50% of all page
| hits, Internet Explorer would come out to
| the far right spot of the five browser
| choices shown on the screen.
`----

http://techcrunch.com/2010/02/22/microsoft-ballot-screen/
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