![]() ![]() Microsoft has to at least give mobile browsing a shot, though. ![]() Edge doesn't have the benefits of widespread PC usage or deep integration in a mobile OS, so there might not be much space for it on smartphones. Apple's Safari browser comes in second at about 33 percent, most likely because it's integrated with iOS on iPhones. NetMarketShare (opens in a new tab) data tabs Chrome as the leader on smartphones, too, accounting for 57 percent of mobile web browsing. Edge can only claim about five percent of the total, trailing even the browser it replaced as the default on Windows computers, Internet Explorer, which is still used by about 14 percent of PC owners.Ĭurrent mobile browsing stats aren't very promising for Edge, either. The cross platform Edge support could be handy, but there's a major problem for Microsoft: Barely anyone actually uses the browser on their PCs anyway.Ĭhrome dominates the browser wars, currently accounting for almost 60 percent of PC web traffic according to NetMarketShare (opens in a new tab). ![]()
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