This is an article about marketing browsers, i.e. what can browsers offer so that people start caring which browser they are using.<p>I just don’t really see the big problem there. We have got a lot of healthy competition in the browser market. The dark ages of IE6 are (nearly) over and the future of browsers is looking pretty good.<p>I don’t think you will be able to change much about the way people think about the web and browsers. Browsers are just one of those transparent things that remain in the background. And I’m pretty sure that throwing features at the problem is not the right way to go. Turning browsers into glorified <Insert-Your-Favorite-Web-Thing-Here> clients just seems to be a pretty stupid move.
At and old company, we were dealing with the acquisition of a new product, and with it a new, more vocal user base that often expressed itself on USENET. The CTO went on our website, followed some links to a 3rd party website, hit a nntp:// link that opened Outlook Express on a newsgroup, then was all up in arms the next day: "What are all these negative comments doing <i>on our website</i>!?"<p>Yes, it was something like 2001, and we had a software company CTO that didn't know the difference between http and nntp and Internet Explorer and Outlook Express.<p>To quote Zed Shaw: Steak and Strippers, Baby!
Browsers are not the issue here. When Woz designed the Apple II, he imagined that everyone who owned one would write programs for it. Instead, they used it for VisiCalc or Number Munchers. Programmers look at a computer and see possibilities, competing technologies, and a vast environment to explore. Everyone else looks at a computer and sees a tool, something to let them catch up with Grandma without having to call or pay a visit.<p>The real question to ask is what makes programmers (and their ilk) different from everyone else. I'm convinced the answer is education, but it seems like no one is interested in discussing the sad state of such in the US.<p>Bottom line: Most people don't care what computer, let alone what browser, they use. All they care is what it can do for them, and faster load times don't seem to make that big a difference.
Okay - so given this data along with the recent announcement that Windows 7 will ship without a browser built-in in Europe, does that mean that up to 92% of Europe will go offline when they upgrade?
So, you're saying that all of Internet's intelligible discussion is generated by less then that, right?<p>Makes me wonder whether Internet in it's current state will hold up were we to dislodge with the general ignorance.