Net Applications compiled all the data. It does so by monitoring how some 160 million unique visitors browse through more than 40,000 sites each month. According to its calculations, Chrome's share reached 4.4%, which was an uptick of a measely 0.4% when compared to Chrome's presence in November.
Where does that leave Safari? Sadly, it owns just 4.37% of the desktop browser market. Chrome just barely edge it out of the third spot by 0.03 percentage points.
Chrome has been available on Windows-based machines for more than a year. Prior to last week, Chrome was only available in developer versions for those willing to put up with an unstable browser.
Since I am an Apple user, I was excited to download the Chrome beta for Macs. I am currently switching between Chrome and Safari. So far, I find Safari to be a bit better, but Chrome is growing on me.
[Via ComputerWorld]