The browser wars are heating up again, but this time the fight is for dominance of the mobile Internet.
Google, Apple, Microsoft and Yahoo! are all
in the struggle, along with the Norwegian-made Opera browser and the
open source Firefox software from Mozilla.
The motive behind the wars is not just
bragging rights. The company that controls the mobile Web can direct
users to its websites, and importantly, gather data that can be used in
targeted advertising.
"The browsers need to be present on the mobile device for survival," said Greg Sterling, an analyst with Opus Research.
"Everyone is trying to manage their strategy in this multiscreen and multiplatform world."
Research firm StatCounter found that global
access from mobile devices, not including tablets, doubled in the year
to January to 8.5 percent of all Internet usage.
Google stepped up its effort earlier this
year by releasing a full version of its Chrome browser for mobile
devices, which will over time replace the unnamed browser on devices
powered by Google's open Android platform.
The Google-Android browser by April had
grabbed 21.5 percent of the mobile Web, overtaking Opera, the early
leader that had 21.3 percent, according to StatCounter.
"Chrome is definitely the up-and-comer because of Android, and it has a lot of momentum on the PC," Sterling said.
Running third was Apple's Safari, the default
browser on iPhones, with 20 percent. Nokia, BlackBerry and a few others
hold small shares.
When tablets are included, Apple is the
dominant player with 63 percent, according to data from Net
Applications' NetMarketShare survey, but Android is gaining with nearly
19 percent.
The push by Google meshes with its strategy of
gathering information about users across platforms, so that someone
searching on a mobile device might get an ad on a PC, or vice-versa.
And Google just completed its $12.5 billion
deal to buy mobile phone maker Motorola Mobility, freeing the California
company to build its own handsets that play into the strengths of its
software.
"Everybody wants to have that first point of
contact with the user to control the experience from that point, capture
certain data and direct them to services," said Al Hilwa of the
research firm IDC.
"It's all about control, about who is further up on the stream of data."
Meanwhile Microsoft, in its effort to get a
share of the mobile space, is pushing its own Internet Explorer browser
for devices running Windows, but critics say the software giant is
limiting compatibility.
Mozilla's Harvey Anderson complained in a
blog post that Microsoft is limiting the "advanced" capabilities for
outside software, effectively shutting out browsers like Firefox.
Anderson said Microsoft in its new Windows 8
devices was signaling "an unwelcome return to the digital dark ages
where users and developers didn't have browser choices."
Yahoo! became the latest to boost its effort in the mobile space, introducing its Axis browser designed for mobile devices.
"It is meant to replace Safari," Yahoo!
product management director Ethan Batraski said of Axis. "You will never
have to use Safari ever again."
Ben Schachter, an analyst at Macquarie
Capital who follows Google, said the Internet search giant will also
introduce a version of Chrome for the Apple operating system.
Schachter said in a note to clients that
Google benefits from Chrome by reducing the payments from "traffic
acquisition costs" and that a Chrome browser for iPhones and iPads could
"meaningfully" reduce what Google pays Apple.
But Apple can tweak its strategy without
competing head-on against Google, Sterling said. He said Apple's Siri
voice assistant and its new maps software offer a type of search. And as
tensions rise with Google, it could change the Safari search engine to
Microsoft's Bing, or another.
Analysts say it remains unclear to what
degree device makers will try to block out competing browsers, and if
this will trigger a government response. In the 1990s, Microsoft's
efforts to lock out competing browsers prompted actions on both sides of
the Atlantic.
The battle for control of the mobile Web
raises questions about Facebook, which is groping for a mobile strategy
after a troubling response to its massive share offering.
One report said Facebook was eyeing Opera,
which could solve some of the perceived problems for the social network
giant by offering a platform to get better data on mobile usage for
targeted advertising.
"It wouldn't surprise me" if Facebook were to acquire or tie up with Opera or develop its own browser, Hilwa said.
Another player to watch, said Hilwa, is
Amazon, which has developed its own browser for the Kindle Internet
device -- a move that can also steer users various services, earning
cash along the way.
Hilwa said Amazon, like the others, is
pursuing a strategy that includes hardware and software, but can also
sell goods and services.
"They have content, they sell stuff, they
have Web services," he said. "They have a lot of assets and have been
successful. I would watch them."
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