People do use Firefox - on desktop, particularly Windows. But not as many as before; and few on mobile, for good reason. Firefox Mobile is a pain, because it doesn't use font boosting, but also doesn't end up with the same layout as the desktop version (possibly due to regular font sizes on Android vs. Windows).
Here's Flayrah's browser statistics for the last seven days:
Chrome (47.29%)
Safari (24.27%)
Internet Explorer (14.87%)
Firefox (4.37%)
Edge (2.80%)
Samsung Internet (2.41%)
Opera (1.19%)
Android Webview (0.84%)
UC Browser (0.80%)
Amazon Silk (0.38%)
The figure for IE seems dubious; it may be Tor or bots. Here are the platform statistics:
Windows (38.78%)
Android (26.99%)
iOS (22.55%)
Macintosh (7.24%)
Chrome OS (2.83%)
Linux (1.15%)
You can see why I spent time on improving our mobile presentation this month - it's half the views.
Almost nobody uses Mozilla Application Suite's Navigator, or its successor SeaMonkey (based on Firefox 60 ESR).
People do use Firefox - on desktop, particularly Windows. But not as many as before; and few on mobile, for good reason. Firefox Mobile is a pain, because it doesn't use font boosting, but also doesn't end up with the same layout as the desktop version (possibly due to regular font sizes on Android vs. Windows).
Here's Flayrah's browser statistics for the last seven days:
The figure for IE seems dubious; it may be Tor or bots. Here are the platform statistics:
You can see why I spent time on improving our mobile presentation this month - it's half the views.