Opera downloads double after Microsoft deal
Relevant offers
Norway's Opera said that downloads of its browser more than doubled after Microsoft was forced to give European users a choice of web software to settle European Union antitrust charges.
Microsoft started sending updates to Windows computers in Europe in early March that launches a pop-up screen telling them to pick one or more of 12 free web browsers to download and install, including Microsoft's Internet Explorer.
Opera Software ASA said European downloads of its newest desktop browser increased 130 per cent between March 12-14, after the updates were sent out. It saw the highest increase in Poland, where downloads went up 328 per cent.
The company's chief technology officer Hakon Wium Lie said this confirms that users will try alternative software when given a choice.
Some 100 million Europeans using Microsoft software will be asked to choose between rival browsers by mid-May in a concession the company made to EU regulators in return for them dropping an antitrust case. The EU executive said the move would foster competition.
Opera triggered the EU case by complaining that attaching Internet Explorer to Windows was an unfair way for Microsoft to put its web software on most of the world's computers.
The top five browsers - Microsoft's Internet Explorer, Mozilla's Firefox, Google's Chrome, Apple's Safari and Opera, are now given prominent placement on the pop-up choice screen.
The selections will rotate from computer to computer, so none of these five browsers will always be first.
Far smaller competitors such as Avant Browser, Flock, Green Browser, K-Meleon, Maxthon, Sleipnir and Slim Browser also will be displayed if the user scrolls sideways.
- AP
Sponsored links
Microsoft's man who monitors privacy
'Janitor satellite' made to clean up space
Australia to get R18 rating for games
iPad factory conditions 'better than the norm'
App turns iPhone into adult toy
Review: Samsung Series 7 UA46D7000
Bulgaria could suspend vote on ACTA
Internet in Iran severely disrupted as elections loom
Review: The Darkness 2 for Xbox 360
Nasdaq website disrupted by online attacks
Sir Richard Taylor named New Zealander of the Year
Mallard offers ticket cash back
Men in court after raid on Auckland apartment
Kiwis in cruise ship cocaine bust
No radiation leak on plane, says Fire Service
Abercrombie stars as Breakers shoot down Hawks
Dead pile up after Honduras prison blaze
No Kiwi jobs lost in call centre move: Orcon
Apple mobile apps stealing private data
Dragons deny wrongdoing as wee row erupts
15-minute-old newborn gets heart pacemaker
'Starved, beaten' teen weighed just 32kg
Schoolgirl sex video man guilty
Sir Richard Taylor named New Zealander of the Year
Dazzling Adele silences critics
Kiwis in cruise ship cocaine bust
Mallard offers ticket cash back
'Starved, beaten' teen weighed just 32kg
Sonny Bill Williams finds rugby boring: mate
No radiation leak on plane, says Fire Service


