No, I'm not suggesting that they are related, but just that there is news out about the two of them.
First, Janco Associates Inc. reports that in the business sector, Firefox now has 10% of the browser market. However, the total market share seems to be about half of that and if MSoft gets its act together in launching a new version of IE, the growth may disappear. Still, Firefox has lots of advantages in terms of customising by add-ins and 'themes', so companies may begin to adopt it, suitably customised, as company standard.
The picture from the point of view of Information Research seems to support Janco's data: this is a table of the distribution of hits over the browser used - a snapshot taken today:
| 1. | Internet Explorer 6.x | 80.3 % |
| 2. | Mozilla Firefox 1.x | 9.1 % |
| 3. | Internet Explorer 5.x | 4.5 % |
| 4. | Netscape 7.x | 1.5 % |
| 5. | Mozilla Firefox | 1.5 % |
| 6. | Mozilla 1.x | 1.5 % |
| | Unknown | 1.5 % |
| | Total | 100.0 % |
The news from Skype is interesting - the first announcement passed me by, since Skype appears not to have informed existing users. Skype 'Out' has been available for some time: you can call a land line from your computer - at low cost - and I use this for some international calls. Now, however, you can also have Skype 'In' - that is, you can have up to 10 telephone numbers assigned, for different countries in the world, which will allow residents of those countries to call your Skype number and get through to your VoIP phone at local phone rates. Very handy if your friends and relatives don't use computers: and also very useful if you are abroad, without a computer, and want to call home - you can call your own local number and make the international call at local rates. The service costs, of course, the princely sum of €30 a year!