Popular Articles

IPCC clear on evidence for global warming
Some aspects of global warming may not be entirely understood and data may be sparse, but scientists do not dispute that global temperature has increased, especially since 1950, as pointed out in the fourth assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

Miners mulling cut in iron ore output
Shaken by a sudden halt in demand from China, Indian iron ore miners are planning production cuts.

News of the day

New Act for development and regulation of mines, minerals
A new draft bill to replace the Mines and Minerals Development Regulation Act, 1957, would be placed before the Cabinet soon, a senior government official said here today.
International Business

Internet search mkt share: Bing's loss is Google's gain

For the first time since its launch four months ago, the market share of Microsoft"s search engine Bing slipped in September while that of its rival Google rose. - Ad spend on social media set to grow by 44 per cent - RCom partners Microsoft for Windows mobile solutions - MS wants excise duty on packaged software - Packaged software tax riddle: Microsoft wants excise duty on it - State SMEs hike IT spending - Microsoft developing tablet PC: report Bing"s monthly market share in the US declined to 8.51 per cent in September from 9.64 per cent in August, according to web analytics firm StatCounter. Similarly, the search engine"s share globally decreased to 3.25 per cent last month from 3.58 per cent in August. Microsoft launched Bing in May as part of its efforts to challenge the dominance of Internet major Google. "Google was the beneficiary from the decline of its main rival, increasing (its US market share) by more than two percentage points to 80.08 per cent in September from 77.83 per cent the previous month," StatCounter said in a statement. Microsoft has also joined hands with Yahoo! for a partnership mainly focusing on the Internet search market. The statement said there was little consolation for Microsoft from the performance of its new partner, Yahoo! which also declined to 9.40 per cent from 10.50 per cent in August. Globally too, Yahoo!"s market share dipped to 4.37 per cent in September from 4.84 per cent in previous month. "The trend has been downwards for Bing since mid August. The wheels haven"t fallen off but the underlying trend must be a little worrying for Microsoft," StatCounter"s CEO Aodhan Cullen said. Data is based on an analysis of 4.6 billion search engine referring clicks including 1.1 billion from the US. A leading international web analytics firm StatCounter monitors more than 10 billion pageloads per month.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):