IT Dabbles With Firefox, but Few Plan to Switch From IE
Computerworld -
The Firefox Web browser has been causing a commotion among users and snaring snippets of market share from Microsoft Corp.'s Internet Explorer since June -- long before Version 1.0 of the open-source software was officially released earlier this month.
But statistics suggest that corporate users aren't the major group fueling the growth of Firefox. The new browser's most dramatic spikes in usage are on weekends, according to Chris Hoffman, director of engineering at the not-for-profit Mozilla Foundation, which developed Firefox.
That observation was borne out by an e-mail poll of IT managers conducted last week by Computerworld. Only two of the 25 respondents said their organizations have standardized on Firefox. Another 11 said they have tried Firefox or use it on a personal basis. But 17 said that their companies have no current plans to re-evaluate their decisions to go with Internet Explorer.
"We've been standardized on Microsoft Internet Explorer for as long as we've had a standard," said Patricia Coffey, an assistant vice president in IT at Allstate Insurance Co. in Northbrook, Ill. "Basically, we run Microsoft on the desktop as our standard, so we use IE, Office, Outlook, etc."
Allstate's "big gripe ... is the security issues with Microsoft," Coffey said. But she added that the insurer is content with IE from a features standpoint.
Security is the reason why Jefferson County in Colorado ordered its 2,000 government workers to switch to Firefox about five months ago, said David Gallaher, the county's director of IT development. Gallaher said he came to view IE as "a VDS -- a virus distribution system."
"It's hazardous to your corporate health," said Gallaher. "You have to turn off everything that makes Internet Explorer interesting just to avoid the impact of the viruses. Even Microsoft employees have told us, 'You should turn off ActiveX controls.' "
Jefferson County ran the beta version of Firefox and is moving to Version 1.0. Gallaher said the migration has gone well, except for components in a few applications that don't yet support Firefox, including the county's enterprise document management system. But he said the application vendors have indicated that they will fix the problems.
Mark's Work Wearhouse Ltd., a Calgary, Alberta-based retail chain, encountered Firefox support problems with the Web sites of some of its suppliers and business partners, according to CIO Robin Lynas. For example, the pages on a courier company's site wouldn't render properly with the new browser. But the courier has since fixed the problem, Lynas said.
Those glitches haven't deterred Mark's Work Wearhouse
Networking
Additional Resources



Learn the important issues you must consider before starting your next mobility initiative. Get your mobility white paper from IDC now, compliments of Sybase.
White Papers & Webcasts
Southern Company
Download Now
Aligning IT to Business: The Rising Importance of Application Delivery Networks
Application Delivery Networking (ADN) will play a vital role in helping enterprises incorporate strategic technologies to achieve business initiatives.
Defending Against the Storm
Download Now
Mitigate Risk, Lower Costs and Improve Network Efficiency
Create a stable IP network that not only meets today's challenges, but is flexible enough to also meet future demands.
Share our Strength
Download Now
Preparing Your Business Services for the Future
Would you trust your network monitoring tools enough to know when something is truly halting a business service?
IPAM: Slashing Network Costs
Slashing Network Costs by Consolidating and Automating Core Network Services
Essential Archive Requirements for E-Discovery
Register Now!
Horror stories: Managing IT Across Multiple Locations
How one extra sharp IT manager eliminates daily agony, hassle and repetition.
