Yes, but the way is long:
"IE share slips under 70%; Firefox surges past 20%"

"The more home users who are online, using Firefox and Safari at home
rather
than IE, the more those browsers' shares go up," he said. With
November
including the Thanksgiving holiday in the U.S. and more weekend days
this
year -- 10 such days, versus an average of 8.7 per month -- users were
at
home more than usual.

http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9121919


On Dec 11, 7:21 am, sad1sm0 <john.fan...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm really not sure I see the benefit.  To build an entire site on the
> client side seems useless to me given that most spiders don't evaluate
> javascript as far as I'm aware.  That means bad news to me.  And as
> far as the IEKiller idea, I have to say that's up there with Chatroom
> Scrollers back in the days of AOL.  The best way to kill IE is to link
> to FF on your site if you have one, and anywhere else you can imagine.
> FF is up to 44% market share and IE has 47% (according 
> tohttp://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp) as of November.

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