I'm not sure which clients would indicate they were browsing from Antarctica.
All the British stations use a satellite link to the British Antarctic Survey headquarters in Cambridge, UK. The link to the Antarctic is transparent to the outside world so all browsing down on the stations (and ships) appears to come from a Cambridge IP address. I'm sure many of the other Antarctic stations work the same way.
The VoIP phone system works the same way so you can ring the station using a "local" Cambridge number. This often lead to strange conversations when people dialled the wrong number and found out they had accidentally phoned the Antarctic.
That is an interesting issue, and one I've never considered before cause I just took the data from MaxMind for granted.
I work for Mozilla crunching numbers. There isn't any way I could share any IP addresses of course. If you pull down the data from MaxMind and do a search for AQ, you'll see a set of IP address ranges that are recorded as being located in Antarctica. We get a small amount of traffic from IP addresses in those ranges.
I'm sure that this has been noted, but in this graph: http://gs.statcounter.com/#browser_version-ww-daily-20090101... it's interesting to see how ie6's number dips down every weekend---presumably due to office workers under corporate mandates during the week and left to their own devices on saturday and sunday.
Summary: Firefox has 100% marketshare in one continent, Antarctica, out of what is most likely a very tiny sample size. Please stop with the linkbait titles.
Either IE dropped by 15% overnight, last September (with Opera taking those 15%), or SC figured a way around Opera's IE cloaking. Or maybe a new version of Opera came out that had Opera set by default as its UA string? Anyone know?
[+] [-] simoncoggins|17 years ago|reply
All the British stations use a satellite link to the British Antarctic Survey headquarters in Cambridge, UK. The link to the Antarctic is transparent to the outside world so all browsing down on the stations (and ships) appears to come from a Cambridge IP address. I'm sure many of the other Antarctic stations work the same way.
The VoIP phone system works the same way so you can ring the station using a "local" Cambridge number. This often lead to strange conversations when people dialled the wrong number and found out they had accidentally phoned the Antarctic.
[+] [-] DEinspanjer|17 years ago|reply
[+] [-] throw_away|17 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ROFISH|17 years ago|reply
http://gs.statcounter.com/#os-ww-daily-20090101-20090306
[+] [-] zain|17 years ago|reply
[+] [-] alecst|17 years ago|reply
[+] [-] truebosko|17 years ago|reply
[+] [-] DEinspanjer|17 years ago|reply
[+] [-] tvon|17 years ago|reply
[+] [-] tlrobinson|17 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mindaugas|17 years ago|reply
At least after 2009 01 01
[+] [-] slater|17 years ago|reply
http://gs.statcounter.com/#browser-RU-daily-20080701-2009030...
Either IE dropped by 15% overnight, last September (with Opera taking those 15%), or SC figured a way around Opera's IE cloaking. Or maybe a new version of Opera came out that had Opera set by default as its UA string? Anyone know?
[+] [-] chorny|17 years ago|reply
[+] [-] noamsml|17 years ago|reply