It’s time for some stats comparison between three popular online music streaming services. I am not describing them as “most popular” as there’s many services that offer, basically same service and their popularity is, most often, just a matter of personal taste. In this post I will focus on Pandora VS Last.fm VS Grooveshark, as they are all accessible directly from browser. If you feel like seeing more stats for other services, let me know and I’ll try to get them for you and post as soon as possible.
Why I stopped using Firefox
Do you remember when Mozilla released Firefox 1.0 back in 2004? Mozilla started a revolution introducing a user-friendly, safe and stable browser to the market. Even if Firefox didn’t actually dethrone IE when it comes to number of users, it was most certainly the browser beloved by online users. Mozilla achieved that thanks to Microsoft, as well. How? By ignoring the need for improvements in Internet Explorer for years. Only recently Microsoft realized that it’s the browser that is the “window to the world”. Enough sentiments. I am writing this post because today I stopped using Firefox for any personal use. it’s gone.
Megaupload VS Fileserve and others
The battle for the most popular file sharing service is on. In the last year the number of companies offering easy, one-click file sharing has grown giving users possibility to choose their favourite. This post will not only be about Megaupload vs Fileserve, but also Rapidshare and Hotfile - most popular file sharing services that serve petabytes of data and help people do what the internet was designed for – share information in any possible format.
Dropbox VS Box.net – Comscore Stats
This week I decided to share some comscore results for two most popular file sharing services – Dropbox VS Box.net.
Both provide, basically the same service, file synchronization between as many devices as you like/need. There are certain differences that distinguish those two. At first sight, you can see that Box.net is showing at their website is their corporate clients. And that seems to be their aim – companies rather than individuals. Both players operate on freemium business model, giving free service and possibility to expand it to paid plans.
Read more to see the summary of freemium plans and Comscore 13-month stats for both services.












