Internetworldstats.com updates its list of top ten internet languages...kind of
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
A site called internetworldstats.com keeps track of internet users by country and language and is quite useful if you ever want to try to ascertain the future of a language in a certain region. At the moment languages like Japanese and German are reaching almost full capacity in that most people that speak these languages already have access to the internet, whereas ones like French, Spanish and Chinese are still far behind, meaning that they still have quite a bit of room for growth.
Their chart on the top ten internet languages is located here and they updated it a few days ago from the stats they were using from June 2008 to more recent numbers from December.
But!
The formatting is all messed up this time so it takes a bit of work to see what the chart is supposed to mean. Here's a post of mine from before with the stats from June, which gave the following:
TOP TEN LANGUAGES | % of all | Internet Users |
---|---|---|
29.4 % | 430,802,172 | |
18.9 % | 276,216,713 | |
8.5 % | 124,714,378 | |
6.4 % | 94,000,000 | |
4.7 % | 68,152,447 | |
4.2 % | 61,213,160 | |
4.1 % | 59,853,630 | |
4.0 % | 58,180,960 | |
2.4 % | 34,820,000 | |
2.4 % | 34,708,144 | |
TOP 10 LANGUAGES | 84.9 % | 1,242,661,604 |
Rest of the Languages | 15.1 % | 220,970,757 |
100.0 % | 1,463,632,361 |
(amongst other numbers)
The new chart seems to show the following for the languages:
- English - dropped from 29.4% to 28.7% (-0.7%)
- Chinese - rose from 18.9% to 20.4% (+1.5%)
Let me know if the chart is fixed and I'll update this post.
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