Back in June I mentioned being surprised by the low number of visitors to this site using 800 x 600 pixel monitors. At the time the exact number was zero. Well it’s increased a bit since then. Now a whopping 0.67% of visitors here have the mini-monitors. In spite of that, I think I’ll still feel comfortable ignoring them when I get around to the redesign.
I still find those results a bit startling, so I decided to do a quick survey of a few other sites I manage. Here’s the results:
Percent of users with 800×600 monitors
Website: 2007 to date / for July 2007 (target audience)
SEOrefugee.com: 2.01% / 2.01% (search engine optimizers)
NetDetours.com: 10.31% / 7.07% (general interest)
TOONrefugee.com: 7.34% / 6.08% (general interest with focus on sports, computers, etc.)
Extrapolating (unscientifically) I’d guess that most sites have already reached the magic 10% level where it suddenly seems OK to ignore the resolution-challenged in their audience. And I wouldn’t rule out that most of them will be at the 5% level by the end of the year.
To help confirm my conclusions, I check five other sites whose information I can only share in a general manner. The highest concentration of the smaller monitors was 13%. Another site was right at the magic 10% level. A third was at 7% and the other two were below 5%.
So it looks like 1024 x 768 is the new 800 x 600.
It makes me feel old, I remember when 800 x 600 was the new 640 x 480.
“Untitled Document” is the default page title for web pages created in Dreamweaver and a variety of other web page editors. According to Google “about 32,900,000″ with that title now populate the web. And, if you’re interested (which apparently few people are), according to Yahoo! the number is “about 44,700,000.”