Going back through my stats at Clicky, I noticed something that stood out: The largest percentage of my visitors do not use what most bloggers use for their themes, the 1024×768 fixed-width. That resolution was used by only 31.9% of my visitors in the last 30 days. It is said that a picture can speak a thousand words. Well, I didn't take screen shots because the layout of the page that I'd be capturing would make this page extremely long. The following table will make it long enough as is:
| Resolution | # Visitors | Percentage |
| 1024×768 | 4,123 | 31.9 % |
| 1280×1024 | 2,267 | 17.5 % |
| 1280×800 | 1,732 | 13.4 % |
| 1440×900 | 914 | 7.1 % |
| 1680×1050 | 739 | 5.7 % |
| 800×600 | 682 | 5.3 % |
| 1152×864 | 387 | 3 % |
| 1920×1200 | 232 | 1.8 % |
| 1600×1200 | 214 | 1.7 % |
| 1280×768 | 195 | 1.5 % |
| 1400×1050 | 156 | 1.2 % |
| 1280×960 | 128 | 1 % |
| 1280×854 | 70 | 0.5 % |
| 1280×720 | 24 | 0.2 % |
| 1360×768 | 16 | 0.1 % |
| 2560×1600 | 15 | 0.1 % |
| 1440×960 | 13 | 0.1 % |
| 2560×1024 | 13 | 0.1 % |
| 1344×840 | 9 | 0.1 % |
| 1152×720 | 9 | 0.1 % |
| 1200×1920 | 7 | 0.1 % |
| 800×664 | 7 | 0.1 % |
| 320×396 | 6 | 0 % |
| 1024×1280 | 5 | 0 % |
| 1920×1080 | 5 | 0 % |
| 1600×900 | 4 | 0 % |
| 800×496 | 4 | 0 % |
| 1366×768 | 4 | 0 % |
| 240×320 | 4 | 0 % |
| 1024×640 | 4 | 0 % |
| 1152×768 | 4 | 0 % |
| 800×5000 | 3 | 0 % |
| 640×480 | 3 | 0 % |
| 2048×768 | 3 | 0 % |
| 1800×1440 | 3 | 0 % |
| 1360×1024 | 3 | 0 % |
| 1792×1344 | 3 | 0 % |
| 960×600 | 3 | 0 % |
| 1200×1600 | 3 | 0 % |
| 1152×648 | 2 | 0 % |
| 1050×1680 | 2 | 0 % |
| 1152×870 | 2 | 0 % |
| 768×1024 | 2 | 0 % |
| 1600×1024 | 2 | 0 % |
| 1024×819 | 2 | 0 % |
| 2880×900 | 1 | 0 % |
| 5760×1600 | 1 | 0 % |
| 1024×600 | 1 | 0 % |
| 1024×699 | 1 | 0 % |
If you look carefully, you'll notice that the combined percentage of visitors using a resolution greater than 1024×768 is in the majority. Why wouldn't we want to support the majority, as well as the minority?



