
(Credit: Apple)
While Apple still has a ways to go to be the dominant cell phone provider in
the world, CEO Steve Jobs is comfortable with his lead in selling mobile
applications.
Apple announced Tuesday that after a year in existence, its App Store has
counted 1.5 billion downloaded applications for the
iPhone and
iPod touch. In a
press release, Jobs said, "The App Store is like nothing the industry has ever
seen before in both scale and quality. With 1.5 billion apps downloaded, it is
going to be very hard for others to catch up."
Indeed, the rate at which customers are buying the apps seems to be
increasing. In April, Apple announced
1 billion apps had been downloaded
from its store, after just nine months of being open. Just three months later,
another 500 million apps have been purchased. Apple says there are 65,000 apps
available in the store, and 40 million iPhones and iPod touch devices sold thus
far, with new iPhone 3GS owners likely bumping up those download numbers in the
last month.
Apple's success with attracting developers to make all those apps is
certainly inspiring imitators. Just Tuesday morning Verizon announced it is
looking to develop an application store for its wireless phones. Phone makers
Nokia, RIM, and Palm have similar platforms for selling apps for its devices,
and there are also repositories for apps that work on the Windows Mobile and
Android platforms only.
But the App Store, despite its success, is not without its problems. Many
developers still appear flummoxed by the sometimes ambiguous policies for
creating applications and the inconsistencies in how they're applied. For
example, MLB At Bat, which streams live baseball
games, gets the stamp of approval from both Apple and ATT, the exclusive
carrier, but SlingPlayer Mobile from Sling Media (available only in the US), which streams live television, does not.
And application developers report that trying to get answers from Apple on
the inconsistencies or clarifications when their apps are denied is frustrating. Even at the recent
Worldwide Developers Conference in June, developers sitting on a panel regarding
App Store publishing said the company took no Q&A on the process and
referred questions back to its Web site.
Still, many of those same confused developers continue to develop for the
iPhone and iPod touch for reasons illustrated by today's news: The App Store is
still the most viable way for mobile developers to get their applications in
front of customers.
Via
Crave CNET
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