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More Developers Start Working on Android Apps

Written by Frederic Lardinois / August 6, 2009 10:30 AM / 4 Comments

flurry_logo_aug09.pngBy the end of this year, Apple's App Store will carry more than 100,000 apps. According to Flurry, which specializes in providing real-time analytics to mobile app developers on the iPhone, Android, JavaME, and Blackberry, new project starts among iPhone developers show no sign of slowing down. Flurry, however, also noticed that a growing number of developers have started to work on Android applications - maybe in reaction to Apple's erratic App Store approval process. Over the past six months, the number of new Android apps that have integrated Flurry's analytics doubled and the pipeline for new Android apps is also filling up quickly.

Flurry currently tracks about 1,600 applications. The company argues that because developers often integrate analytics early on in the development process - as early as 6 months before an app ships - it can track "new project starts." As always, we have to take these statistics with a grain of salt. After all, it's possible that the number of developers who are integrating Flurry Analytics is growing and not the number of developers in general.

Android Poised for Growth

Still, Flurry's stats for Android are definitely encouraging, and there can be little doubt that more and more developers are starting to look at Android as an alternative platform - especially since Apple's App Store approval process continues to be a mess.

Flurry doesn't track applications on Windows Mobile phones. Microsoft, however, is also trying to woo disgruntled iPhone developers and is now offering instructions for how to port iPhone apps to Windows Mobile.

flurry_android_starts.png

EBooks on Mobile Phones

Flurry also took a close look at eBook applications and noticed that the number of active users there is showing tremendous growth. Flurry tracked nearly 3 million active users of eBook apps in July, up from just around half a million in March. While Amazon and Barnes & Noble both offer eBook apps for the iPhone (and B&N also offers one for the Blackberry), Sony remains the only major eBook player without a mobile app. Judging from these numbers, the real battle for dominance in the eBook market might not happen around hardware devices like the Kindle or the Sony Reader. Instead, whichever company can dominate the eBook market on mobile phones might have a serious advantage over its competitors.

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Flurry Smart Phone Industry Pulse July 2009 Final

Comments

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  1. It's good to get quality developers working on a variety of platforms but hopefully the market doesn't get too segmented by applications that are only developed on one platform. My impression of how a lot of people make decisions on selecting a device is basically whatever the provider with the best mobile plan happens to offer. Not the greatest way for users to make decisions on what product they should actually purchase. Not an issue if developers work on multiple platforms to make the same quality applications for everyone but if there's too much focus on individual devices it's not the best for consumers.

    Posted by: Steve | August 6, 2009 1:27 PM



  2. that's because they can see the android platform on the long run, with a true "write once, run everywhere". actually this could be the new j2me done right, without fragmentation and with a great UI.

    Posted by: Vitor Domingos | August 6, 2009 3:39 PM



  3. With all the fragmentation you either need Appcelerator's Titanium ( http://www.appcelerator.com/ ) or Phonegap ( http://phonegap.com/ ) to build apps for all or most mobile devices.

     Posted by: Joe McCann Author Profile Page | August 7, 2009 5:58 AM




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