Posts Tagged ‘market

A Showcase Of Sites For iPhone Apps

Since Apple opened up the iPhone for developers to build applications on there have been hundreds of thousands built. They have opened up a whole new market for designers and developers to tap into. This has meant a slew of websites advertising these applications. I’m not sure which site was the first but there are some very clear conventions to be seen throughout this showcase. Have a look for yourself.

Mobile Roadie

Mobile Roadie

ShakeItPhoto

ShakeItPhoto

Confessapp

Confessapp

Birdfeed

Birdfeed

Dig Deep Fitness

Dig Deep Fitness

Thermometer

Thermometer

Birdbrain

Birdbrain

Paraply

Paraply

Snow Reports

Snow Reports

Kodu

Kodu

Top Floor

Top Floor

Keypoint

Keypoint

Happy Dangy Diggy

Happy Dangy Diggy

Stone Skipper

Stone Skipper

I Said What?!

ISaidWhat!

Outside

Outside

The Absolute App

The Absolute App

June Cloud

June Cloud

Frenzic

Frenzic

If you like this post you may also want to look at:

Blue Website Showcase

Weekly Web Design Inspiration #36

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Stan Shih, founder of Acer, has made a bold prediction with a cowardly timeline: that US computer brands aren’t competitive enough to stick it out another 20 years. That’d work out just great for, let’s see… oh, right, Stan Shih!

Shih’s claim is that US manufacturers are incapable of putting lower priced products on the market, and so will die off like so much chaff. BUT: while companies like Lenovo and Acer have made strides recently, in the PC market there’s still high demand for top-tier products, and Dell and HP are still huge—and hugely popular—companies.

The bigger problem, of course, is that in twenty years anything can happen. Maybe we won’t be using laptops at all by then. Maybe we’ll do all our computing from the Google chips implanted in our brains. So before Stan Shih gets too excited about 2030, maybe he should focus first on making laptops that don’t melt in 2010. [PhysOrg]



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According to the analysts at research firm Gartner, mobile application stores are expected to generate revenues of nearly $7 billion over the course of this year. That figure is a combination of the $6.2 billion spent purchasing the mobile applications themselves combined with an additional $.6 billion generated through advertising revenues from in-app ads. Not surprisingly, Apple dominates this market, accounting for 99.4% of the market as of last year, states the report.

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Over the course of 2009, mobile application download revenue exceeded $4.2 billion, with eight out of every 10 apps downloaded offered free to end users, says Gartner. Going forward, the analysts predict mobile application stores’ revenue will grow to $29.5 billion by the end of 2013. That revenue, again, will be a combination of paid applications and free applications running ads.

3 Billion in Apple App Sales? Not Exactly

While we’re sure the general trend is correct as far as the growth of mobile application stores and Apple’s position as the market leader, we have to agree with the note that John Gruber recently made on his blog regarding these figures. He quotes a portion of the report where analyst Chris Foresman says:

Earlier this month, Apple announced that sales had topped 3 billion; that means iPhone users downloaded 2.5 billion apps in 2009 alone. Gartner’s figures show another 16 million apps that could come from other platform’s recently opened app stores, giving Apple at least 99.4 percent of all mobile apps sold for the year.

Gruber notes that Apple didn’t actually announce 3 billion in sales, they announced 3 billion downloads. In fact, you can see the original press release making this announcement here. Not only that, but another Gartner analyst Miguel Fontanez told us earlier this month that Apple, as a rule, does not disclose App Store revenues as a separate line item in their revenue reporting. That means that any estimation of Apple’s App Store sales are just that – an estimation.

Last week, in speaking with Peter Farago of Flurry analytics to calculate App Store piracy numbers, we determined that Apple had generated approximately $750 million in sales to date. That’s 3 billion downloads over the lifetime of the App Store with roughly 25% of them being paid downloads. In other words, if Gartner used the 3 billion to determine Apple’s position as the market share leader in sales, then their calculations would be off.

However, as Gruber also notes, if Gartner’s calculations are accurate regarding the other mobile platforms (16 million in app sales, they claim), then it’s clear that Apple still has the app store to beat… even if they don’t account for 99.4% of the market.

We don’t expect Apple’s dominant position to change anytime soon – the company has momentum. In November 2009, Apple announced they offer over 100,000 applications and by now that number has likely grown even more. However, other mobile application stores are growing quickly, too. Google’s Android marketplace, for example, with its open nature unhampered by any sort of bogged-down app review process, has now topped 20,000 applications as of December. The Android mobile operating system is growing in popularity, too (usage increased 3% over the past three months), meaning it will soon be a contender for a hefty slice of that the app store pie in years to come.

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This blog delivers stylish and dynamic news for designers and web-developers on all subjects of design, ranging from: CSS, Ajax, Javascript, web design, graphics, typography, advertising & much more. Our goal is to help you communicate effectively on the web with an engaging website or functional interface.

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