Microsoft Working On Its Own App Store
CWmike writes "Microsoft is working on a software distribution scheme along the lines of Apple's iPhone App Store, CEO Steve Ballmer said yesterday at a developer's conference in Sydney, Australia. 'There's not much money being made, but the general concept of giving developers a way not only to get their code distributed, but to really get visibility for the code, is a good idea,' Ballmer said. Ballmer hinted that something similar would be coming soon from Microsoft. While he said Micrsoft was not ready to detail the works in progress, he said '... fear not, we're hard at work, and you'll see some of the benefits [of that] with some of the concepts, particularly Facebook's.'"
yo ballmer, maybe you should shut the company down and return the money to your investors.
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
This company is pathetic. Don't they every ever come up with an original idea?
Considering that Apple didn't invent any of the things you listed either, I don't see what your point is.
I'm pretty sure Apple invented the iPod.
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
I am pretty sure that neither of them invented the mouse or the GUI.
I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
The money being made is in smaller chunks but the volume could be quite high. This combined could quite profitable for small, independent developers. Also from Apple's standpoint they are not in it to make large amounts of profit for themselves from the app store. Like the music and video divisions, it will probably generate a small profit. The app store is a tool to sell more devices. MS unfortunately only sees that they can't make much money off it because their model relies on OEMs buying their OS software and their mobile software which means they will have to compete in some cases with 3rd party developers.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
I'm pretty sure the mouse came from Xerox PARC.
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No, but Apple legally licensed/bought the tech from PARC. Microsoft simply copied them after they saw how successful it was.
Whether or not Apple did invent these things it has been a fairly consistent paradigm that Apple (or Google, or whoever) comes up with something and makes it successful and then Microsoft tries to get in on the action. I'm sure their app store will do fine. At least as fine as the Zune....
http://www.rootstrikers.org/
'There's not much money being made, but the general concept of giving developers a way not only to get their binaries distributed, but to really get visibility for the binaries, is a good idea'
Whether or not Apple did invent these things it has been a fairly consistent paradigm that Apple (or Google, or whoever) comes up with something and makes it successful and then Microsoft tries to get in on the action.
I hope Apple or Google successfully goes bankrupt then MS copies them.
I'm pretty sure the mouse came from Xerox PARC.
No, Doug Englebart invented it at SRI.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
... fear not, we're hard at work...
Start fearing.
Nuclear engineers build weapons. Civil engineers build targets.
What few realize is that is that the mouse was preceded by the development of cheese as a user input device. If I recall correctly, this was an Al Gore invention which, unfortunately for him, didn't succeed to the same level as his better known invention - the internet.
Sadly, Al could not figure out an appropriate application of a block of cheese to a User Interface. Xerox PARC quickly picked up the ball and drew the obvious conclusion.
With blackjack? And hookers? Ah screw it, forget the blackjack... And the app store.
No, but Apple legally licensed/bought the tech from PARC. Microsoft simply copied them after they saw how successful it was.
Whether or not Apple did invent these things it has been a fairly consistent paradigm that Apple (or Google, or whoever) comes up with something and makes it successful and then Microsoft tries to get in on the action.
On the other hand it took Apple few decades to put second button and wheel (ok.. "orb") on their mouse and they managed to get it wrong still.
I think that's an example of something they did better.. They ripped Google off and put better, more detailed satellite photos in the "birds-eye view" on their mapping site. It's a little chunky to use but the photos are amazing. Now when I shop for a house I go to live maps and instantly get a view of it from all sides from about ~50ft away. It puts Google Earth to shame, and although street view is even closer and more detailed, it covers a lot more area than street view.
Sure, MS copies ideas, but it only really HELPS the consumer in the long run. Even if it's not always "better" than the competition, it gives us more choices. I, for one, am looking forward to the new app store on my HTC Kaiser.
It could end up being like a package manager. If you could get all or most of your software through the software store, it could handle updates and dependencies. It might even make re-installing Windows easier. Just save the list of installed programs, wipe and install, then use some scripting magic to re-install all of your programs. That is, if it's not crippled by DRM.
TheÃy will call it ...
App Store Live?
Probably something like Linux package managers, only you have to pay for the privilege of a less functional version.
They are making PLENTY of money off the app store, far more than they expected. Ballmer's comments about "there's not much money being made" is simply his way of discounting Apples success and predicting his own failure.
this could render horrible, spyware-laden free app download sites like the current ones a thing of the past. if Microsoft hosts and vets downloads, it means higher quality apps for users, as well as an extra distribution channel for vendors
I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
I'm pretty sure the mouse came from Xerox PARC.
No, Doug Englebart invented it at SRI.
-jcr
I met him once a couple years ago. Really old (he's passed now) but he had a pretty interesting story. The part that really gets me is he never made a penny from inventing the mouse, aside from his salary at the company. He should have been made rich though!
-Taylor
Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
So what is the motivation here. Apple has it's store to control content. I don't think MS wants to do that. Google has it's store to insure that content is available, provide more pages to host ads, and eventually make a little money on the side, when they begin charging, something I thought they were already doing, but I forgot about their always freaky business model. MS business models are always very straight forward.
So as best I can figure this is a case where someone else it making a bit of money in the computer business, MS is not getting it's cut, which is driving MS crazy. So they open a store, even though they have no experience in it and will not pay anyone who has experience, and then use their partnership arrangements to make others use it, maybe even building it into the next version os IE. Probably have to have to have and MSN account to use it as well.
"She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
The way I see it is that someone somewhere innovates. PARC, Linus or whoever, it doesn't matter. It seems to be less and less likely with any big company.
Apple gets hold of the idea and makes something very neat and appealing with it. The only problem I ever have is that it is too expensive. I own an iPod but have never felt able to justify the cost of a 'Mac.
Microsoft takes the idea and makes something much cheaper. It looks cheap as well. It runs on my PC but is no more open than the Apple stuff.
I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
Apple invented the iPod as much as Microsoft invented the Zune. However, NEITHER of them invented the mp3 player, portable media player, etc. Even the mp3 player with a touchscreen was nothing new when Apple announced the "innovation"!
If you don't believe me check out Archos. They had touch screens + WIFI WAY before apple did.
Linux community: "Windows sucks. They don't even have a decent app repository. In Linux I can find any program from one place!" Microsoft: "We're building an App Store" Linux community: "Zoinks! Theives! Scoundrels! Copycats!" Since when is it wrong for a company to see something it's competitor has done successfully, that was beneficial for both customers and developers, and then decide to do so for their own customers and developers? Seriously, how is this a bad thing that they're doing it? They've even acknowledged that their competitors had a good idea and that they've taken the concept from them. Jeez.
No. Microsoft licensed it from Apple Apple vs Microsoft.
Don't look stupid at the next shareholders' meeting.
What have MS really got to show for the last two years or so? A string of failures: Zune, Vista, Yahoo...
MS need to show shareholders that they are still competing with the other players and are not just burning their cash. Apple and Google have app stores (running or in development). Therefore MS better have one too.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
Everyone likes to bash Apple for having a desktop GUI and at the same time claim that Windows is merely a copy, but, a more careful reading has to give Microsoft a few firsts.
Microsoft had a component object model first in OLE/COM. Active X controls are an extension to this for sure, and COM doesn't look as good when your PC is always on a LAN...but that nifty little trick of having an Excel document embedded inside of a word document required a fairly divergent set of technologies that Apple and IBM worked on but never really got together and Microsoft simply did. OLE structured storage comes to mind. Come to think of it, both GNOME and KDE have rich object models on the desktop largely inspired by the COMish nature of Windows shell, but, you don't see pervasive Shell Extensions on Linux in the way you do with Windows partially because there are, well both KDE and Gnome.
Microsoft was the first to have a pre-emptive GUI. OS/2 was mired in SIQ even through Warp and Mac could lock up for any reason, but Windows NT Daytona was rock solid, and, in historic perspectives, was the most logical OS Microsoft would ever release.
Microsoft's START bar got it right. Apple finder and the desktop thing was ok for its time, but really, Microsoft's START bar is actually the thing that we find ourselves using. My Gnome start bar is essentially the MS START bar with some doodads, as is the Mac OS/X bar.
First fully programmable DOM in a browser. Oh, now that's a biggy.. it was this feature of IE 4.0 that killed Netscape more so than anything else.
And, as of right now, no one has code completion and refactoring as well as is done inside of Visual Studio for C#. To this date, no one has made a desktop database that put together reporting, forms and database the way MS Access has.
There's nothing in Microsoft land that equates to what Apple has with its application store. Windows shareware developers have to do shareware, first of all, which is pretty bad. In the Apple store, Apple has it set up that consumers have to pay first and then get the application, and that Apple approves the products and lathers its brand on things makes it great. In Windows, you have 2000 web sites all cheesily affiliated with a handful of players, no consistent payment collection mechanism, loads of cracks everywhere, viruses and malware diluting the idea of downloading programs from the internet, all just conspiring to make developing for Windows a very difficult proposition. A Microsoft Store, not just some subcontracted junk from Digital River, but a Microsoft Store fully and genuinely bundled right into damn OS (and incidentally Vista is a step in the right direction), would be a godsend.
This is my sig.
And, on Windows it will probably actually WORK.
I know you're a whiny astroturfing AC troll, but I can't let this pass.
If Microsoft OS software had a feature that worked like GNU/linux's software repositories, that would be a huge benefit for the end user and a major selling point. Install any of many thousands of apps in every category for free just by clicking on it? Free apps so plentiful they require their own search engine? Automatic dependency resolution? Integrated updates for all apps in one system? Slam dunk. There's even a spot for it in their control panel: the forgotten "add programs" part of add/remove programs.
But they won't because they can't. Every commercial software vendor would port to GNU/Linux the very next week, and the game would be over for them before the Justice department even launched the antitrust investigation.
So sad for MS. So good for everybody else. That is the "that was easy" button.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
I prefer "Runs for sure!" It has that link to their DRM efforts that foretells the conclusion, without ruining the ending for the neophyte.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
apt-cache search ________
apt-get install _________
That s simplifying it of course, but apt and it's relatives were always one of the majors reasons I loved Linux. Unlike windows, I didn't have to hunt apps down on shady sites, download random EXEs, etc. Everything is in one relatively simple to use place. Add some way to process payments and you have a ready made AppStore.
He's dead? According to Wikipedia he's still alive.
I'm pretty sure Apple invented the iPod.
That was Kane Kramer. http://gizmodo.com/5046463/apple-admits-british-man-invented-ipod-in-1979-uses-him-to-win-patent-lawsuit
http://marriedmansexlife.com/
I like to bash MS/Ballmer as much as the next slashdotter, but I don't think that's true. He admits that it is a good idea. And his comments about "not much money being made" simply show the difference between his definition and your definition of "much money".
"CrapStore"
"no more open?"
Darwin's source is out in the wild thanks to Apple.
Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
Uh! I was wondering when someone would point that out.
Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
I don't think it is as much about discounting Apple's success as it is minimizing the "me too" nature of Microsoft's business.
Finally they are making repositories of software so people have at least some chance to find out if it's malware or not.
Finally Microsoft might get a package manager and people could install software without having to type "programmname free download" into the next search engine, and probably getting malware with the first 10 links.
That is, unless Microsoft messes it up which they will probabaly do. My guess is that they will not open it to "free" software or the whole system will be horribly insecure. Probably nobody will trust Microsoft and therefore they all will stay at the old, horribly insecure system.
I think that's exactly right. By making it look like a favor to developers instead of a real business, while at the same time drooling over a 30% slice.
I think this is just a way to kill pirated software. What if in Windows 7, like the iPhone, you can only install software you got from the MS App store? It's also a nice way to keep those irritating OSS programs like FF and OO off of their lawn.
-- Cheers!
Here's an example of how Ballmer views the world.
Despite acknowledging that WebKit's open-source nature is "interesting," Microsoft's chief executive elaborated on why he says the software giant is sticking--at least for now--with its Trident rendering engine for Internet Explorer.
"I think there will continue to be a lot of proprietary innovation by us, and other people, inside the browser itself," he said. "A company like ours needs to have (its own) rendering service. It is important that we have a browser that embraces (Internet) standards but also allows us to have innovative extensions, even before the standards bodies go there."
http://news.cnet.com/8301-10805_3-10090118-75.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-5
So MS make innovative extensions to IE and then wait for the standards bodies adopt it??
He's completely ignoring FOSS here. He seems to have lost objectivity, especially if you read the rest of the article.
Doesn't look like MS is going compliant any time soon.
Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
"Apple legally licensed/bought the tech from PARC"
On a purely historical note, Apple licensed the mouse patent from SRI (where Doug Englebart, its inventor, worked), not PARC, although the fact that they bothered to do so reinforces your point about Apple actually having licensed many of the technologies they used in the Lisa and early Macs rather than simply plagiarising them.
I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
The GUI came from the PARC, too! And the iPod was nowhere near the first portable media player - apple copied that too!
Wow, an open-source app store.
However, I did by being thorough enough to look them up as I see them!
Lit for Nerds, Stuff that Matters.
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
When the Microsoft executives saw Apple's ability to apply heavy-handed censorship and control over applications offered on the iPhone platform, they thought "That's Brilliant! Why the hell didn't we think of that first?"
... and then they built the supercollider.
I'm feeling quite the banksta with my two iPhone apps.
Stevie B. can suckit.