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Apple App Store Hits 10B App Download Mark

alphadogg writes "The Apple App Store hit the 10 billion app download mark overnight on Friday, marking a milestone involving an awful lot of Doodle Jump, Tap Tap Revenge and Angry Birds playing, not to mention Facebook and Pandora usage. The Apple App Store hit the 1 billion mark in April of 2009, after opening in July of 2008. Apple is rewarding the downloader of the 10 billionth free or paid App Store app with a $10,000 iTunes gift card in a bit of showmanship that Willy Wonka would be proud of. As of 7AM EST, however, Apple hadn't publicly identified the winner, only saying that you'd need to come back later to find out who won. Apple put an iOS app countdown ticker on its Website last week to build buzz around the milestone and generated about 250 million app downloads since. It also revealed a list of all-time most downloaded free and paid iPhone and iPad apps." The winner of the $10k is Gail Davis, a British woman whose children installed an app without her knowledge. She actually thought the phone call from Apple was a prank at first. "My daughters told me they had downloaded it and they knew there was a competition and that we may have won it," she told BBC Radio 5 Live.

14 of 195 comments (clear)

  1. Kids these days by chitselb · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I had a similar thing happen with Apple's iTunes a few years ago. One of my kids downloaded a couple hundred dollars worth of stuff using my debit card. Since I didn't (still don't) own an iPod and run Linux on the desktop (no iTunes client) there was no way it was me. I was pretty sure it was an inside job, but there was no phone number to contact Apple. The child vehemently denied any involvement. After going back and forth a few times with iTunes' web support people, they told me it was fraud and I should involve the local police department, ending the matter where they were concerned. I went back on their site, but instead of reporting it as a fraud issue, I took the "I forgot my username and password" route. I entered my credit card info and they gave up the goods, handing over the kid's email account. The iTunes were also discovered on the kid's iPod, as well as receipts in the yahoo mail folder. Busted.

    --
    never ask a question you don't want to know the answer to
    1. Re:Kids these days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Er, that's not very similar. These kids downloaded a free app without their mother's knowledge. Your kids are thieves.

  2. Great, but... by Atti+K. · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I miss the Apple that made great hardware (although a little bit overpriced), and a nice OS to go with it. The iPhone/iPad/AppStore/iTunes/we-control-the-device-even-if-you-bought-it Apple that has put Macs and OS X to the background is not so nice and geeky anymore.

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    .sig: No such file or directory
  3. OS X is in no way backgrounded by SuperKendall · · Score: 5, Informative

    has put Macs and OS X to the background is not so nice and geeky anymore.

    That's not at all true. OS X and the computers they make have been updated with around the sam regularity as before. And if Apple was putting OS X in the background why would they have just launched a whole App Store dedicated to the Mac? If anything they are trying strongly to migrate some portion of the very large developer base they have amassed into doing Mac software too.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  4. The question being... by hipp5 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...what does one do with $10,000 to iTunes? I'd be hard-pressed to find 10,000 songs or apps that I liked. Does it work on the mac app store? Because I could see using it then for expensive productivity software.

    1. Re:The question being... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Sign up as a dev with a single useless hello world app for $10000...then buy it with the gift card?

    2. Re:The question being... by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 3

      The balance should be the same. My balances are the same in iTunes and in the Mac App Store and both go down when I purchase something from either store. The $10,000 this lady won will work in either store.

  5. Re:Taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    You don't have to pay tax on your winnings in the UK.

    Yes you do, if you didn't pay tax on the original bet. I don't know if this applies to competitions, but it does to wagers.

  6. UNIX by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While they might not have put OSX into the background they do seem to be putting the environment & UI there. They seem to be trying to shift the usage from a few apps that do a lot to dozens of small apps that each do a few specific tasks.

    Which is the UNIX approach to dong things, which has worked out very well for a long time.

    Great monolithic applications are the exception, not the norm. It's a lot easier to write very useful software if you target it to a specific use.

    It wouldn't surprise me if they shift to a more iOS user interface and phase out the taskbar

    That would surprise me a great deal since on a device where primary input is a mouse, you need something like the dock.

    They can also be the gatekeeper for all your private data shared between your apps.

    Only if everything went through the cloud. But Apple is a practical company, and they know networking is inherantly a secondary service, something you cannot rely on always being present. Remember they are still not letting iOS users sync over the internet, requiring a local computer - does THAT sound like someone who is going to act as any kind of "gateway" for anyone?

    If you are looking for gateways of content, look no further than Android I'd say as that sounds exactly like something Google would want to do (if nothing else than to collect data about what you sync!).

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:UNIX by lennier · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Which is the UNIX approach to dong things, which has worked out very well for a long time.

      Great monolithic applications are the exception, not the norm.

      That was the Unix way 20 years ago. Sadly, since the rise of the huge monolithic X-Window desktop frameworks like Gnome and KDE, it's no longer the case. Even XFCE isn't all that modular.

      It would be nice if the open source world had an equivalent to 'Unix pipes' for a GUI environment - at the moment, Microsoft PowerShell is looking like the best step in that direction.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    2. Re:UNIX by dissy · · Score: 3, Informative

      Which is the UNIX approach to dong things, which has worked out very well for a long time.

      So how do you pipe iApps together to perform more complex tasks?

      AppleScript and Automator

      Instead of being limited to only stdin, stdout, and stderr, they let you pipe objects between apps and even let you put the end result as text to use with stdin on a command line tool and back again.

      There are plenty of examples for both languages on how to do most scripting/piping tasks with not just iApps but most OS X applications.

      Script editor even lets you compile your apple scripts and automations down to applications, which gives you the same functionality as a shell script starting with #!/bin/bash and being chmod +x

      Here is a nice screen shot of the GUI Automator editor showing the apps it can put together, some actions in the app it has selected, and the methodology for putting together each bit of the script you want to do, coincidentally using an iApp.

      For anyone who's good at Excel formulas or macros, Automator will be a snap. Similarly, anyone used to shell scripting will find Apple script just as easy.

  7. Re:and 10k is like what 3 mac pros? by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 3, Informative

    the dual processor mac pro starts at $3500 and you only get 6gb ram and a 1TB hdd at that price. So 10k I can only get 2. But for 1.5k-2.5k you can get build one and get a real raid card / on board hardware raid.

    Apple wants $700 more for a 4 port raid card. But high end server cards on the pc with more ports are like $300.

  8. Re:This doesn't compute by Cimexus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yeah a lot of people take the 'download all the free apps you can find, try them and delete the bad ones' approach. Easy to get to 10B that way. If they were all paid apps (even cheapo ones at $1.99 or whatever) they probably wouldn't have even got to 1B yet.

  9. Re:This doesn't compute by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Funny how I didn't hear any such objections when it was "Mozilla passes X million downloads". In fact, it was all hyped up how much one download could be a thousand corporate PCs. So it's not comparable to say iTunes sales, but it shows that free apps is a big reason people get an iPhone. Plus it's rather disingenuous attempt to imply that free downloads are worthless. Downloads of the Facebook app is very valuable to both Apple and Facebook, even if they aren't charging you for it. Sure there's trivial apps but it's like Firefox's endless extensions, some of them are pretty damn worthless but you don't hear people complain about that, at least not on slashdot.

    It's not exactly news that Apple-bashing has been popular here since the first iPod. Not to mention the vastly exaggerated claims of open source being the source of Apple's success. So they took a BSD kernel and adopted certain unixisms, but in terms of what sells Apple it's like bragging over delivering the plumbing to an award winning building design. Apple has done great and they've done it almost all on their own and none of the spotlight has even reflected on open source. I would bet that 99.99% of Apple's customers doesn't even know and wouldn't have known the difference if it had been some proprietary kernel.

    Is everything perfect in Apple's walled garden? Of course not, but so far my experience with my iPhone has been great minus the people who wrote the alarm clock. Neither is it perfect in the One Microsoft Way, but it's hardly that in the Linux bazaar either. I'm sick and tired of these three phrases:

    1. If you want it fixed, write a patch for it. That's the beauty of open source.
    2. Well, you got what you paid for. You've got nothing to complain about.
    3. If you dislike it so much, why don't you go back to Windows (Winblows, Micro$oft)?

    It's the unholy trinity of "We don't have a problem, you do. Now fuck off." even if you complain about something that's obviously broken for a common use case and makes using it hopeless. And through anti-proprietary fanaticism there's usually not a single commercial alternative even if the money is burning in my pocket. I've pretty much decided to abandon Linux after 3.5 years as my primary desktop and go either Mac or Windows, I just haven't decided which yet. Because I want my choice back, if whatever open source delivers doesn't work I'll go buy something that (probably) does.

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    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings