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Windows Phone 8 Having Trouble Attracting Developers

colinneagle writes "Microsoft has promised that cross-platform development across the 8s – from Windows 8 on a desktop to Windows Phone 8 – will be a simple matter, but that's still not enough to get some developers moving on Windows Phone 8 support. The Windows Phone platform has made a remarkable recovery since its reset with version 7. Since then, WP7 has grown to 100,000 apps. But that pales in comparison to the 675,000 in Google Play and 700,000 in the Apple App Store. Granted, there's a ton of redundancy – how many weather or newsfeed apps does one person need? – but it points to availability and developer support. A report from VentureBeat points out what should be obvious: that while developers like Windows 8, they aren't as excited about Windows Phone 8 software because they have already made huge investments in other platforms and don't want to support another platform. A survey by IDC and Appcelerator found 78% of Android developers were 'very interested' in programming for Android smartphones, a slight drop from the 83% in a prior survey. Interest in the iPhone and iPad remained undiminished, with 89% and 88% interest, respectively."

3 of 268 comments (clear)

  1. Made $4 with WP7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    After three months of effort writing a free app for Windows Phone 7, so far I have made a total of $4 from Microsoft's advertising system. This is from the top-rated app in its category. Needless to say, I won't be writing any apps for Windows Phone 8 unless I'm being paid to do so.

  2. The SDK only came out today by zanderz · · Score: 5, Informative
  3. Re:They will have to invest in carriers by tlhIngan · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yea, if you recall the iPhone was a big deal and then the App store was released after many people already had the HW.

    Much easier to woo devs when you got a large install base, vs. trying to court them when most have not even heard of your HW/SW.

    Actually the iPhone was a strange situation. Apple at that time (and still does) wanted devs to write web apps (and Apple worked hard to get geolocation, sensor data, and local storage in HTML5). But devs wanted a native SDK, and they kept clamoring. So much so that they hacked together an SDK from MacOS X headers so jailbroken iPhones could easily get apps.

    Apple saw this and created an SDK and the App Store. (And still allows webapps to be released with no approval required at all).

    It's very easy to attract developers when they're banging on your door begging to develop for your platform.