The British government is now in the business of developing
for the iPhone, according to a July 6 BBC News report, which suggested that
tens of thousands of British Pounds had been earmarked for apps for everything
from travel advice to renewing a driver’s license.
According to documents obtained via the BBC’s Freedom of
Information request, development costs for the apps reached as high as
40,000 British Pounds in some cases, or roughly $60,876. The spending decision is
apparently attracting controversy, as the British government had previously
vowed to review its spending on Website development and
maintenance.
The British government had apparently sponsored, among
others, a “Jobcentre Plus app” that helps people seek out new jobs; other apps
hadn’t yet reached the release stage, with one under development to help
drivers renew their licenses—among other car-related tasks—reportedly now on
hold. Various government departments, perhaps spooked by the possibility of a
public blowback, subsequently told the BBC they had either no intentions of
developing iPhone apps, or else very limited plans to do so.
“The government recently announced a freeze on all marketing
and advertising spend for this year and this includes iPhone applications,” the
Cabinet Office told BBC News in a statement. “Future spend on iPhone
development will be subject to strict controls: only essential activity,
approved by the Efficiency and Reform Group, which is chaired by the Minister
for the Cabinet Office and the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, will be
allowed.”
As smartphones increase their market share among the general
population, app stores have become a prime focus of those device-makers’
efforts; the larger the app store, the logic goes, the more attractive to the
consumer looking to install a variety of programs on their smartphone. Apple
currently leads the pack, with tens of thousands of apps available through its
App Store, although Google’s Android Marketplace has made substantial gains
among developers.
Simultaneously, both BlackBerry and—before its acquisition
by Hewlett-Packard—Palm faced criticism for the relatively small size of their
own app stores. Microsoft has already started encouraging developers to create
for its upcoming Windows Phone 7 platform.
During Apple’s 2010 Worldwide Developers Conference in June,
the company focused a substantial portion of its sessions to mobile products.
To nobody’s great surprise, it
also unveiled the iPhone 4, the next-generation smartphone meant to head
off challenges from increasingly robust Android devices such as the HTC Evo 4G
and the Motorola Droid X. As part of its competitive efforts, Apple is rolling
out “iAd,” a platform that allows developers to deliver mobile advertisements
within apps themselves.
“There is definitely a market for your applications,” Apple
CEO Steve Jobs told the audience. But if you’re the British government, it seems, there’s also the possibility for
a little backlash.