Microsoft opens Windows Marketplace for Mobile to application submissions from developers, marking a new stage in Microsoft's attempt to gain market share in the mobile space, already fiercely contested by Apple, Google, Research In Motion, Nokia and other companies. Windows Marketplace for Mobile will support applications for Windows Mobile 6.5, the latest version of Microsoft's smartphone operating system, as well as Windows Mobile 6.0 and Windows Mobile 6.1.Microsoft
announced July 27 that it is accepting application submissions for Windows
Marketplace for Mobile, its store
for Windows Mobile smartphone applications.
Submissions for mobile-device applications will be accepted from 29
supported countries. By the time Windows Marketplace launches in fall 2009,
Microsoft plans to have 600 applications available. While certainly a large
number, however, it lags behind Apple's App Store, which currently features
over 65,000 apps.
In a bid to appeal to the enterprise, Microsoft plans to feature a dedicated
section for business applications on Windows Mobile for Marketplace. The store
will support
applications for not only Windows Mobile 6.5, the latest version, but also
Windows Mobile 6.0 and 6.1.
Microsoft evidently hopes opening its application store to an expanded
number of devices will help gain market share from Apple, Research In Motion,
Google and other competitors in the mobile space. The rewards for success are
potentially vast; according to a recent report by Juniper Research, some 20
billion mobile applications will be downloaded annually by 2014.
"Registered developers and ISVs can now upload their application, game
or widget to the Windows Marketplace platform and we'll begin certifying those
apps according to the process, policies and guidelines we've published,"
Todd Brix, senior director for Microsoft's Mobile Platform Services Product Management, wrote in a July 27 corporate blog post. "We certify apps on a
First In, First Out (FIFO) basis."
Brix went on to add that application certification should take 10 business
days, and the status of applications can be checked through the Developer
Dashboard. Guidelines for developers can be found here,
(PDF) while submission requirements can be found here
(PDF) and policies here. (PDF)
Should an application not pass the certification process, Microsoft plans on
kicking back a report detailed with the various tests and checks to identify
the problem.
"Our strategy for all of this is pretty straightforward: We want to
create a global marketplace for Windows Phones where developers and users meet
to sell and buy high-quality and high-value applications," Brix said.
"These are new customer experiences, and frankly, capabilities that will
set us apart."
In order to promote the application-submission launch, Microsoft is also
hosting a Race to Market Challenge, which will offer four Microsoft Surface
tables as prizes for applications judged in the categories of Most Playful,
Most Useful, Most Valuable (downloads versus price) and Most Downloads of a
Free App. That contest will run until the end of 2009; details can be found on this
site.