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2Developer Interest in the iPad Cools from Earlier This Year
3The Breakdown
4Three Tiers for Mobile Development
5Tier 1—The Big Dogs
Apple’s wildly popular iPhone has set the tone for mobile app dev platforms with its viable marketplace and attractive options. However, Google’s Android has shown significant growth, rising from 68 percent in January to 81 percent in March. Meanwhile, developer interest in the iPad slipped a little.
6Tier 2—The Up and Comers
The middle tier shows the most growth and perhaps the most promise. Developer interest in the Research In Motion (RIM) BlackBerry doubled, rising from 21 percent in January to 43 percent in March. Interest in the Windows Phone platform nearly tripled, rising from 13 percent in January to 34 percent in March. Microsoft was probably helped by the recent announcement of its Windows Phone 7 Series platform and developer strategy.
7Tier 3—The Also-Rans
It is probably not fair to list Symbian as an “also-ran” when Symbian is the most widely used smartphone platform in the world, but, in the U.S. at least, developers just do not seem to be rushing to the platform. However, developer interest rose from 10 percent in January to 16 percent in March. Poor sales and financial woes seem to have impacted developer interest in Palm’s innovative webOS platform. Meanwhile, the more specialized Meego and Kindle platforms are rather new to the game.