Everything state of the apps
Developers Bjango posted an interesting — and informed — reply today to Newsweek‘s sensationalist scoop on the iPhone App Store goldrush, and how the “rushies” might not be finding
Dan Moren of Macworld has an interesting post up about this year’s C4 Independent Developers Conference, and how the indie devs seem to have cooled towards iPhone development and turned
When I buy an app, I’m entitled to:(answers)
We were going to post some long preachy editorial about Tweetie 2.0 being a paid upgrade but it looks
Apple.com has gone and souped up their iPhone app promotion page, carrying forward the “Apps for Everything” tag from their latest rough of commercials.
Featured categories include apps for cooks,
So you make an app free, get people to download it, then use it to violate your users’ privacy by pulling their telephone number off their iPhone so you can
Apple has just announced that their iTunes App Store for the iPhone and iPod touch has passed the 2 billion downloads bar. Boom indeed.
Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO, says:
The
According to developers, Apple has sent them out the following note:
We are pleased to introduce the App Store Resource Center, a single destination designed to make it easier
Last week we linked to an AdMob estimate that the iPhone and iPod touch App Store could represent a $2.5 billion a year economy, which based the estimate off usage
According to developers Bjango, Apple is now telling developers to remove the “Free Memory” function — the ability to clear data from RAM without force quitting or rebooting —
Does the App Store represent a $2.5 billion a year economy, with 26.4 million iPhone users, 50% of whom pay for apps to the tune of $9.49 a month, or






































