Developers will decide Pre's fate

By Victoria Ho, ZDNet Asia
Thursday, July 09, 2009 07:20 PM

For the Pre handheld to beat out smartphone competitors, Palm will have to court developers whose support can "make or break" the device's market success, noted analyst firm Ovum.

According to an Ovum report Wednesday, the mobile device competes squarely against Apple's iPhone, which emphasizes an application-centric user experience.

Ovum's principal analyst Tony Cripps said, in comparison to the Pre, the iPhone stands as a "better bet" for users looking for an "iPhone-style experience" because of its richer third-party app ecosystem. Apple's App Store houses some 50,000 apps and recently surpassed its 1 billionth download.

Palm's App Catalog, on the other hand, only just crossed 1 million downloads. "The Pre looks less well-loved" among developers, noted Cripps.

Developers tend to prioritize platforms that have a broader audience, in order to justify the investment required to build apps, he said in an e-mail interview with ZDNet Asia. In this regard, the Ovum analyst ranked Palm's webOS at the bottom of a group comprising competing mobile OSes--iPhone, Android, Symbian, Windows Mobile and BlackBerry.

Cripps said: "Palm enters a competitive market where the battle for developers' hearts and minds is being fought out by far more significant players."

He referred to Nokia's struggle to attract developers to its Symbian OS: "What chance has Palm of rallying the great and the good of application and content developers to webOS, when even Nokia is struggling to keep them onside?"

Will Pre rescue Palm?
The Palm Pre, which has enjoyed much hype since its January announcement, carries the company's hopes of ending its revenue woes.

Palm saw success with its Centro device toward late-2007, but this was not sufficient to prevent the company from reporting a sharp revenue decline. Its Treo Pro device, too, reportedly received a lukewarm response in the United States when it debuted in late-2008.

Earlier this year, the shipment of Palm's smartphone units dropped 42 percent to 482,000.

Cripps said Palm still has to convince operators and users to pick up the Pre. Operators watching this space should monitor the level of developer support before committing to the Pre, he added.

Palm this week announced plans to include a GSM version of the Pre for the device's European launch, expected to take place at an unspecified date this year.


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Developers will decide Pre's fate
To me, this article seems like an overly negative and biased one, leading unknowledgeable people the wrong impressions. For one, the Mojo SDK for the Palm Pre is not out yet, due late/end of Summer. Thus, this does not allow the public to start development properly and the reason why the number of applications in the store is low at the moment. If homebrew applications are to go by, there is quite a lot of interest in the Pre, with the ease of hacking compared to other platforms being healthy and interesting prospects.

Granted, it remains to be seen how popular the WebOS platform will be, as well as the app store and I believe better marketing would benefit Palm. It certainly did with Apple and the iPhone...everyone knew the iPhone, not many I know have heard of the Pre.
Posted by anonymous on Thursday, July 09 2009 08:31 PM

RE: Developers will decide Pre's fate
Absolutly, you can't make a comparison either saying one billion vs one million...it means nothing due to the amount of time apple has had to gain those downloads...The Pre has been on market for a little over a month
Posted by anonymous on Thursday, July 09 2009 08:53 PM

RE: Developers will decide Pre's fate
I agree...How can developers "love" something that hasn't been released yet???

A lot of people "love" HTML, PHP and JavaScript. So does that mean that this theory is false since those (and a few other "loved") languages will be what the Pre's Apps will/can be written in?

I also agree that the huge interest in the HomeBrew apps for the Pre is a good indicator that developers are itching to get Apps out there on this platform. It's also worth mentioning that there will be far less hoops to jump through to get an app out there compared to any Apple based product. ;)
Posted by anonymous on Friday, July 10 2009 02:37 AM

Developers will decide Pre's fate
...and from a business sense, you mean to tell me that developers would want to add another application to the sea of 50,000+ available for the iPhone rather than testing the waters with Pre? IMO. A app developer would rather get an app on the WebOs platform because users would be able to FIND THE APP and choose it. Have you tried wading through the iPhone app catalog? It will take you a while. Geez. 48,000 of those apps are duplicates or garbage.
Posted by Marvelouss on Friday, July 10 2009 12:41 AM

Developers will decide Pre's fate
Does this author have stock in Apple? How long did it take Apple to have one million downloads to their iPhones? And its been what, two years to achieve 50,000 apps for their product, right? How many did they have after one month?

Apple is short-sighted in their alliance with AT&T and why should I pay to terminate my Sprint contract to obtain the iPhone from AT&T? Apple will see they have made too long a contract with AT&T and other products like the Pre will gain market share due to contractual backlash.
Posted by anonymous on Sunday, July 12 2009 05:57 AM

Developers will decide Pre's fate
I LOVE this quote: the iPhone stands as a "better bet" for users looking for an "iPhone-style experience." Cripps sounds like a genius.

Am I as smart as an professional analyst? Let's see: the Pre stand as a "better bet" for users looking for a "Pre-style experience."
Posted by PookiePrancer on Wednesday, July 15 2009 10:52 AM


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