56% of developers support Apple's iOS, 90% are single-platform
Advertising agency Millennial Media's Mobile Mix survey for May 2010 found that 56 percent of U.S. developers write software for Apple's iOS. That's nearly double the next-largest platform, Google's Android. 5 percent write for Nokia's Symbian, while 4 percent create software for Research in Motion's BlackBerry devices.
And while Apple has the lion's share of developers, the study also suggests that those developers are exclusive to Apple. Among all U.S. developers in May, 90 percent were single platform, while just 10 percent wrote mobile applications for multiple platforms.
Millennial Media says that its advertisements reach 82 percent of the mobile Web, according to Nelson, with 59.6 million users. The company is the largest independent mobile advertising network, following Google's acquisition of AdMob.
Other details revealed in the latest Mobile Mix report:
- Requests for the Apple iPad on Millennial Media's network grew 160 percent month-over-month.
- Apple remains the top mobile device maker, with a 25.4 percent share among all manufacturers. However, that was a decrease of nearly 10 percent form the April figures. iOS still has 46 percent share among smartphones alone on the company's network.
- Google's Android has grown 338 percent since January. Ad requests for Android increased 15 percent month-over-month in May.
- Research in Motion is the second-largest mobile operating system on the company's network. RIM had five devices in the top 20 mobile phones, lead by the BlackBerry Curve which represented 7.92 percent of traffic in May.
- Despite what have been reported as lackluster sales, Google's Nexus One was the third most popular smartphone on Millennial Media's network. In May it accounted for 3.94 percent of all mobile phones.
In April, Millennial Media revealed that 70 percent of its smartphone traffic for ad impressions was consumed by the iPhone in the month of March.
96 Comments
More good news for iOS developers.
Analyst: iPhone 4 Launch a ?2 Million-3 Million iPhone Event?
http://digitaldaily.allthingsd.com/2...-iphone-event/
...are pondering if Google, with it's ad driving can leverage the Android install base to generate higher than normal hits. That is to say, could they "game the system" with Android - giving them a perceived higher share of ad requests? I ask because they are ad-revenue driven, and these stats are critical to their success, reflecting their influence in the marketplace. I'm not saying they do, or would. Just could they?
If I were a developer (I'm not), I would spend my time developing applications where I can make $$$$.
I would spend my time developing applications where the customers I target have $$$$
I would spend my time developing applications where I don't need to worry or invest in distribution or how to get paid.
Even IF Android takes off, their customer-base/marketplace have a different mentality.
It's more of a "home grown, do it yourself" mentality, and where can I get it for free. Also, the Google marketplace seems obscure and riddled with issues (today, anyway)
Don't get me wrong, Free will always be king, BUT well written, well designed, useful applications, should command $ca-ching$, and today, that $ca-ching$ is with the iPhone/iPad/iPod-Touch customer base.
AND
with the mature Apple App Store.
Does not surprise me at all and even with Microsoft's so-called inducements to develop for Win 7 Mobile I don't expect much to change. iOS is a lucrative albeit competitive platform.
the numbers are hardly surprising, given apple's dominance currently with mobile apps, and usually if you put the kind f resources into a mobile app for iphone, you aren't as likely to do it again for the smaller markets.