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Application Developer Versus Smart Phone Developer

Autor:   •  March 30, 2015  •  Case Study  •  1,301 Words (6 Pages)  •  800 Views

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Application developers versus Smart Phone developers

In this new mobile platform world, app developers are the new kingmakers. Not a day goes by when someone doesn't introduce their own app store. As the world of mobile apps continues to gain importance in our lives, the space will continue to be ruled by app devlopers .In many ways, it’s a good way of moneymaking opportunities for independent app developers as well as big companies.

Software developers make effective software. It is an engineering endeavor that cannot be extracted from the context and systems with which it interoperates. The heart of a good software solution is not in turning the functional specification into code but rather in the use of available resources such as time and money to create desired outcomes for stakeholders, while satisfying constraints such as legal requirements through purposeful design.

  1. Who has more power and how they got?

Recently there is an amazing growth in the mobile app development domain. Resourceful apps like iPhone business applications are popular due to the ubiquity of web browsers, and the convenience of using a web browser as a client. The ability to update and maintain web applications without distributing and installing software on potentially thousands of client computers is a key reason for their popularity, as is the inherent support for cross-platform compatibility. This opens up a new marketing and brand-building channel for marketers and organizations looking to interact with mobile users on a one-to-one basis. Downloaded directly to the phone, mobile apps leverage and interact with the unique features of the operating system to give consumers a richer experience thereby adding more value to the field of smartphone application development. Plus, the ability to include Location Based Services (LBS) and user preference settings ensures a more personal experience.

Software developers flocked to the larger Windows PC market, which in turn attracted more customers, which attracted still more software developers to Windows. For the better part of last two decades, Microsoft held the allegiance of software developers, relegating the Mac to the periphery of the computer business. Choosing an OS used to mean taking a bit of a plunge: since software was anchored to it, a choice of, say, Windows over Mac meant a long-term choice between different available software collections. Even if a software developer offered versions of its wares for each OS, switching from one OS to another typically meant having to buy that software all over again.

It was that one reason we ended up with a single dominant OS for over two decades. People had Windows, which made software developers want to write for Windows, which made more people want to buy Windows, which made it even more appealing to software developers.

With the venture of iPhone and other tablet devices, a flowering of innovation has started in app development. The App development has boomeranged the PC software development. The transformation is happening from product to service. Activities are clumping around a handful of portals: two or three OS makers that are in a position to manage all apps. A rising number of mobile, lightweight, cloud-centric devices don't merely represent a change in form factor. Rather, we're seeing an unprecedented shift of power from end users and software developers to app development.

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