Tech Check
MOST SHARED
- Marc Faber: 100% Chance of Global Recession
- Zero China Growth Is ‘Probable’: Gordon Chang
- Time for Flash Sales to Adapt or Die
- Citigroup Lost $20 Million on Facebook IPO Trades
- 5 Spots Where the Dollar Buys a Great Vacation
- Facebook: The Song — Yes, We're Serious
- How to Trade on the Jobs Report
- China Growth Risks Signal Need for Fiscal Action
- What College Tuition Will Look Like in 18 Years
- A New Look at the ‘New Poor’
- Six Pack: Beer Buzz of the Week
- Greek Exit Could Trigger 50% Fall in Euro Stocks: Analyst
- Under Pressure, FHA Skews to Wealthier Home Buyers
- Big Stock Upside for Hudson City Deal: Analyst
- 5 High-Yield Stocks Ready to Boost Dividends
- Yoshikami: Four Things You Need to Know About Gold Now
- Steinbock: The Euro Zone Endgame Begins
- Option Bulls Take Another Shot on Idenix
- Citigroup Lost $20 Million on Facebook IPO Trades
- Sticker Shock: What College Is Likely to Cost in 18 Years
- JPMorgan to Shake Up Risk Team After Big Loss: Report
- Icahn Raises Stake in Chesapeake, Wants Board Seats
- Marc Faber: Chance of Global Recession Is Now 100%
- Week Ahead: Europe Has Wall Street Bull on Short Leash
- What Happened to Stocks? Most Unloved in 50 Years
- Cool Jobs: From Gold Stacker to Bed Tester
- Many Greeks Moved Their Money Abroad Long Ago
RSS FEED
Apple's New Killer Apps
Silicon Valley Bureau Chief
![]() |
Apple iPhone |
When Apple was preparing to launch its "app store" for iPhone, the online software marketplace of free and for-sale third party developer applications, I suggested then that this was potentially the great hidden gem in the iPhone story.
That App Store might some day rival iTunes as a revenue stream.
Think about it: Apple [AAPL
Loading...
()
] could rely on thousands of independent developers to create new programs that could lure millions of potential iPhone customers.
Literally all things to all people simply by offering up some code and letting those developers do their thing. Letting the marketplace grow the marketplace.
Now we have word from on high, courtesy of Steve Jobs and his comments to the Wall Street Journal that Apple's App Store is a bona fide blockbuster. Consumers have bought or downloaded 60 million apps in the month the online doors have been open.
Jobs says Apple has been selling 1 million apps a day, and while it's not generating a huge amount of profit, it could become a billion-dollar retail operation in the future. A loss-leader, if you will, for iPhone. Jobs says he has never seen anything like this in his career for software.
Once again, Apple has seen the future, built a bridge to it, and is taking consumers along for the journey. It's extraordinary that the company has once again seized on another electronic ecosystem, in much the same way iTunes didn't so much as invent downloaded digital entertainment as it did re-invent it. And iPhone is the direct beneficiary of this ingenuity, proving once again that the device isn't merely a "smart phone," but Apple's next-generation "platform."
You just don't see this kind of grassroots market place support and development excitement around the sector's biggest players, like Nokia [NOK
Loading...
()
], Microsoft [MSFT
Loading...
()
] and Research in Motion [RIMM
Loading...
()
]. And I'm not saying Apple will eclipse them any time soon. But when and if that does happen, Apple's App Store is the kind of thing that can sure speed it up.
Questions? Comments?










