SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Integrating IT >> Outsourcing and Application Service Providers (ASP)

Microsoft looks to build one stop mobile apps market

Microsoft looks to build one stop mobile apps market

By:  Jeremy Kirk  On: 01 Sep 2008 For: IDG News Service (SS) Creator

Third-party developers have built more than 15,000 applications for Windows Mobile, but the applications are sold through a multitude of vendors on different Web sites

Microsoft is preparing to launch in the next few months a Web site called Skymarket to sell Windows Mobile OS applications, a job advertisement suggests.

The clue to the launch is a job advertisement spotted by blogger Long Zheng. Microsoft is looking for a senior product manager who would oversee the marketing and development for the service, intended to complement the eventual release of the next mobile OS, Windows Mobile 7.

Third-party developers have built more than 15,000 applications for Windows Mobile, but the applications are sold through a multitude of vendors on different Web sites.

The advertisement would suggest that Microsoft is aiming for something closer to Apple's one-stop shop approach with its iTunes Store, which also sells applications for the iPhone. Those applications, which now number more than 1,000, are vetted by Apple and are not sold elsewhere.

One of the goals listed in Microsoft's ad for the position is making "the Windows Mobile marketplace 'the place to be' for developers wishing to distribute and monetize their Windows Mobile applications."

Microsoft has already taken a shot at loosely roping its applications under one online roof with its Windows Mobile Catalog.

But the site is a facade, with links leading to vendors such as Pocketland, Handango and MobiHand which handle the transaction and downloads. By contrast, Apple's applications can be purchased and downloaded on its iPhone wirelessly.


Sign up for our Newsletters
Tags: Web site












Print |  Views: 658   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Jeremy Kirk Jeremy Kirk is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

Windows Mobile Marketplace dangles dollars at developers
Windows Mobile Marketplace dangles dollars at developersMicrosoft's Windows Mobile Windows Mobile Marketplace, is offering 70 per cent of sales for applications they develop and sell at the Apple App store rival
The battle of the multimedia browser plug-ins
The battle of the multimedia browser plug-insNow that Adobe Systems has announced its Integrated Runtime for rich Internet Applications, it is facing competition from Microsoft with its Silverlight software. Industry analysts give their predictions on the next battle of the RIA war.
Microsoft adds .Net to give Silverlight a glow
 Microsoft adds .Net to give Silverlight a glowMicrosoft Corp. is integrating the .Net framework into its new Silverlight browser technology for running multimedia applications on the Web, the company revealed Monday. The move is part of an expanded effort to build a significant developer base so Microsoft can catch up to Adobe Systems Inc. in providing a revenue-generating business in the rich Internet applications (RIAs) market.
Microsoft needs a hotter smart phone to manage
it’s an image of the past that might have been: an enterprise employee buys a new pc, brings it to work and asks the it manager to set it up for them. not for their home use,
blog comments powered by Disqus