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Thursday, May 6, 2010

Mobile App Stores could start fading away within four years

ABI Research says the number of smartphone applications downloaded from 'app stores' will keep growing until 2013… but those figures will then start to drop.

Last year, consumers downloaded 2.4 billion applications from application stores – a figure that'll almost treble by 2013, when almost 7 billion apps will be downloaded. Apple's App Store will remain the market leader until 2013 according to ABI's report, despite pressure from Android and Symbian. However, ABI Research says the evolution of the mobile internet will then lead to consumers starting to head away from dedicated stores for their software applications. Total app downloads will probably continue to grow, although downloads via app stores are expected to fall.

Mark Beccue, senior analyst at ABI, said "App stores aren’t going away: following the 2013 peak in demand, the number of downloads in 2015 will have decreased only seven or eight percent. But as our use of the mobile internet evolves, demand will increasingly shift elsewhere. We see two emerging trends: first, many applications (increasingly built on web standards) will migrate from app stores to regular websites, and for some sites you won’t need an app at all. In addition, more and more popular applications will be preloaded on mobile devices. Social networking apps in particular will be pre-loaded on new products."

However, there is still hope for the app store – and it comes from developing markets. ABI Research says mobile network operators will increasingly launch their own app stores, which may offer downloadable apps for feature phones in regions where smartphone penetration is lower.

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Categories: Operating systems, NewsNumber of views: 12163

Tags: research android apple applications symbian

1 comments on article "Mobile App Stores could start fading away within four years"

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Ronnie

5/9/2010 9:00 AM

I have always believed that smartphones even while they are increasing in depth and width of penetration will not be the ideal vehicle for delivering apps always.

The answer possibly lies in the app being stored in the cloud somewhere and rendering an execution in the feature phones. The big money and big opportunity will lie in graduating the feature phone users to apps uses such as healthcare, education, mobile payments and more.

So far Apps have just been skimming the usage paradigm on the surface. There is a bigger market out there lieing untapped.The delivery and srevice relevance is going to be critical.

ronnie05.wordpress.com/2010/04/27/y76/
ronnie05.wordpress.com/2010/04/27/78tr/

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