Palm’s WebOS Now Has 1,000 Apps. Only 99,000 To Go To Catch Up To Apple.
Palm’s App Store has reached a milestone. According to WebOS School, Palm now offers 1000 apps to its mobile users on its App Catalog. Of course, this number has to be taken with a grain of salt. Apple’s App Store has over 100,000 apps and the Android market has over 16,000 apps, making Palm’s achievement a little less thrilling.
The relatively small amount of apps for Palm isn’t surprising; Palm has had a lag in adding apps to its store for some time now and has not been able to match the speed or breadth of Apple’s App ecosystem. But it’s safe to assume that Palm may be adding apps more quickly now, after the company announced an easier approval process for apps and the ability to allow developers to fully distribute their apps via the web. What this means is that developers can simply submit their apps to Palm, and Palm will return to them a URL that they can then blog, tweet, do whatever they want to share it. When a person then clicks on that URL they can easily install the app, bypassing any kind of store. Palm realizes that it has to play nice with developers in order to get them to build on top of its software.
Will the App Catalog ever catch up to Apple’s App Store? Probably not, but Palm’s strategy could definitely still make the mobile device company a player in the mobile device world.
Here’s a list of the most downloaded apps from Palm’s App Catalog (they are all free) and a breakdown by type of app:
1. The Weather Channel
2. AccuWeather
3. Backgrounds
4. Topple Ball Mini
5. Pandora Radio
6. WHERE
7. Bubbles!
8. Card Ace: Hold ‘Em
9. Bubble Level
10. Trapster
The relatively small amount of apps for Palm isn’t surprising; Palm has had a lag in adding apps to its store for some time now and has not been able to match the speed or breadth of Apple’s App ecosystem. But it’s safe to assume that Palm may be adding apps more quickly now, after the company announced an easier approval process for apps and the ability to allow developers to fully distribute their apps via the web. What this means is that developers can simply submit their apps to Palm, and Palm will return to them a URL that they can then blog, tweet, do whatever they want to share it. When a person then clicks on that URL they can easily install the app, bypassing any kind of store. Palm realizes that it has to play nice with developers in order to get them to build on top of its software.
Will the App Catalog ever catch up to Apple’s App Store? Probably not, but Palm’s strategy could definitely still make the mobile device company a player in the mobile device world.
Here’s a list of the most downloaded apps from Palm’s App Catalog (they are all free) and a breakdown by type of app:
1. The Weather Channel
2. AccuWeather
3. Backgrounds
4. Topple Ball Mini
5. Pandora Radio
6. WHERE
7. Bubbles!
8. Card Ace: Hold ‘Em
9. Bubble Level
10. Trapster
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