Or you could have a demo version for free which is crippled or only a
partial app then the full app which is the paid version.

On Nov 10, 7:18 pm, "Jesse Scherer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you absolutely must offer a trial, and the Market won't support it, you
> could offer a trial version of your app with some sort of kill switch (the
> application sets a flag and tells itself to stop working after 10 days) and
> a paid version that does not do this. It would not prevent a truly
> determined person from circumventing your terms, but given the nature of
> Android, why couldn't somebody just hack the Market app to ignore trial
> periods anyway?
> My 2c
>
> Jesse
>
> On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 7:10 PM, Christine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hopefully, they will allow a trial period. iPhone market doesn't allow
> > that, so you're forced to either charge for the first download, or
> > make the app free.
>
> > On Nov 10, 9:52 pm, Eric <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > It was announced that a 30% cut of the Market price will be paid to
> > > the carrier(s), and the remaining 70% will be paid to the developer.
>
> > > You can also sell apps through venues other than the Market, and avoid
> > > the 30% cut, but it seems likely that most phone owners will only look
> > > for apps in the Market.
>
>
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