Thank you for your 2 cent Kevin!! :-D

I just thought of something as well...
If the market place wasn't so messed up and I hadn't come across so
many bunk apps..
I wouldn't be here right now.
I wonder how many people that holds true for and how many people it
will hold true for.

On Jun 9, 2:02 pm, Kevin Duffey <[email protected]> wrote:
> Onomp,
>
> I think I get the gist of what you are worried about. I think all of us sort
> of have that fear... will Android survive with so many buggy apps out there
> and with more and more mom/dad/non-geeky people adopting android phones,
> downloading these potentially problem apps, seeing them crash, and get
> frustrated and leave... will Android survive through all this? I too have
> had this thought from time to time. It is going to happen. People are going
> to get android phones, realize they aren't iPhones.. and leave. It already
> happens. People are going to see that android devices, while no harder than
> other smart phones and offers a lot more to boot, can be difficult at times.
> After all, android devices are essentially a dumbed down computer. It runs
> multiple things at once, and sometimes those things crash.
>
> There are a few things for you to consider tho, before you give up on
> Android as a platform to develop for. First, most PC owners are Windows
> users.. and we all know the never ending jokes of blue screens, crashes,
> etc. I think most users are familiar with program crashes to some extent. It
> will look different in Android.. a Force Close message is not exactly
> non-geek friendly, but most users these days will have a rough idea that the
> app crashed, and either to restart it, or possibly to go to their computer
> and look up the issue. Some people will get pissed and eventually leave. It
> will happen. I think what you are possibly overlooking is that the world of
> phones has drastically changed the past couple years, but that most end
> users have not yet stepped up to them. Billions of cell phones, only a 100
> million or so smart phones. Prob < 5% of the world wide market is smart
> phones at this point, but it's rapidly changing. It will be a few more years
> before the majority of people are used to the idea of a phone that can do
> everything their computer can... that you can download apps and play games,
> read the news, an e-book, stocks, connect to your email, company vpn, etc.
> It's catching on quick tho. So like the 80s and 90s when people slowly
> adopted PCs (and Macs to a much lesser extent), the pains we all went
> through with blue screens, and random reboots.. we're doing it again with
> smart phones, only smart phones are a lot better at handling these issues.
> It will just take some time for the mass consumers to get used to this new
> way of communicating, playing, using, and understanding the issues that may
> crop up.
>
> As for Android going away.. I honestly worried about the same thing. I
> thought..man.. there are a LOT of issues with Android as a whole. The market
> app is taking too long for updates.. we should be able to better filter
> apps.. why not a way to allow us to see only 4 star apps with over 5000
> downloads for example? It's a very easy thing to do... google has all the
> data, a simple query can pull that info and allow us to get more detailed
> filtering on apps we may want ... or want to avoid. But, Android is far from
> going anywhere. Despite it's flaws, like others said, it's an evolving
> beast. It's going to get a LOT better. Froyo (2.2) in my opinion bumps up
> Android devices to beyond iPhone, with the exception of games/music apps and
> user interface.
>
> Part of what you are seeing and worried about is what drives iPhone so well.
> The user interface on iPhone is the best, period. I personally like the
> Android one better, but the majority of people including Android users will
> say the iPhone interface is about as easy as it gets. There new iOS4 with
> multi tasking should make it better. However, for the same reason a lot of
> developers are leaving iPhone for Android.. the openness of Android, we're
> going to see a lot of "painful" initial learning curves on the market. I
> can't tell you how many threads I see in here and on other android forums of
> people who want to write a game, and have no idea what Java is. It's scary
> how many developers with almost no experience are coming out of the woodwork
> to build a game for Android. It's both scary, yet good too.. because that
> means you have a huge interest in the development of Android apps. I bought
> my Droid in November, there were 5000 apps on the market. Now there are over
> 55,000 7 months later. In a year, we'll be up to 150,000 apps. That can be a
> good thing IF the market app itself improves and allows more filtering
> options, but I am sure you're worried that the bulk of those are going to be
> horribly bad apps, and most end users won't know, and will get scared and
> return their android phones and thus the android market will shrink.
>
> I think the opposite tho.. I think.. .well, I hope that what we see in
> Froyo.. the new google free service that developers can now log in and see
> the full stack trace + comments of a crashed app, will only improve in many
> ways. The biggest thing that urks me right now with regards to the market is
> how fast your app can stop being downloaded based on user feedback. There is
> no way to really respond to user feedback in the market... so even if you
> get a bad comment, and you fix a bug and want to, you can't comment back in
> a threaded manner that shows you are a good developer, fixing your issues,
> supporting the users. The current market comment system in my opinion is the
> single biggest downfall to the market right now, and it could be fixed
> pretty easily. Allow developers to respond so like you see in blogs, a
> "comments.." link is there below the first comment, and a user can see if a
> developer responded, fixed it, etc. As well, allow consumers to remove their
> comments, or edit them. I may really like an app, but it keeps crashing on
> my Droid.. so I post a 1 star feedback and a comment that it crashes all the
> time on my Droid. Developer responds with a comment about looking into it,
> then fixes the issue, submits an update.. I get it, try it out again, it
> works, I can then go back and edit my comment, re-rate the app.. and my 1
> star becomes a 4 star. That would greatly improve the ratings of apps too.
> If I leave 8 comments, all 1 stars, then I leave 1 comment with a 5 star..
> there are still those 8 1 stars that are hurting that apps overall score.
> It's a flawed system and I hope google fixes that in particular, as it will
> greatly help apps chances of survival.  Right now, much like on iPhone.. if
> you download, dont like, rate it bad, and never check back.. and more people
> do this.. an app will eventually not get downloaded. Even if the developer
> fixes it, updates, etc.. they lost all those users who no longer have the
> app installed. They'll never get the updates or notices. It's a crappy way
> to run the market right now, and Android has the chance of really fixing
> this issue.
>
> Anyway, bit long winded.. don't give up. Try to ride it out and see if you
> can influence others... make it better. Perhaps someone at google will read
> this or other threads like this and maybe they are looking at ways to make
> it better.
>
> On Tue, Jun 8, 2010 at 10:02 AM, theSealPortalTeam <
>
>
>
> [email protected]> wrote:
> > I'm sorry but, I have an Andorid phone and never had a problem after
> > the most recent release. Just like anything, perfecting an operating
> > system takes time and patience. I'm very proud of what Google has done
> > to open up mobile development, in fact many developers would agree
> > with me. Android is not dieing, its evolving.
>
> > Without the openness of Andorid, developing for a mobile platform
> > would be difficult as it was in the past.
>
> > On Jun 8, 11:36 am, Onomp <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > Unless google implements a way to track the force closings of
> > > applications (maybe even phone specific) and has a market for flawless
> > > programs and seperates the the ones which still need work, all of your
> > > application ideas will be stolen by the competitors working for the
> > > other OS's and as android takes off and the consumers feel the devices
> > > are too bugged, android will die, your work and learnings will be for
> > > nothing.
>
> > > Anyone else agree?
>
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