Or it could just be that your app was removed almost completely from the market.

Very disturbing if your conspiracy theory is true. These type of tactics don't 
work though. 

On Mar 11, 2009, at 8:01 PM, sm1 <[email protected]> wrote:


The second problem is that the current userbase seems to consist
primarily of extremely immature, arrogant American 13-yr-olds with a
staggeringly overdeveloped sense of entitlement.

That's what I thought at first also but after I enabled copy-
protection on two of my free apps, all the offensive comments
disappeared instantly. This means that the offensive and apparently
immature comments all came from dev phone 1 owners (ADP1), and these
phones can be located anywhere in the world because they are bought
from Google over the net. I suspect that these people are very few
anti-American, anti-Google, individuals from countries like ... (enter
your favorite American enemy here). Some could also be working for
competitors or may be selling products on a competitor phone. Seeing
the obnoxious comments and ratings completely stop after enabling copy
protection reassured me on the state of the net users and G1 owners in
general and particularly in the US of A.

Copy protection (which does not work on rooted phones, btw) for me
means ratings protection.

serge


Kapstaad wrote:
Hi all,

I can see two problems with app sales at the moment.  First, Android
is still, for all intents and purposes, a beta product.  The G1 phone
and the OS running on it are lacking some of the polish found in the
iPhone, for example.  However, the Open Handset Alliance partners will
eventually produce more hardware, and Android will mature (come on,
cupcake, let's go already :-).  Until the OS platform, and the
hardware, and thus the apps built for them, acquire that slick,
streamlined user experience that gets everyone ooh-ing and aah-ing,
penetration of any market demographic will be slow going.

The second problem is that the current userbase seems to consist
primarily of extremely immature, arrogant American 13-yr-olds with a
staggeringly overdeveloped sense of entitlement.  I base my
observation on the number of assinine 'first' posts in the reviews,
the childish language and the rather ubiquitous lack of anything
remotely useful to anyone hoping to read an actual product review.
It's clear that national and religious bigotry are alive and well in
this crowd, too.   I've never been able to understand the mental state
of an individual who goes to considerable lengths to bash a product
which is well-built and does what its advertised to do, on the basis
that the product doesn't do something else or that it force-closes due
to OS bugs (which happens on all handset platforms).  It's especially
galling when you realize that pretty much all of these hyper-critical
dorks can't write a single line of code themselves, but feel it's OK
to mouth off at a developer who has sincerely and diligently gone to
great lengths to build a working, useful, bug-free app.  I always want
to reply "if you're so damn smart, download the SDK and build a better
app yourself", but I know my suggestion won't be followed, and it'll
just add even more useless noise to the reviews.

While I'm generally in favor of Google's hands-off approach to
moderating the reviews (or maybe it's just laziness, or maybe they're
hoping the 'wisdom of the crowd' will take care of the buffoons), the
marketplace has, in my view, rapidly devolved into a useless kiddy-
centric mess.  If Google's been aiming for the barely-teenager crowd,
they're right on the money.  If they were hoping to penetrate the
business user market or even the Joe Average market, the antics of the
"kiddiots" in the reviews section of the Market are going to severely
hurt Google's efforts.  A long-press on a review will mark it as spam;
that's nice, but we really need a second option, either 'mark as
inappropriate', or 'rate usefulness 1-5 stars' so we can drown out the
dumbest comments with a majority vote.

The as-yet immaturity of the Android platform is a Good Thing; it
represents an excellent opportunity for early adopters to get into
what's most likely going to be a really big game, right at the start,
and "ride the wave".  The immaturity of the majority of current app
reviews is most decidedly NOT a Good Thing, and I think Google would
be well advised to provide some tools to help keep the dweeb noise
level down, or risk losing credibility with and/or support from app
developers.

Just my $0.02.

Brad


On Mar 8, 5:57 pm, Stoyan Damov <[email protected]> wrote:
Ahahahahaha, I did look at the downloads of the top 10 apps - they are
PATHETIC, the max number of downloads I saw was 1000-5000. How many G1
owners are out there, I'd bet on < 100K.

On Sat, Mar 7, 2009 at 10:42 PM, friedger <[email protected]> wrote:

Android stats say here are 10 paid applications.
http://androidstats.com/ranking/applications?filter=paid

However, I don't know what this stats are based on, better check the
market yourself...

Friedger

On 7 Mrz., 00:16, JP <[email protected]> wrote:
You can find out for yourself. Browse the market with a G1 and check
the number of downloads of some of the at-price apps that compare to
your friend's vision apps and that have been made available for
download for a few weeks now. This would be a 15 to 30 minute exercise
that will give you the business intel you are looking for. Then assume
a return rate, deduct Google's 30% cut from the revenue. You're friend
will now the applicable taxes, ODC etc.
This will be an order of magnitude estimate only, but should be
accurate enough to arrive at a conclusion.

On Mar 6, 2:20 pm, Anil <[email protected]> wrote:

An acquaintance who runs a small business (not in the mobile area) and
employs one programmer, is wondering whether to develop apps for
Android Marketplace. He wondered  whether it is financial sense to do
so and I recommended the Android marketplace, but do not want to
mislead him. While the commercial success of the iPhone marketplace is
well known, what has been the commercial story of apps sold in the
Android marketplace?
How many downloads per month, how much sales volume in $, average
price of an app, how many are free downloads vs paid, how many apps,
how many G1 phones are around etc. Are there any reliable statistics
from Google on this?




      


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