On Jan 28, 2012 2:03 PM, "Christiaan Schoenaker" <
[email protected]> wrote:
>
> I believe the rotation cube its already an example code from htc dev
center. I got it to learn to use 3d functions for evo3d phones.
> since this developer post such basic programs on the marker, maybe i
can.post my first Hello World on it too. maybe add a featured pay app that
first let you press a button and then shows you the message. (dont worry,
im not going to do this)

Go search the market.  Last time I checked, there were several "hello
world" apps available.  Some clearly indicating that is was just a posting
of a tutorial, others appeared to be trying to market it as a novelty app.
It is what it is.  I say feel free to hold to standards, but when it comes
down to it and I'm contractually free to distribute my stuff, I'm gonna do
whatever seems like it is legal and will make me money.

I think the first iPhone "farting app" was a crappy app.  But it made that
guy a good bit of money.  And you can bet your farty app that I wish I had
the insight to think of that first.

>
> On Jan 27, 2012 8:28 PM, "Tim Mensch" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> On 1/27/2012 11:43 AM, Nathan wrote:
>> > On Jan 26, 10:47 am, Tim Mensch <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >> And I could have it wave like a flag instead of being in a 3d box.
>> >> That way it's at least Computer Graphics 102 instead of 101. :)
>>
>> > Do report back on whether you make a solid living on one wallpaper
>> > app, or whether you end up making multiple ones.
>>
>> Honestly, if I were to go down that road, it would almost certainly be
with multiple themed apps, just like the featured one that started off this
discussion. The SEO advantage of that approach is undeniable.
>>
>> Just by having a search term in the title of your app you're likely to
end up on the first page of search results. Look, for example, at the first
page of the results from Angry Birds. See the game "Angry Frogs"? When I
look up its rank, it shows up as "not in the top 500." You have to go to
page three to find my game (Hamster: Attack!), a game with high ratings, in
the same genre as Angry Birds, and ranked between 105 and 120 in the US for
the past few weeks in Arcade/Action (higher in other countries -- Northern
Europeans seem to love Hamster, as well as South- and East-Asians). Angry
Frogs has a lot more downloads than Hamster, but then apps like "Angry
Birds Backup" have only 5-10k downloads (I get that much per DAY most days)
and terrible ratings, but they're also listed on the first page.
>>
>> So when someone searches "Chinese New Year", apps (including wallpapers)
with that term in the NAME will be ranked way higher than similar apps that
have mention it in the description. And an Awesome 10000 Wallpapers app
that can't even begin to list all of the images it supports wouldn't show
up for several pages, even if it were really popular, and even if it
managed to list the search term the user is interested in.
>>
>> So there's no doubt that having 200 apps, one for each search term, is
the smarter approach, and having that app be featured seems like implicit
approval of that behavior by Google. Despite what the developer agreement
says about "repetitive" apps. It does feel like that specifically bars 200
similar screen saver apps -- what else could it mean? -- but if the reality
is that such apps are being FEATURED, and more importantly, not taken down,
ever (barring DMCA challenges), what conclusions can we come to as
developers? Especially when no one at Google EVER comments as to the
specific meaning of those agreements...
>>
>> Tim
>>
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