Analytics firm Flurry has dissected developer ratios for Apple and Google’s mobile platforms as their respective annual conferences are on the horizon, and research findings show the two companies boast a joint market cap of about $750 billion.
The study compared developer support for iOS versus Android by examining data collected from more than 70,000 companies across more than 185,000 mobile apps. The bar graph below illustrates developers’ loyalty to Apple: For every 10 apps that developers build, seven are for the iOS operating system.
“While Google made some gains in Q1 2012, edging up to over 30% for the first time in a year, we believe this is largely due to seasonality, as Apple traditionally experiences a spike in developer support leading up to the holiday season. Apple’s business has more observable seasonality,” explained Flurry in a blog post.
Flurry further cited iOS as the more attractive platform to developers due to its stronghold on the tablet market share. The pie chart below represents a sample size exceeding 5 billion total user sessions. It reveals the Galaxy Tab and Amazon Kindle Fire “hold very distant second and third places in terms of consumer usage.”
Another comparison on revenue generated by top apps for both Android and iOS uncovered the difference in revenue generated per active user is four times greater on iOS than Android. Flurry noted that for every $1 earned on iOS, a developer could expect to earn about 24-cents on Android.
Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference is June 11 to June 15 in San Francisco, while Google’s I/O conference is June 27 to June 29 in the same California tech-hub city.
Visit Flurry for the full run-down and more graphs.
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It’s a pity that Apple’s iOS App Discovery is still horrible and even though it’s getting better it’s miles behind Android. I know it’s not fact but whenever I’m on my Android device I feel like there’s gazillions more Apps in Play Store than the App Store.
I guess the App Store isn’t really designed to help you ‘find’ new Apps simply by wandering through searches the same way you would find websites by wandering through Google searches. 5 or 6 searches of similar terms (such as ‘photo editor free’ and such similar items) will all bring me up the same result and the App Store doesn’t really allow for fast browsing/previewing the blurb of each app up and down the list (or in it’s case left and right).