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I've been hearing some good things about Google's Android Market recently, and I might look into developing for android (currently develop for iPhone OS) at some point. Are any of you Android Developers, or simultaneously developing for iPhone AND Android? What have your experiences been for developing and selling your apps on the Android Market? Does Google have their act together in their app approval/deployment process? How does being a developer/merchant on the Android Market compare with the that of the App Store? Are you making money? Do you see this market as promising? Love it? Hate it? Share your experiences on the Android Market.

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I actually coded up a couple of apps for the Android market, both paid and free. So let me take the questions in order you presented them.

Q. Are any of you Android Developers, or simultaneously developing for iPhone AND Android. I am starting out to develop for the iPhone just now. On the opposite side of the coin, I know several people who have been developing exclusively for the iPhone, but due to the congestion at the iPhone app store, are starting to develop for the Android as well.

Q. What have your experiences been for developing and selling your apps on the Android Market? Developing is fairly easy. You download the SDK, Eclipse, Android plugin for Eclipse and you are in business. The SDK comes with a ton of samples including a full blown game. You really do not need the phone. In fact, I didn't see an actual G1 phone until well after my app was up on the Android Marketplace and I was curious what the experience was, so I dragged my butt over to the TMobile store.

I first developed 2 free apps. The second (called "It's not Funny") has been a pretty good success. The download numbers, considering the amount of people that own the G1, have been pretty good. Despite the fact, that the application was brain dead simple. I actually added ads to the application and so it's been a small income of $200 per month or so. Nothing to write home about, but pays for a couple of bills.

Then I developed, what I considered to be an actual useful application, at least to me (called "Better Deal") and that has been an unqualified flop. The app was 99 cents and I think to date there has been 20 purchases. On the bright side, the app is also pretty simple and didn't take long to develop. I've heard similar laments from other Android devs as well, vis a vis paid apps not selling all that well.

Q. Does Google have their act together in their app approval/deployment process? It's $25 to get into their store, then another $20 (iirc) to enroll in Google Pay and the moment you upload the app, it is available to be downloaded and purchased. Flat out awesome. Very little bureaucracy.

Q. Are you making money? A. From ads, not from purchases.

Q. Do you see this market as promising? My initial enthusiasm waned a bit, as the onslaught of android phones did not happen, but I still see it as promising.

My only gripe is that if you are stuck and no one can help on the android forums, you are pretty much stuck. I disagree with the API in a couple of places - it could have been done better, but all in a all, an excellent v1. Version 1.5, aka Cupcake, just hit the scene and addressed most of the gripes, plus speed, etc...

Other than that, the development rocks.

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Just curious.. how did you integrate Ads? Is it Google supported? Or 3rd party? Or roll-your-own? – allclaws May 22 at 22:01
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No, not Google supported, though you would think, they'd provide a solution, given AdSense. I used AdMob which has a widget that cleanly integrates into the development experience. It's also a tool of choice for iPhone devs as well. – AngryHacker May 22 at 22:49
I LOVE ANDROID! – Isaac Waller May 24 at 0:23
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As a moderately successful android developer (top 25 game)

  • Android is a nice platform. It has a few warts (java code is pretty slow. Hopefully they add a jit in the next version) but if you are not processor bound you can write apps pretty quickly compared to the iphone, winmo or palm.
  • I make almost all of my money off of ads. Sales have been in 100-200 copies a month at 1.99. Ad revenue has been around 50 dollars a day for an app with 20k+ downloads. Pretty much all (I am not aware of any overseas) of my sales have been to US customers. If you look at ads served, about 10% are in Europe.
  • The market is great. You can post your app and it shows up instantly
  • The market sucks. You have like 255 characters to describe your app, no way to do screen shots, you can't respond to comments,...
  • Long term I don't know if the ad model is sustainable. I think it is a lot easier for iphone users to buy software (itunes is better for most people than google checkout) so I am not sure if the paid apps will ever take off. If google could get the apps to show up on the phone bill that would change things a lot. I am counting on more carriers (ATT, Verizon,Sprint) and phones (magic and samsung i7500) to increase the market size.
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Mind sharing the name of your game? – AngryHacker May 31 at 19:52
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Screen shots are now available in the App Store with the 1.6 OS release. – Colonel Sponsz Oct 29 at 14:19
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I have an app in the Android Market (Loquacious, twitter client). I enjoy developing for Android, the SDK makes it pretty painless.

I've made a few hundred dollars selling a $2.99 Twitter app in a market where there are a bunch that are free, take that for what you will. I'm planning on replacing my time-limited free trial with an ad-supported free trial in the near future.

I think that because paid apps weren't introduced until several months after the G1 was introduced, the early adopters got used to free apps, and they'll probably never be as likely to pay for something, but I've definitely seen an uptick in sales over the last couple of months and I haven't released an updated since April.

I love that there's no bureaucracy in the Market, so we never hear any of these app store approval horror stories. On the other hand the low barrier to entry means there's a whole lot of junk in there which brings down the overall Android experience. Also, +1 to everything hacken said about reasons the market sucks. Some of these things, I expect, will improve over time.

Long term, I'm bullish on Android. I wasn't expecting a glut of phones to start coming out until the second half of this year, and we look to be on track for that with several more HTC phones and Moto and Samsung offerings. As we start seeing a wider range of phones across all the different carriers, I think Android will start to really pick up.

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There are lot of Android Market stuff annoying developers.

  • 24h software return policy - because most phone games are meant to be played for just day of two. Most developer are suffering high return rates because of this

  • Free apps are favored over paid apps. Most users find it difficult to browse paid apps on market (this is going to be changed in v1.6)

  • Really short app descriptions without screenshots (also going to be changed in v1.6)

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