{"id":442,"date":"2015-01-29T19:34:33","date_gmt":"2015-01-29T07:34:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/geektactics.geektamin.com\/?p=442"},"modified":"2024-06-14T09:50:15","modified_gmt":"2024-06-13T21:50:15","slug":"apple-fanatics-satisfy-ravenous-app-etites","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/geektactics.co.nz\/blog\/apple-fanatics-satisfy-ravenous-app-etites\/","title":{"rendered":"Apple Fanatics Satisfy Ravenous App-etites"},"content":{"rendered":"
Apple, alongside thousands of mobile software developers have been met with a particularly ravenous crowd. Enthusiastic users of iPhones, iPads and iPod touches spent a whopping nearly $500 million USD on applications and in-app services in the first week of the year. Not a bad start to 2015 for mobile software developers!\u00a0This is the highest weekly volume recorded by Apple.<\/p>\n
If sales continue at this pace, Apple and app developers could split about $25 billion in revenue. That’s about 10,000,000,000 downloads of Where’s my Water! Of course, most of the money goes towards the developers. Apple’s revenue sharing formula dictates that a fair 70% of\u00a0app sales be paid out to developers.<\/p>\n
You may be wondering, will app sales continue to follow this trend, or is this an outlier, perhaps of bored holidayers. Well, it’s unlikely this trend will stop any time soon! Firstly because the world is becoming more mobile<\/a>. And secondly because this trend has been long in the making for Apple. In 2014 Apple’s app billings increased by 50%. This increase gave app developers $10 billion.<\/p>\n