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App Store 'full of zombies' as it celebrates fifth birthday

2013-07-10 05:44:24

By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News

While some apps generate millions for developers, most are rarely downloaded

Continue reading the main story

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Apple's App Store is populated by many "zombie" programs which get next-to-no

downloads, new research suggests.

Figures seen by the BBC from tracking service Adeven indicate over two-thirds

of apps in the store are barely ever installed by consumers.

However Apple has said that 90% of all apps in the marketplace - which is

marking its five-year anniversary - are downloaded at least once a month.

Apple boss Tim Cook said the store had "fundamentally changed the world".

Speaking to app developers at the firm's recent developer's conference, the

chief executive said: "Customers love the buying experience and they love your

incredible apps. And they have now downloaded 50 billion apps.

"That's a lot of zeros and a truly staggering number."

'Very small'

But according to Adeven the size of the US firm's app store, which has about

900,000 products, has left many developers struggling to get noticed.

"579,001 apps out of a total of 888,856 apps in our database are zombies," the

analytics firm said.

It defines zombies as apps which never appear in Apple's master-list of the

most downloaded apps worldwide, a chart which runs to over 300,000 places.

Continue reading the main story

Top apps of all time

The App Store's most popular paid-for iPhone apps ever are:

Angry Birds

Fruit Ninja

Doodle Jump

Cut the Rope

Angry Birds Seasons

WhatsApp Messenger

Camera+

Words with Friends

Tiny Wings

Angry Birds Space

The most popular free iPhone apps are:

Facebook

Pandora Radio

Instagram

YouTube

Skype

Words With Friends Free

The Weather Channel

Twitter

Temple Run

Google Search

Source: Apple

"We can't say exactly how many downloads they have - Apple doesn't reveal this

- but it is very small."

Adeven's research follows on from another survey conducted by Pew Research

Center's Internet & American Life Project.

It indicated that some 68% of smartphone owners used five or fewer apps on a

weekly basis, with many of their other "impulse" buys losing their appeal

almost instantly.

App developer Malcolm Barclay told the BBC that the amount of "zombie" apps was

not a surprise - but argued that there was "safety in numbers".

"There's a lot of apps in the store that are not downloaded for good reason,

they're awful.

"It's about making yourself attractive. If you have an attractive application

that does what it sets out to do, Apple will help it get noticed."

Influence

Zombies aside, the launch of the App Store in 2008 is widely regarded as a

game-changing moment for how we consume technology.

It has inspired other companies to follow suit, with Google, Microsoft and

Blackberry among those to have launched their own stores.

Apple says it has paid out $10bn ( 7bn) to app developers - three times more,

it boasts, than all the other app stores combined.

The "app economy", as it has become known, has also been responsible for

disrupting the video games industry.

Companies such as EA have shifted to offering downloads of many of their titles

for free, and make money through in-app sales of power-ups and other add-ons.

Those that do charge an upfront fee are still relatively cheap.

In particular, the popularity of Rovio's Angry Birds - which has made millions

through franchising and merchandise sales - has made some games publishers

consider if the established model of charging 30 or more for console and PC

titles could become a thing of the past.

Even so, the development has not been without controversy.

Apple, which takes a 30% cut of all sales through its online marketplace, was

recently forced to offer refunds to parents who had found themselves facing

unexpected bills as a result of in-app purchases by their children.