Sprint to open app store
IDG News Service - Sprint Nextel next year will introduce a new, more open application store on its feature phones, turning to a third party to manage it with the goal of getting new offerings out to consumers in an average of one week.
The third-largest U.S. operator also will remove its own built-in set of application offerings, or "deck," from future BlackBerry handsets and from Windows phones from Windows Mobile 6.5 onward, said JP Brocket, general manager of wireless consumer applications, at the Sprint Open Developer Conference in Santa Clara, Calif. Sprint's Android and Palm WebOS phones already ship without a Sprint application deck, relying on the Android Marketplace and Palm's own stores.
Carriers have come under fire from mobile application developers for taking too long to approve new applications and placing too many restrictions on them, and they have been moving toward outside app stores since the successful launch of Apple's iPhone App Store. Sprint wants to get out of devoting its resources to lengthy evaluations of software for its own deck and believes a third-party specialist would be better equipped to handle the path from development to sale, Brocket said.
"It's kind of a big new day for us to relinquish that management," Brocket said. "But ultimately, if you make good content and customers want it, you should have the right to get it out there and succeed. ... I don't need 10 people behind a desk, behind a wall, looking at every piece of content and making the call whether it's good or bad. Customers will make that choice."
Sprint plans to start up the new store early in the first quarter of next year. As long as a potential application works and meets basic requirements such as a core set of controls and support mechanisms, it should be approved for the new store, he said.
The main aim of the new store is to get more applications out to consumers, Brocket said. In addition to speeding up the approval process, Sprint will bring its revenue-sharing plans with developers in line with the industry norm. Though the market will be more open, Sprint will offer application providers marketing opportunities to make themselves stand out among others, he said.
In addition to the new, outsourced app store, Sprint is working with GetJar to offer that company's store for free mobile apps to most of its subscribers, Brocket said. The carrier will also allow subscribers to download other app stores and over time try to give consumers easy access on their phones to other popular, well-managed stores, he said.
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
Sprint Nextel
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