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subject: Android Apps On Windows Mobile 6.5 [print this page]


The habit of no cost democracy would have resulted in piracy of mobile applications, or a minimum of a growing indifference towards the practice. Direct consequence for developers, the difficulty of growing significance to monetize their creations and live for their work.

This is basically the view that Joey Flores, CEO of a company application development, sets out in a scathing post entitled "I Believe Your App Should really Be No cost."

In this brief text, the developer does not hide his frustration, especially in the lack of responsiveness of platforms and inadequate laws to the digital age.

Joey Flores tells how he sees his paid applications downloaded and offered discounts, free of charge galleries of options. He also admits his helplessness phenomenon. For even when the platform removes the fly application of its catalog, it inevitably ends up on an additional gallery, and so on.

So bitter, Joey Flores said that prospects who don't would like to pay are the source of the leak forward. "Poor users who do not even know they download something they should really not, I mean, who's in a position to have an understanding of these laws so unclear and know which web site is legal could not? .. Poor, poor users of Canon Review"

But the worst for him, seems to be the arguments of the "pirates" who believe that "they don't fly, they only distribute copies." Implied, the original code is still owned by the developer can modify as they wish.

"Is not it far better to be called the author of a cool application and not to make capital but to create some notes and stay unknown, they ask. So you tell them it's up to you, but they do not agree, "wrote Joey Flores.

Note the, this text is a caricature. But beyond its bias, and some may well say its poor faith, it has the merit of raising basic questions for developers. How to live from function? Tips on how to sell applications? How you can guard them?

And how do all this if the dominant model of marketplaces is cost-free, as stated in his opinion, the majority of pirates for whom the copyright belongs to the past?

by: Damien Fisherman




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