Thursday, July 11, 2013

App Store Year Zero: How unsweetened web apps and unsigned code drove the iPhone to an SDK

History of the App Store: Year Zero

In celebration of the App Store's 5th anniversary we're taking a look back at its history, starting with the web apps and unofficial apps that preceded it!

Apple introduced the App Store on July 10, 2008. Over the course of the next week we're going to take a look back at the origins and development of App Store, and forward towards its potential future. To do that properly, however, we have to start at the beginning, with the original iPhone in 2007. And with the original iPhone, there was no App Store, and no third party apps. At least not at first...

Flashback. Before the iPhone and the App Store there were many different web-based software fiefdoms that collected a hodgepodge of different freeware, shareware, and commercial apps, attached to a variety of check-out systems, employed inconsistent and often annoying licensing schemes, and required a lot of work to install and make work. And they were relatively expensive by today's standards.

  • Bejeweled 2 for PalmOS was $19.95. (Bejeweled for iOS is $0.99.)
  • BugMe! notes for PalmOS was $39.95. (BugMe for iOS is $1.99.)
  • IM+ for PalmOS was $39.95. (IM+ is free on iOS; IM+ Pro for iOS is $9.99.)

In short, mobile apps were ripe for revolution.

No apps for that

When the iPhone was introduced at Macworld 2007, it ran just over a dozen built-in apps. That there was a lot of empty space on the Home screen - gaps in the grid where another app, and another row of apps, could fit - seemed to suggest something more was coming.

The iTunes Store app showed Apple could take their desktop-based ecommerce platform and make it mobile.

Indeed, a YouTube app was added before launch, and an iTunes app would be added in the fall. The latter was the more interesting. The iTunes Store app showed Apple could take their desktop-based ecommerce platform and make it mobile. And not only could they sell digital content to customers directly on the iPhone, they could do it in as unified, simple, and secure a way as always.

Could, however, didn't mean would.

The not-sweet enough solution

Demand for a way to create third-party apps for the iPhone was thunderous. At WWDC 2007, just before the original iPhone launched, Steve Jobs announced Apple's answer to a development platform: Web 2.0 + AJAX (now known as HTML 5). Web apps was the "sweet solution" he offered. He bullet-pointed that no SDK was required, and that web apps could look and function just like the built-in apps. They could even use URL strings to call phone numbers or launch emails.

Reaction among those expecting native apps was mainly negative. John Gruber summed it up nicely:

If all you have to offer is a shit sandwich, just say it. Don’t tell us how lucky we are and that it’s going to taste delicious.

A lot of creativity followed, and developers did indeed create games, Twitter clients, todo lists, and more.

As a solution, web apps were more sour than sweet.

But back then, the limitations of web apps, their lack of access to core functionality, their relatively poor performance compared to native apps, and the difficulties involved in charging for them proved to be insurmountable problems.

As a solution, web apps were more sour than sweet.

Apple continues to promote HTML5 as the open alternative to the App Store. Google, Facebook, and even Apple continue to make great web apps. But the writing on the wall - and the icons on the Home screen - made it obvious to everyone, including Apple, that just like first party apps before them, third party iPhone apps had to go native.

Unsigned coding

Twitterrific for jailbreak

The original iPhone was jailbroken less than a month after release, and a web based jailbreak became available in the fall of 2007. Jailbreak let unsigned code run on the iPhone, and that meant apps could be run outside of the ones Apple built in. In other words, real third party software was now possible.

Twitterrific was born, as was Lights Off and Tap Tap Revolution. They even developed their own Linux-style repositories, including Installer.app, and later, Cydia.

Rumor has it Apple executives weren't initially keen on the idea of native app, or of an App Store. But with everyone from famous Mac developers to amazing newcomers working on apps without any official support, Apple risked being left behind on the very platform they'd created. Then head of iPhone software, Scott Forstall championed the cause of native apps inside Apple, and eventually opinions changed. Apps became seen as an opportunity, and as a potentially huge competitive advantage.

SDK... ok!

On October 17, 2007 Steve Jobs wrote an open letter on Apple.com's Hot News page, announcing an iPhone SDK (software developers kit) for the spring of 2008.

Let me just say it: We want native third party applications on the iPhone, and we plan to have an SDK in developers hands in February. We are excited about creating a vibrant third party developer community around the iPhone and enabling hundreds of new applications for our users. With our revolutionary multi-touch interface, powerful hardware and advanced software architecture, we believe we have created the best mobile platform ever for developers.

At the iPhone OS 2.0 preview event in March of 2008, Apple introduced the first, official, Objective-C based iPhone SDK

True to his word, at the iPhone OS 2.0 preview event in March of 2008, Apple introduced the first, official, Objective-C based iPhone SDK. They would allow 3rd-party apps, but would be carefully curating them. Apps would have to be approved for the App Store, and aside from a very narrow ad-hoc distribution channel, no side-loading would be permitted. Likewise, no code interpreters, so no Java, Flash, or similar runtimes could be used on iOS.

Because Apple already had the vast iTunes checkout system, they had an incredible advantage when it came to rolling out a store. Just like with iTunes media, they could handle credit card and transaction processing internationally. The iTunes Store also meant they already had infrastructure to handle large-scale digital distribution. They supplied both, along with the marketing muscle of their storefront, free for free apps and for a 30% cut of paid app revenue.

While there was some controversy over the size of Apple's cut, developers like the Iconfactory's Craig Hockenberry saw the upside as well:

My first impression was that [the 30% cut] seemed a little high, but acceptable. You’re getting someone else to deal with the hassles of downloading, payment processing and, to some degree, promotion. There’s a lot of value in that. Look at what it costs to be on other plaforms, such as Xbox Live, and it seems fair.

But thinking through the situation a bit more, I realized that those things pale in comparison to the value of being associated with the Apple brand. Having their explicit stamp of approval and being included in the App Store will make any product more appealing to a customer. Buying directly from Apple means that your software won’t screw up their phone and that can be returned if it doesn’t live up to expectations. That, combined with the ease of a single click purchase, is going to drive a lot of sales. You’ll make up that 30% without even trying.

And just like that, Apple went from launching the first in a new generation of mobile, if closed computing platforms, to enabling the first in a new generation of mobile software. They went from zero... to the App Store.

To be continued...

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/AdadJ91tsXg/story01.htm

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