• On MovieTome: See the villain of IRON MAN 2!
July 16, 2009 5:54 PM PDT

Symbian's answer to App Store on the 'Horizon'

by Mats Lewan
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 4 comments

Symbian, the world's dominant but seriously challenged operating system for smart phones, on Thursday announced its take on application distribution--the Symbian Horizon application-publishing platform.

Symbian compares the program, which it has hinted at before, to a book publisher or record label. It's a one-stop-shop for developers to reach a series of phone application stores--those offered by phone carriers and manufacturers--and get revenue in return. Horizon, scheduled to launch in October, will also offer assistance with technical development issues and language translation.

Symbian, which has been nonprofit since Nokia acquired the British company last year and created the Symbian Foundation, will not charge anything for the program.

The only catch is that developers need to make really good apps--the Symbian Foundation will select which are good enough to be published.

"We're starting small and can only work with a limited number of apps initially," according to Symbian's Web page. However, in a blog post, the organization says the goal is to "develop a system that will automate this work allowing us to scale the program to include as many apps as possible."

This is an urgent issue for Symbian.

While Apple just announced 1.5 billion iPhone apps have been downloaded from its App Store and 65,000 apps are now available in the store, Symbian and its main proponent, Nokia, haven't seen anything close to that level of smartphone app awareness among its users.

Symbian's market share has fallen from an impressive 73 percent in 2006 to 50 percent in 2009, according to research firms, which still is a lot more than Apple's 10 percent or so, according to figures from market researcher Gartner.

But according to Symbian, its market share in North America, which is becoming the innovative center for smartphones, is a mere 5 percent.

Fighting competition from rivals is a tough mission. The difficulty for developers to make applications compliant with a wide variety of different Symbian handsets--at the moment about 70 models--and the lack of a well known app store, are obstacles for getting users' attention and attracting developers.

Symbian now says it is in discussions with seven stores for the Horizon program. It already has strategic relationships with Nokia's recently launched Ovi Store, Samsung Applications Store, and AT&T MEdia Mall.

It also said the process of signing Symbian applications, which developers have found cumbersome, will be simplified and in some cases eliminated.

Developers can submit an unlimited number of applications or even ideas, and will retain ownership over submitted applications.

Updated at 10:45 p.m. PDT to correct market share figures for the Symbian operating system.

Mats Lewan, IT and telecom editor at Swedish technology weekly Ny Teknik, has joined CNET News as a 2009 fellow with Stanford University's Innovation Journalism program. E-mail Mats.
Recent posts from Wireless
Big marketing budget drives Moto Droid sales
Droid does, iPhone doesn't: The porn app store
AT&T has refurbished 16GB iPhone 3Gs for $49
Trend watch 2010: Mobile movies
AT&T gets Luke Wilson to hit Verizon again
Ericsson wins Nortel's North American GSM unit
3G wireless still holds promise
Nokia trims R&D staff in Japan
Add a Comment (Log in or register) (4 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
by monkeyfun14 July 16, 2009 7:57 PM PDT
Between
Windows Mobile 7 , OSX Mobile , Android , WebOS , and Blackberry OS

What appeal does symbian have anymore?
Reply to this comment
by slickuser July 16, 2009 8:50 PM PDT
symbian who?
Reply to this comment
by lozeeb July 17, 2009 1:52 AM PDT
Symbian may not be that well known in N. America but worldwide they have as much market share as Windows Mobile 7 , OSX Mobile , Android , WebOS , and Blackberry OS combined. I personally do not like the OS but the Scandanavians know a thing or two about mobiles. With both Nokia and Erricson they have done very well. I am sure Symbian will evolve and innovate until Nokia can bring a new OS to market. Also remember that Symbian came about to stop Microsoft doing in the mobile market what they did on the desktop, distroy compertition then raise prices. I think Symbian has now done this so the Symbian members can use their own Symbian or Android (FOC) and when Microsoft comes begging asking them to develop a Windows Mobile devise they can negotiate the unit price for the OS down as they have alternatives.
Reply to this comment
by koitenshi August 12, 2009 12:09 PM PDT
There are over 1.5 million s60 applications out there... they have been downloaded over 100 billion times... Apple and the iPhone are still FAR behind Symbian...
Reply to this comment
(4 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next

S.F. hacker space: Heaven for the DIY set?

The Noisebridge hacker space offers sewing and Mandarin classes, soldering workshops, Internet-controlled front door access, and a server room with no door.
• Photos: Circuits, code, community

The browser battles go on and on

roundup From Firefox to IE and from Chrome to Opera and Safari, there's no sitting still for browser makers looking to keep their products fresh and competitive.

About Wireless

Check out the latest wireless news on CNET News, featuring the latest news on cell phones, mobile gear, VOIP, and internet access via broadband and wireless connections.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Wireless topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right