Skip to main content

Apple App Store hits 1.5 Billion Downloads

Apple App Store hits 1.5 Billion Downloads

Some folks might still be thinking that the idea of mobile applications is just a flash in the pan, but there’s a reason Research in Motion, Microsoft, Nokia, Sony Ericsson, and other industry players are all hustling to get their own application stores up and running: in the year since Apple introduced its App Store for the iPhone and iPod touch, users have downloaded more than 1.5 billion applications. Like the iTunes Store before it, Apple looks to be setting the bar for the mobile applications business, with over 100,000 developers signed up for its program and over 65,000 applications available for its mobile platforms.

“The App Store is like nothing the industry has ever seen before in both scale and quality,” said Apple CEO Steve Jobs, in a statement. “With 1.5 billion apps downloaded, it is going to be very hard for others to catch up.”

Of course, the App Store is not without issues, both in terms of application quality (there are a few stinkers in the bunch) and Apple’s still-mysterious process for approving applications for sale or distribution via the App Store. Some applications have been rejected ostensibly for duplicating functionality Apple provides with its own core applications, while others have been rejected out of hand (such as the $999 “I am Rich”), for inappropriate content, or merely for accessing Internet-based content Apple deems inappropriate, even if that content is readily accessible to Apple’s own built-in Safari Web browser.

Editors' Recommendations

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Apple joins Google in allowing alternative app store payment systems in South Korea
App store icon showing three notifications.

As a response to a South Korean law passed last year, Apple will now allow third-party developers to offer their own alternate payment services for purchases made through the App Store. The move comes after Google announced plans to do the same in late 2021.

Finally, coming into compliance with the South Korean Telecommunications Business Act, the company's submitted plans that would allow third-party developers to support alternate payment systems. While Apple will still take service fees, it'll be less than the 30% currently charges as the company will no longer need to process payments.

Read more
Apple reveals how much it paid to App Store developers in 2021
App store icon showing three notifications.

Apple paid out a total of $60 billion dollars to App Store developers in 2021, data released by the tech giant this week revealed.

The company said that since the App Store’s launch in 2008, $260 billion has been paid to App Store developers globally, up from $200 billion a year earlier.

Read more
U.K. agency says Apple and Google are stifling user choice in their app stores
App store icon showing three notifications.

Apple and Google's mobile platforms have faced a maelstrom of criticism regarding their respective app store and operating system rules, and the U.K.'s Competition and Market Authority (CMA) is adding to that cacophony of voices. After the result of a probe this year, the CMA concluded that the mobile duopoly is leading to "less competition and meaningful choice" for customers.

The CMA highlighted a few incidents of concern. Apple famously not allowing Microsoft's xCloud game streaming app into the App Store merited a mention, as did Google's deals with smartphone makers to include Chrome and other Google apps in exchange for access to the Google Play Store and Google Play Services.

Read more