The App Accelerator in Bengaluru will
hold specialized briefing sessions with over 500 developers each week as they
build software for iPhones, iPads, Macs, Apple TVs, and Apple Watches.
Apple officially opened an App
Accelerator — essentially an incubator for developers creating apps for the
iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, and the Apple Watch — in the Indian city of
Bengaluru on Friday. The objective is simple: getting developers in a country
where 97% of
smartphones run Android to dip their toes in the Apple
waters.
Indian developers
can sign up for free at the Accelerator where experts known as Apple Technology
Evangelists will brief about 500 developers each week on developing for Apple’s
platforms. According to a press release, Apple will also work with developers
on a one-on-one basis to offer detailed app analysis and feedback to enhance
their apps on Apple’s various platforms. Apple CEO Tim Cook had first announced the
Accelerator during his visit to India in May 2016.
Phil Schiller,
Apple’s Vice President of Worldwide Marketing who is in India for the launch, told Indian
technology news blog Gadgets360 that Apple wants to “accelerate the quality and
innovation of the apps that are being created [in India]” and to “bring some of
our unique Apple expertise close to developers who are making their great
software.”
It’s easy to see why
that might be crucial for Apple. Thanks to Android’s dominance in emerging
markets like India, developers in these countries often develop their apps for
Android first, and, in some cases, Android only. More importantly, engaging
with local developers would allow Apple to understand the needs of the Indian
market and help tailor future versions of its operating systems to its needs,
said analysts who spoke to BuzzFeed News.
“India is home to
more than a million software developers, so Apple naturally wants to get as
many of them as possible hooked to the Apple ecosystem,” Neil Shah, Research
Director of Devices and Ecosystems at market analysis agency Counterpoint, told
BuzzFeed News. “Not losing this vast talent pool to other players like Google
and Facebook is essential for them.”
Shah also points out
setting up a centre like this also allows the company to win brownie points
with the Indian government, with which it has been grappling for months to
be allowed to set up Apple Stores in India. The country’s stringent laws
require certain kinds of foreign companies to source components locally before
they can set up a retail presence within India, something that Apple has been
resisting. “Setting up an App Accelerator in the country would help Apple show
its commitment to contributing to the Indian economy by generating software
jobs,” said Shah.
Apple's
collaboration partners at launch are Practo, a $600 million health-tech startup
based in Bengaluru, and game developer Reliance Games. But some iOS developers
in India told BuzzFeed News that they wish Apple had reached out to smaller
developers in the country rather than wealthy startups with dedicated Apple
development teams.
“I think companies
with small teams — between 5 and 40 people — are the ones that would really
benefit from Apple’s Accelerator,” said Shashwat Pradhan, founder of Emberify,
which makes an iOS life-logging app called Instant. “Having hands-on guidance
from Apple would be great for indie developers like us who can’t really afford
to go to WWDC (Apple’s annual conference for developers) in California every year.”
No comments:
Post a Comment