Big Money in Small Packages
Developers looking to cash in on the next big thing may want to look to the smartphone platform. According to Computerworld, in the next few years the market for applications on iPhones, BlackBerries and the like is set to skyrocket.
A quick look at the
keywords iPhone or Blackberry on Dice shows you companies developing smartphone apps are popping up
all over, and they're offering a goodly number of positions for developers with
the right skills.
So what exactly are the "right skills?" Can you leverage your current experience? If you have a good OOP foundation, you can probably spool up pretty quickly.
Both Android and BlackBerry development can
be done in Java, so there's no huge learning curve for Java engineers. Palm development is done within the Mojo
framework running on top of webOS, so
you can leverage your Web development skills to begin creating Palm
applications fairly quickly. iPhone
development involves using Objective-C, which is a sort of Smalltalk/C
mashup. Again, if you're a salty old OOP dog fluent in any of the C
derivatives, you could probably make the transition.
Of course, anytime you hear "gold mine," you have be somewhat skeptical. But in this case, it doesn't seem like pure hyperbole. After all, Apple's app store spurred 1.5 billion downloads in its first year. Although the majority were of free material, about 18 percent weren't, and when we're talking numbers that big, even a small portion adds up to big bucks. How big? Boston research company Yankee Group Research predicts U.S. revenue from smartphone applications will be $4.2 billion by 2013.
Of course, few
people are going to hit the market with the kind of app that's going to let
them jump from their cube to a life of programming from the beach. But if you're
a developer looking for a new direction, now may be the time to try your hand
at smartphone development.
-- Chad Broadus
Posted at 08:06AM Oct 19, 2009 in Blog | Comments[1]


Posted by Paul Kreitl on October 19, 2009 at 02:23 PM EDT #