Developers' interest in WP declines for the first time, and will “figh” Win10 full platform

  

Computer store news: Research agency VisionMobile announced their developer survey report today, which usually publishes two developer survey reports a year. The survey covered more than 13,000 mobile developers, and the results showed that developers' interest in the Windows Phone platform declined for the first time, which is of course directly related to Microsoft's strategy for transitioning to the Windows 10 Mobile platform.


The good news is that 44% of mobile developers are interested in Windows 10, a big improvement from 28% of Win8 a few years ago. However, this is not guaranteed to be successful, because in 2012, 57% of developers are interested in Windows Phone.

VisionMobile expects Windows Phone's overall market share to continue to decline, while Windows Phone developers (8% of total) may migrate to other platforms, such as using the Xamarin tool in VS 2015 to migrate C# code. Go to iOS and Android platforms.

For Windows Phone, there is some indirect good news, that is, the number of developers planning to develop mobile browsers has increased by 26%, as more and more users are reluctant to download web-based applications. This cross-platform solution may benefit Windows Phone when Windows Phone devices run powerful browsers like Edge.

Some of the other key facts of this survey report are as follows (not necessarily related to Windows Phone):

  • The mobile development industry is still a male-dominated field. Only 6% of respondents said they are women, and North American data is relatively better (10%)
  • This is a fascinating area. 89% of developers work across multiple industries, and they often use free time to develop applications.
  • This is a field of income dilemma. More than half of mobile developers (51%) and 59% of IoT developers are unable to earn sustained revenue (monthly revenues below $500)
  • Cloud platforms still have a glimmer of hope. Cloud platform developers may be doing the best, with 67% of them having good income (monthly income above $500)
  • Don't expect cloud services to go public. Undoubtedly, the most popular cloud development platform is private (including 44% of developers), more than Amazon Web Services (16%) and Microsoft Azure (13%)
  • Windows Phone is coming from the public Disappeared in sight. In the past six months, developers' interest in the Microsoft mobile platform is slowly declining (from 30% to 27%), while Android is still the most popular mobile platform for developers (71%), the popularity of iOS Still positive.
  • This is a multilingual country with regional differences. In North America, HTML5 is a widely used language (47%), while developers in Asia tend to have mature languages ​​such as Java and C.
  • This is a country full of adventurous explorers. More than a quarter of developers (26%) don't even know the ultimate affiliation of their app consumer groups
  • Developer teams are easily expanding with the birth of new languages. Swift language developers are growing, despite the fact that 16% of Swift developers are not getting any revenue
  • This is a country that is always positive and optimistic. 2% of desktop developers are still sticking to Google’s Chrome system, and they’re confident in the number of users on the platform


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