Predictions Amazon's upcoming Kindle Fire tablet will be a hit with bargain hunting consumers won't be too wide of the mark if developers get their way.
Stats released by cross-platform development specialist Appcelerator suggest enthusiasm for the device within the development community is currently ramping up.
Appcelerator's latest developer survey, conducted in cooperation with IDC suggests, 49 percent of North American studios interested in developing for Android tablets named Kindle Fire as their target device, narrowly placing it ahead of Samsung's Galaxy Tab on 48 percent.
Said figure also mean developers are doubly as interested in Kindle Fire as they are Amazon's biggest rival in the high-end eReader market Barnes & Noble's Nook Color, which garnered 24 percent of support across the region.
Second fiddle Samsung
Appcelerator noted the level of developer interest in Kindle Fire is now on a par with the enthusiasm studios showed for iPad before its release, with interest coming in at 53 percent in April 2010.
Despite Galaxy Tab falling short against its new found rival in North America, however, Appcelerator claims on a worldwide basis, Samsung's tablet is still top dog within the Android ecosystem.
Globally, 56 percent of developers intend to support Galaxy Tab, ahead of Kindle Fire on 43 percent.
Developers turned on by Kindle Fire cite the device's $199 entry price as the main reason for their interest, with the strength of the device's potential software library its second biggest strength.
Windows Phone winning
On the mobile side, Windows Phone also seems to be gaining momentum, with 38 percent claiming they're now 'very interested' in supporting Microsoft's platform.
The main reason appears to be the launch of Nokia's Lumia 800, with the Finnish firm's partnership with Microsoft acting as a trigger.
While Windows Phone is winning the industry over, however, RIM is losing ground.
Interest in supporting BlackBerry phones fell 7 percentage points quarter-on-quarter, coming in at 21 percent. PlayBook, too, is suffering, down 6 percentage points to 13 percent.
Naturally, Apple's iOS still reigns supreme overall, with 91 percent of developers citing interest in iPhone and 88 percent plumping for iPad.
[source: Appcelerator]
Data & Research
When Matt was 7 years old he didn't write to Santa like the other little boys and girls. He wrote to Mario. When the rotund plumber replied, Matt's dedication to a life of gaming was established. Like an otaku David Carradine, he wandered the planet until becoming a writer at Pocket Gamer.
Related Articles
News
Mar 22nd, 2012
Appcelerator survey says developers are looking to Google not Facebook for social differentiation
Top Stories
Feature
May 17th, 2024
New release roundup: The best new mobile games from a battle royale to a console classic remake
Feature
May 16th, 2024
Behind the scenes: How adding sandwich offers to an idle merge game boosted three metrics at once
Events
Valencia Indie Summit 2024 | Europe | May 16th |
Digital Dragons | Europe | May 19th |
GamesBeat Summit 2024 | North America | May 20th |
Mobidictum Meetup Tallinn May 2024 | Europe | May 21st |
Nordic Game Spring 2024 | Nordic | May 21st |
Impact 2024 - Indie Games | May 23rd | |
MomoCon 2024 | North America | May 24th |
Morocco Gaming Expo | Africa | May 24th |
Popular Stories
Feature
May 14th, 2024
53 top mobile games in soft launch: Squad Busters, Battle Guys: Royale, Plants vs. Zombies 3, LEGO Hill Climb Adventures, and more
Feature
May 13th, 2024
Hot Five: Dubai's new Gaming Visa, April's mobile game charts, and Xbox studio closures
Feature
May 14th, 2024