News » National
CHENNAI, July 25, 2011
Chrome Store points to web evolution
Ajai Sreevatsan
A screenshot of the Chrome Web Store.
A screenshot of the Chrome Web Store.

Google taps a mechanism that worked well for mobile phones

Where would we be without a web browser? Much of the World Wide Web
would have been inaccessible, social networking would have been
nothing more than a buzzword, and search engines would probably have
been individual software applications.

Despite being so integral to the Internet experience, the basic
architecture of the web browser has not changed much since the advent
of Mosaic, which was the first widely used web browser. But things are
set to change.

The Chrome Web Store, launched a few months ago, offers some pointers.
It features more than 3,760 apps and has already recorded more than 16
million app installs. The phenomenally successful app environment is
now slowly making its way to the personal computer.

The implications are significant, and could define the way the
Internet evolves. Google has realised that web users are looking for a
richer experience, and its strategy is to monetise web development by
adopting the marketplace mechanism which has worked so well for mobile
phones.

While there are around 100 million mobile Internet users, there are
over two billion people who use a web browser. If the web is treated
as a platform, the user size of Android or iOS would look tiny in
comparison. Google is betting on the vast advertising potential,
deeply integrated in-browser experience that will allow syncing of
applications with mobile devices and a faster adoption of cloud-based
platforms such as the Chrome OS.

A Google spokesperson said that as the web becomes ever more powerful,
users will increasingly adopt web-based applications — and the better
the web experience, the more people will use the web.

Mozilla has responded by launching its own open web ecosystem
[https://apps.mozillalabs.com/appdir/]. A major difference is that
unlike the Chrome Web Store, Mozilla's apps can be used in any web
browser with the help of a plug-in.

The subtext to this whole new vision of software and application
development is the remarkable democratisation of the space. Until
recently, digital distribution was platform-centric, and the developer
got only 30-50 per cent of the money from each transaction.

Apple unleashed the app revolution by reversing the revenue share,
keeping 30 per cent and giving the developer 70 per cent. The $1.99
games and productivity apps started showing up, thanks to developers
getting a bigger cut. Facebook Credits follows a similar approach.

The Chrome Web Store has taken this to the next level, giving
developers 95 per cent of the revenue. By offering a higher revenue
share, Google hopes to get iPhone, iPad and game developers to move
over to Chrome Web Store (and Android phones as well). The plan is to
make money through advertising and Ad Sense. Thus, the intense
competition in the mobile phone space is changing the web. And it is
‘win-win' for both developers and users.

Source: http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article2290878.ece
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