
Was Apple’s just released App Store announcement — and Steve Jobs’ remark about how difficult it will be for others to catch up — conveniently timed to preempt Microsoft’s Worldwide Partner Conference where, according to our sibling site WMExperts, details of Windows Marketplace for Mobiles are emerging?
1.5 billion downloads, 100,000 developers, and 65,000 apps is a good old Jobsian gut punch to knock the wind of out any Microsoft news about WinMo 6.0 support, Windows Marketplace Business Center, and whatever else comes out from the folks up in Redmond.
It also combines in a very tidy roshambo to Verizon’s recent revelation that, according to Engadget Mobile, BlackBerry App World or Windows Marketplace won’t be built into devices on that carrier(?!)… and we won’t go much further on that bone-headed, short-sighted, anti-openness news since our cursing would get Parental Control level 17+ slapped on this post…

Keeping it short but sweet, Skype’s blog shows once again how crazy-powerful Apple’s iPhone software platform really is:
In less than two days, Skype for iPhone has been downloaded more than one million times – around six downloads every second.
While copypetitors are still announcing or coming online (almost daily, with RIM’s App World! launch on April 1st — we fool you not! — and Microsoft’s Marketplace) this showcases the high ground Apple has already seized with their “on every iPhone” ecosystem, and the uphill battle rival platforms might face.
[Via Daring Fireball]
Last night’s iPhone Live! was pretty darn good — so good, in fact, that it created a cross-border, pan-dimensional bug that kept us from recording the first 20 minutes properly. We recapped it a bit, but those who it hit it up live got a special treat. Rest assured, though, we have more than enough to talk about with the new Kindle iPhone App, what it means for Apple, Amazon, and when it might go international – so if you missed iPhone Live!, go ahead and check out this here podcast.
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So, RIM has made their big App Store — sorry — App World announcement and the big news from over on CrackBerry.com is that it will have regulated pricing tiers. What does that mean?
Apple, who is often (and often rightly) accused of being near-fascist in the control they exercise on the App Store still lets developers charge what they want for an App, be it free, $0.99, $2.99, $9,99 or whatever. RIM on the other hand, has created a menu of prices from which developers have to choose. Most surprisingly — and upsettingly it seems to the CrackBerry Nation — is that after free, the next cheapest tier is $2.99. Yup, no $0.99 apps for the BlackBerry, fart fueled or otherwise.
So here’s the question: is that a Good Thing? Will forcing developers to choose between free and $2.99 make them put more work into making better apps to warrant the higher price point? Will it clear out the shoddy, quicky, apps that glut up Apple’s App store? Or will it mean all $0.99 apps just go free and take the ad-supported route?
If Apple decided turn about was fair play and iCloned RIMs apparent ban on $0.99 apps, would that make the App Store better or worse? Would it make you happy, or just [redacted] you off?

CrackBerry.com is reporting that BlackBerry maker RIM has finally settled on a name for their version of the App Store: App World.
See, it’s not a place to buy applications, it’s a planetary system where apps spawn and live SIM lives, and… argh. Who knows?
RIM is expected to spin it ’round their sun some time tonight. Given that BlackBerry’s can only store applications on the tiny sliver of internal RAM left after the OS and filesystem have taken their share (estimated to be 50-100 megs as opposed to 7-15GB on the iPhone), it’s likely to be a small, small App World after all.
To be fair (not that we want to remove our tongue from our cheek any time soon), RIM has to respond to the App Store, just like Google did with Android Market, Nokia is doing with the Ovi Store and Microsoft is doing with SkyMarket, and Palm will do with the Pre. Apple has again changed the game, and if the other players can’t out-innovate, to keep up they must at least replicate.
So, anyone going trade in their iPhone Apps and run back to RIM come launch time?