Is it time to subscribe to a printer service from HP?

Ever since my dad brought home an...

What’s the best way of buying a phone today?

How did you buy your latest phone?...

MWC: What device highlights did you miss?

So, early last week I predicted that...

Starmap for iPhone makes $336k in 3.5 months

Ahhhh fantastic. This is what mobile innovation is all about. It’s why I’ve been so delighted with the launch of the iPhone platform.

Frederic Descamps has a day job working for for neutron science/technology specialist ILL. And he’s got a big interest in stars.

So when the iPhone development kit was released, he set about creating a starmap map for the device.

Woosh. Within a week he had a working prototype. Within 4 months his application was complete and uploaded to the iTunes store. It uses the device GPS to display a starmap for your location.

And in 3.5 months (that’s my rough calculation – the app release date was 28th June) he’s knocked back 28,000 downloads! Now, assuming each download was a purchase at $11.99 what was the total revenue? A smidgen under $336,000.

Now Apple will take a percentage of course. But still, that’s a rather good return for Frederic.

If you extrapolate that out across the year — in fact, let’s do that.

So 28,000 over 3.5 months. Roughly 8,000 sales per month. Now let’s adjust that down to, say, 4,500 to allow for ups and downs. Multiply that by $12.

That’s $54k. A month. Or $648k a year gross revenue.

For everyone who sat staring at the iPhone launch with their arms folded, saying all manner of negative things — I say this: Eat dirt.

Apple — and this is one of the reasons we voted the iPhone our Best Handset and Steve Jobs as our top geezer in the awards — have got it right. Apple have given independent developers the tools and the platform to make software. Apple have sorted out the whole end-to-end process to make it work properly. So that people like Frederic can conceive an idea, run with it, get it out to the masses and be appropriately rewarded.

Fat lot of good Nokia, Motorola, Sony Ericsson and the others have done for the industry recently. I’ve been banging on about this sort of open (ish) innovation for ages. I was delighted when it looked like Apple were going to encourage it — and I’m even happier to hear about the successes occuring as a result.

I recognise the issues with Apple. The apparent app censorship. The lack of total access to the device and so on. Still. It’s embryonic. But we’re getting there. Frederic is doing very well.

And you can too. That’s the brilliance of this new renaissance in mobile development and application innovation. Got an idea? Get it live. Done.

Let’s here from Frederic himself:

“Many planetarium applications exist, but who wants to carry a laptop into the garden to observe the stars?” said Descamps of his inspiration to develop the Starmap. “I wanted a simple map on my iPhone(TM), to use by simply sliding my finger tip on the screen.

“My 4-year-old son and I love this application; a great bonding moment,” commented one user on the App-Store.

Starmap Pro is coming your way soon too at $20.

You can get Starmap in the UK for £6.99.

iTunes App Store link
Starmap

Congratulations and every success Frederic!

5 COMMENTS

  1. Star Walk! Star Walk! I'm still sooooooooooooooo excited! Star Walk is my best puurchase of the month! Forget about Star Map, it's in the past. The future is with Star Walk! Star Walk! 🙂

  2. Star Walk! Star Walk! I'm still sooooooooooooooo excited! Star Walk is my best puurchase of the month! Forget about Star Map, it's in the past. The future is with Star Walk! Star Walk! 🙂

  3. Star Walk! Star Walk! I'm still sooooooooooooooo excited! Star Walk is my best puurchase of the month! Forget about Star Map, it's in the past. The future is with Star Walk! Star Walk! 🙂

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Recently Published

Is it time to subscribe to a printer service from HP?

Ever since my dad brought home an HP LaserJet printer (version 3, if memory serves), I have been printing with an HP. Over the...

What’s the best way of buying a phone today?

How did you buy your latest phone? I'm asking because I'm thinking about what I should be doing. When I was living in Oman, I...

MWC: What device highlights did you miss?

So, early last week I predicted that next to nothing from Mobile World Congress would break through into the mainstream media. I was right,...

How Wireless Will Pave the Path to Neobank Profitability

I'm delighted to bring you an opinion piece from Rafa Plantier at Gigs.com. I think it's particularly relevant given the recent eSIM news from...

An end of an era: Vodafone UK turns off 3G services

I thought it was worthwhile highlighting this one from the Vodafone UK team. For so long - for what feels like years, seeing the...

Mobile World Congress: Did the mainstream media notice?

I resolved this year to make sure I wrote something - anything - about Mobile World Congress, the huge mobile industry trade show taking...