Apple Increases Integration Of App Store With iTunes

Apple has rolled out some aesthetic changes to the App Store in reaction to the service’s popularity

Apple tweaked the look and feel of its App Store over the weekend of 12 Dec, cosmetic changes that nonetheless emphasised how the company is attempting to readjust certain aspects of its online storefront in light of its explosive growth.

Logos for the App Store’s mobile applications have been enlarged, with a more prominent purchase button beneath each, and the App Store itself now features a white background. Descriptions of each app are now shorter, but placed in a more prominent position to the right of the logo.

As opposed to the older version of the App Store, which included a single screenshot (which could be changed by clicking a tiny circle above the image), the new App Store layout is more graphics-intensive, with a number of screenshots tiled beneath the top description.

In sum, the App Store has been redesigned to integrate more fully with iTunes; now, the aesthetic differences between where you buy your apps, and where you buy your music or movies, has been minimised.

The end-user tweaking to the App Store follows the launch of new features for app creators. On 8 Dec, Apple announced an RSS feed for iPhone developers, creating a new communication channel dedicated to news and announcements surrounding App Store submissions and reviews.

“You can now subscribe to a new RSS feed that will allow you to instantly receive updates to the iPhone Developer News and announcements,” read the posting on Apple’s Developer Connection site. “Get the latest information on a wide range of topics including tips on submitting apps to the App Store, current turnaround time for app review, program updates, development and testing techniques, and much more.”

A link was also provided for subscribing to the RSS feed. Also on 8 Dec, Apple announced that iTunes Connect, a tool for managing applications and accessing reports, would be unavailable from 23 Dec. to 28 Dec, with service resuming on 29 Dec.

Apple has enjoyed considerable success with the App Store, which by November had grown to more than 100,000 applications, but that growth has also come with some issues. Apple has begun weeding out developers of useless or fraudulent apps, including some 1,100 mobile applications from developer Molinker that were pulled on 7 Dec. after complaints of fake positive reviews.

Apple has pulled mobile applications in the past, notably in response to outcry over a particular program’s content. In April, for example, the company removed a “Baby Shaker” app after groups complained that shaking a virtual infant to death on an iPhone was not exactly a socially redeemable activity.

Whether Apple will follow calls by outsiders for a tighter and more structured regulatory system remains to be seen, but nonetheless the App Store’s growth is expected to accelerate throughout 2010: research firm IDC predicted in a 3 Dec. research note that the storefront will expand to around 300,000 apps by the end of 2010.

However, the note from IDC also predicted that Google Android’s apps could expand “by a factor of five or more,” raising the prospect of increased competition in the mobile-application space over the next 12 months and beyond.