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June 7, 2016
The Evolution of Cloud Computing

May 31, 2016
Voice-Based Computing with Digital Assistants

May 24, 2016
Turning Makers into Manufacturers

May 20, 2016
Google Brings Android Apps to Chrome

May 17, 2016
Virtual Reality Brings New Life…to Desktops?

May 10, 2016
The Biggest Question for IoT…Who Pays?

May 3, 2016
Learning About Deep Learning

April 26, 2016
The End of Hardware?

April 19, 2016
Enterprise IoT Drives Indirect Savings

April 12, 2016
TidBits About Bots

April 5, 2016
VR in the Cloud

March 29, 2016
IOT Will Drive Tech Outside of IT

March 22, 2016
Apple Moves to Middle Age

March 15, 2016
The Invisible Platform

March 8, 2016
Bringing Makers to Business

March 1, 2016
IOT Coming Into Focus

February 23, 2016
The Devices Formerly Known as Smartphones

February 16, 2016
Can Web Music Survive?

February 9, 2016
The Growing Choices in Wireless Connectivity

February 2, 2016
What if Twitter Died?

January 26, 2016
Smart Home Safety Evolution: Physical to Digital

January 19, 2016
The Promise and Confusion of USB Type-C

January 12, 2016
The Hottest Computing Device? Cars

January 5, 2016
Top Tech Predictions for 2016, Part 2

December 30, 2015
Top Tech Predictions for 2016, Part 1

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TECHnalysis Research Blog

June 14, 2016
Apple Drives Apps into Services

By Bob O'Donnell

The keynote event at the annual Apple Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) is usually about apps. This year, however, things were a bit different.

Oh sure, Apple touted 2 million apps in the iOS app store, over 6,000 available for tvOS, and highlighted the work of a few small developers, but the key takeaway from this year’s event was all about services: Siri, Messages, Maps, and Music.

For those who closely watch Apple, this probably isn’t too surprising as the company has been receiving pressure to focus more on services in light of its hardware declines, and it has been more vocal about its efforts to expand services.

What became very interesting to me as I watched the keynote and then thought about all the new capabilities the company introduced, however, is that, in many ways, Apple is subsuming the capabilities of standalone apps into its services.

The most compelling demos at the event all involved integrating capabilities that used to require launching a separate app directly into an expanded Apple service. Want to call an Uber or a Lyft and see where it is? You can do so via Messages and Maps. Want to view rich web site links and even make purchase transactions or send money via Square or other online payment methods? All that can happen without leaving Messages as well.

This decreased focus on individual apps and increase focus on services isn’t necessarily a bad thing. In fact, it’s arguably the general direction that software development—particularly on mobile devices—is going. In China, for example, you can get access to these kinds of services and much more in WeChat. These developments do, however, imply a fairly major shift in the role that developers can and will have with Apple and end users. They also imply a major rethink in terms of what an “app” actually is.

In essence, the new app model in this services-focused approach is a “service extension,” which strikes me as being much more similar to the “skills” you can add to an Amazon Echo than a traditional app.

The problem is that this model almost completely cuts out the importance, and end user awareness, that app developers have. Does anyone think of the “skills” they add to an Echo in the same way they do an app? Oh yeah, and what about monetization for that service extension developer?

Given the overall app fatigue that many people face, as well as the flattening hardware sales, it’s getting tough enough for people to survive as app developers. Add in this additional layer of abstraction and the distance between developers and end users will likely increase at about the same rate that dollars from them decrease—pretty fast.

For Apple, the situation is a challenging one. On the one hand, it’s expected that they will continue to drive forward the overall experience of using their devices. They need to provide capabilities that their end users want, and it’s becoming increasingly clear that a more seamless, less app-focused approach is the way to go. On the other hand, by subsuming not only the functionality of individual apps, but the manner in which developers can extend the experience of using their devices, they’ve created a bigger business challenge for many developers.

To Apple’s credit, the company opened up Siri, Messages and Maps to outside developers for the first time with the announcements at this year’s WWDC. Given the company’s notoriously tight grip on core system elements and their desire to control the entire Apple device experience, this is a significant development. But given the overall market trends towards services, you could make the argument that they essentially had to in order to give their developers a fighting chance.

The ongoing shift from software to services is something that extends well beyond Apple, of course. Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Facebook all face different types of challenges as we move into a world where we are much less dependent on individual devices and specific OS platforms. But as the company who arguably made “apps” what they are, Apple and its developers will likely face some of the most challenging transitions.

Some of these services-focused changes may take several years to play out, but they’re clearly leading the tech industry down some new paths.

Here's a link to the original column: https://techpinions.com/apple-drives-apps-into-services/46293

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