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Weather HD. Now Available for the Mac.

May 19th, 2011

Weather HD, the iPhone and iPad’s top selling weather application is now available for the Mac, and brings the stunning beauty and design of Weather HD tailored and specifically designed for Mac OS X.

With forecasts all around the world and stunning high definition animations, Weather HD brings you the weather forecast in a stunningly gorgeous way. And with weather maps, severe alerts and notifications, it makes a perfect balance of features you’d need for knowing the weather on your Mac.

App Squatting & Misuse of “Weather HD” Name in the Mac App Store

January 6th, 2011

Today was the launch of the Mac App Store, and also today, one developer falsely, and pretentiously, started selling an application in the Mac App Store under the name Weather HD; the same name of our top-selling iPhone & iPad weather application. We want to make it clear that this “Weather HD” currently in sale in the Mac App Store is not ours.

Given how successful Weather HD has been on the iPhone and iPad, and having being highlighted by Apple as the top selling weather application in 2010, Presselite, the company behind the fake application, must have thought it would be a nice pay day to steal the Weather HD name. They already have the same application for the iPhone as “Weather Live” and for the iPad as “Weather for iPad”, but when it came the Mac’s turn, they managed to steal off the “Weather HD” name.

And it played well for them. In less than 6 hours, the application shot to the Top 10 list of the Mac App Store. Not because it was any good, but because our own Weather HD has a large user base that was interested in trying it out on the Mac. However, their application was, beyond the name, all shit inside, which is why it has garnered negative reviews across the board.

Sadly, this reflects negatively on us, and on the Weather HD name. And is why we want to separate ourselves from this farce of an act from Presselite. Almost everyone on Twitter, and in virtually all the reviews on the Mac App Store, there is nothing but complaints on how bad the application is. Unfortunately, many thought it was ours. It’s not.

App Name Squatting has been an issue in the iOS App Store, and we apparently took the first bite of the issue on the Mac App Store, as some developers try to find the shortest paths to profit without regard to ethical, or even legal considerations. Digging around, we found that Presselite had already done something like this before, by creating an app that had almost the same name and icon of the London Tube Deluxe app. And according to London Tube Deluxe’s developer Malcolm Barclay, he found they have a history of leaving fake reviews, making false originality claims, and even fictitious legal claims. They make cute claims too, like right now in the description of their iPhone version, they say it was “selected by Apple to be featured in its iTunes Rewind 2010 List.” It wasn’t.

It’s pitiful that some developers resort to such tactics.

Weather HD has had a great 2010. It was the top selling iPad weather application, and was selected several times by Apple in their Staff’s Favorite and What’s Hot lists. It was loved by users across the board, and critically as well, from The Guardian, The New York Times and The Huffington Post to Mashable, Gizmodo, TUAW, Macworld, and many others.

But for our loyal users, don’t fret. We have Weather HD coming soon for the Mac, and here is a hint: it is stunning. It will be released soon after we clear away the name issue with Apple.

Weather HD Now Available for the iPhone & iPod Touch

September 29th, 2010

Today we have released the 1.5 update of Weather HD, which now makes Weather HD a Universal application, supporting not only the iPad but also the iPhone and iPod Touch.

Released with the launch of the iPad in April, Weather HD has from day one become the number one top-selling weather application for the iPad, and today, six months later, it still holds this spot. It was, and remains, among people’s top recommendations amongst what first apps to buy for their new iPads, or so says thousands of tweets.

Weather HD was not only liked by users, but was also received extremely well by critics. The New York Times wrote that “Weather HD elevates the user, placing her at cloud level for a hushed real-time weather tableau that puts the web’s goofy sunshine-rain-cloud icons to shame;” The Huffington Post selected it as one of the 15 Best iPad Apps Every User Should Try; only to name a few.

Weather HD for the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad is $0.99, and is available on the app store here.

Revealed: Using Weather HD to Look Inside the iPad App Store’s Sales, and Why Apple May Have Just Created a New Billion Dollar Industry

April 20th, 2010

Much has been said and written about the magic of the iPad, how it would be the savior of industries, and how it would transform and reshape the world.

Having an application, Weather HD (watch trailer), in the Top 10 top-paid list, we wanted to share our early look into how the numbers really are, and what the iPad App Store is shaping to become. We will use our own sales numbers to estimate how everyone else is faring out, and how much the iPad App Store is worth.

If you’d rather not go through the details, you can jump right into the summary.

Introduction

We had Weather HD approved for sale on March 30. Some hour of the day on March 31, Apple made it possible for anyone to download iPad applications, even though the iPad was still not available for sale.

On April 1st, Weather HD became the number four top-selling iPad application, only after Apple’s own Pages, Numbers and Keynote, and on April 2nd, it continued to be the top-selling 3rd party iPad application. In those two days, we sold a little under 2,000 copies of Weather HD, at $0.99 a pop. Not too bad, considering the iPad wasn’t even out yet.

Sales of Weather HD stretched further with the release of the iPad, making about 3,500 units on the launch day. Our rank then relaxed for a few days, falling to the 20s, but then we raced back up till as high as the #3 spot.

This high-start, dive, and then jump, while surely affected our sales, gave us the ability to see how sales were at various spots in the App Store’s charts, and with a bit of maths, and by correlating Weather HD’s sales and ranks, to the ranks of other applications, and mixing in the numbers from Apple’s Top Grossing list, we were able to have a good estimate on basically how much money is flowing in the App Store!

Sales and Ranks

Weather HD Sales DataWe will start by using our own sales and ranks data for Weather HD to draw the bigger picture. While we were the fourth (and a couple of hours the fifth) on the launch day, getting about 3500 downloads, ten days later when we became the third, we saw a little over 2,250 downloads. We attribute this variance to a launch fever, and we will thus not include in our analysis the first four days.

Shown to the right is our sales data for the second week after the iPad release. We will be using 10 data points from our sales. We found that we are lacking data points in the Top 100 that ranked lower than 30, and that ranked higher than 30 in the Top Grossing. To compensate for those points, we used points from each of the graphs to find points in the other. For example, we know how the graph looks like in the Top 30 Paid applications, so we can use this data to find the revenue of some of them, and then use this revenue along with their Top Grossing rank as new data points in the Top Grossing graph. For example, take April 15th:

It’s important to note that these numbers have been reached through first, there being 500,000 iPads in the market, and second, as we said earlier, that the launch might have had a positive uptick to the sales numbers of iPad applications. We tried to limit the latter by not including the first post-launch four days in the analysis. Curve fitting was used, and the error is about 10-15%.

The following is the estimated sales of the Top 100 Paid.

Here is the full list of estimated sales for the Top 100 Paid. These numbers only represent the App Store as it is right now, and will obviously change as the App Store grows. The error is about 10-15%.

Current Market Size

Based on the data we have calculated, we estimate the Top 100 Paid applications made on April 15, based on the day’s specific Top List, $304,058 in the United States alone, and of these, the Top 10 Paid applications represented 32% of the total sales of the 100.

The Top 100 were calculated by curve fitting, and by extending the graph, we estimate the Top 1,000 applications to have made $372,649 on April 15, thus the latter 900 applications above the Top 100 list are making about 23% of the total sales. The number of applications for the iPad is growing, but given the rate of sales in the 101-1000 ranks compared to the Top 100, we expect the later spots to be even lower and thus neglect them in our analysis.

Potential Market Size

At $372,649 per day, this maps to a market that is worth about $136 million per year, and that’s not accounting for growth in iPad sales. Furthermore, the above numbers are for US sales only, and if the iPad App Store were to be like the iPhone’s, then 40-60% of the sales are occurring internationally, so on average that figure could be become more than $272 million per year with the international launch.

The iPhone App Store saw a tremendous growth from mid-2008 to today. By September 2008, 100 million applications had been downloaded, and then 2 billion by September of the next year, and by April 8 of 2010, downloads shot past the 4 billion mark according to Apple. If the iPad were to enjoy a similarly lucrative growth, it’s fair to assume that within two years, hitting the 1 billion dollar mark, per year, will not only be plausible, but easily surpassable.

Corollary: Let’s Hope iPad App Prices Won’t Kill Us All

In an editorial at Engadget, Paul Miller suggested that the iPad’s application prices are too high, and “will kill us all”. While it’s undeniable that the prices are higher, the unit sales pushed daily are still far from the iPhone’s, and so for developers to be able to recoup their costs, higher prices seem only logical. Hopefully, as the iPad sales rise, hesitant developers will feel more inclined to lower their prices to be at a better position to compete.

Summary

Based on the sales and ranks of our very own Weather HD, we estimate that the Top 1,000 iPad paid applications are making about $372,000 per day, which sums up to about $136 million per year. This figure is based on there being only 500,000 iPads in the market, and is accounting only for the application sales in the United States. If the iPad App Store were to be like the iPhone’s, then 40-60% of the sales would occur internationally, so on average that figure would rise to become $272 million per year.

We believe this to be a conservative estimate. If the iPad were to enjoy a lucrative growth as the iPhone’s, which rose from 100 million downloaded applications in the first 2 months to 4 billion 19 months after, we can easily see the iPad’s App Store becoming a $1 billion per year market in 2 years.

This is quite remarkable. While Apple has re-invented how music is sold and played, and then went again to re-invent the mobile industry, the iPad is an entirely new market. Two weeks ago Apple did not just introduce a new type of computer, they put the seeds of a new market that is bound to make many developers and publishers… happier.

Closing Remarks

Special thanks got to Applyzer, the iPhone and iPad analytics company, for providing us with the Top 100 Paid and Grossing lists of the iPad App Store for the past two weeks.

Weather HD: Coming for the iPad

April 1st, 2010

With Apple not including a Weather application on the iPad, vimov’s Weather HD comes to the rescue, providing the most beautiful weather application experience ever made for a mobile device. It uses not complex numbers or graphs to describe the weather, but stunning high definition videos that easily and beautifully describe the weather condition.

Weather HD will be available on sale with the iPad launch on April 3rd, for $0.99.

Hexen II Descends to the iPhone

February 26th, 2010

TouchArcade has the exclusive first look at our port of Hexen II for the iPhone and iPod Touch. Hexen II is one of the most prolific and successful first person shooters that was released by Activision in 1997, and remains till now a cult classic from the FPS genre.

Read on the coverage at TouchArcade, or see the video preview below.

Find Us at CeBIT 2010

February 24th, 2010

vimov will be participating in the CeBIT 2010 trade fair, held in Hannover, Germany, from March 2nd to March 6th, under the Egyptian Pavilion and in participation with ITIDA. You can find us there at Hall 3 Stand J04/1.

At CeBIT, we will be showcasing our range of current and upcoming iPhone products as well as our custom mobile development services. We are going to showcase our flagship product, iSimulate, one of the most popular tools for iPhone development, and the first tool to support iPad development. And for the first time, visitors will have a sneak peak at our upcoming port of one of the most popular games in the world, Hexen 2, on the iPhone.

We consider this as an opportunity to find investors, partnerships and build new business relationships, and discuss with potential clients how they could create or enforce a creative mobile presence for their business.

To arrange a meeting please send an e-mail at [email protected].

About vimov

vimov is a software company specialized in iPhone, iPad, Android and Blackberry mobile application development, as well as webservices development and integration. We have released several products which we own their IP including iSimulate, an application used by thousands of iPhone Developers.

Additionally, we have worked with several international corporations in bringing their services and products to the mobile platforms. Our work includes mobile applications integrated with backend webservices, backend webservices development, navigation applications, 2D games, audio and image processing, and database-based applications.

About CeBIT

CeBIT is the world’s largest exhibition dedicated to Information and Communications Technology (ICT), and brings together ICT buyers, sellers, developers and users from around the globe. Around 700,000 visitors from all over the world attended the previous year’s exhibition. vimov’s representatives can be met at Stand J04/1 in Hall 3.

About ITIDA

The Information Technology Industry Development Agency (ITIDA) is a governmental entity affiliated to Egypt’s Ministry of Communications and Information Technology. It is responsible for growing and developing Egypt’s position as a leading global outsourcing location by attracting foreign direct investment to the industry and maximizing the exports of IT services and applications.

Can You Touch the iPad Today? Yes, You Can!

February 16th, 2010

It’s still some 6 weeks till the end of March, when Apple would start selling the iPad. Developers are hard at work, making sure their applications would be more stunning on the iPad, or envisioning and creating brand new applications. One issue though, they don’t have an iPad, but today, they can get very close to having one.

Today we are releasing iPad support for iSimulate.

While Apple did provide developers with an iPad Simulator, since it’s running on their Macs, developers have no means of using the accelerometer, multi-touch, GPS or compass within it. This means that it would be extremely difficult, practically impossible, for them to create applications that use more than a single touch, which they can do with their mouse pointer.

With iSimulate installed on their iPhones however, their multi-touches on the iPhone (which gets interpolated for the larger iPad screen), the movement recorded by the accelerometer, the location and orientation captured by the GPS and Compass, all get wirelessly sent to the iPad Simulator, so they can develop virtually any application they want, before the iPad is itself released!

Mark Terry, developer of popular iPhone applications like Pianist and Guitarist, said of the new iPad support after using it in developing iPad applications that “without iSimulate, there would really be no other way to test multi-touch input since the hardware is not yet available, so iSimulate has been a life-saver.”

All this as a free update to existing owners of iSimulate, so they can use their iPhones or iPods to control both the iPhone Simulator, and now, the iPad Simulator.

You can get iSimulate from the App Store at a limited-time discount of 40%. A Lite version is also available to try.

We couldn’t pack in a trailer due to the 3.2 SDK being under confidentiality, but the original iSimulate for iPhone trailer should give you an idea.

iSimulate Lite Released

January 25th, 2010

We have released a Lite version of iSimulate, so developers who are interested in buying iSimulate can have a taste of how easy it is to integrate iSimulate in their development workflow before making the purchase.

The Lite version of iSimulate can send only the first touch to the iPhone Simulator, so none of the other four touches are sent, and no accelerometer, GPS or compass are sent, and the video of the application is not streamed from the Simulator to the device.

iSimulate Lite is available on the App Store.

ArabCrunch Coverage

January 4th, 2010

ArabCrunch posted today (Arabic version) a write-up on vimov and our products.

ArabCrunch is the leading destination for coverage of technology and startups in the Arab world, and has recently launched ArabCrunch.net, a much needed wiki-style database of companies, investors, products and people in the technology field in the Arab world.

05-19-2011
Weather HD. Now Available for the Mac. - more

01-06-2011
App Squatting & Misuse of "Weather HD" Name in the Mac App Store - more

09-29-2010
Weather HD Now Available for the iPhone & iPod Touch - more