Nokia has announced changes to its Nokia developer programmes, replacing its free offerings with a new paid-for Nokia Premium Developer Program.
The Finnish manufacturer has suspended the Nokia Developer Launchpad Program and is in the process of retiring the invitation-only Nokia Developer Pro Program.
It hopes to entice members of the Nokia developer community to create applications for Windows Phone 8, but interested parties will now have to pay $99 a year to access a range of benefits.
As a result, applications to the Launchpad Program which have not yet been processed will not be processed at all, but those entitled to a developer device have until 30 November to request it. Tech support cases will be available until April 20 2013. Nokia adds that it will continue to seek out qualifying developers and work with them, despite the closure of the Developer Pro Program.
“While we can’t comment on unannounced programmes, our commitment to our developer community remains strong,” it said. “You can expect to see new programme offerings in the near future that will be of even more value to our developers than the current programmes.”
These new programmes include the Nokia Premium Developer Program, which was announced at Microsoft Build 2012. This costs $99 a year, but promises $1,500 worth of tools and services.
“
Included in the programme is a one year membership to the Microsoft Windows Phone Dev Center, essential if you want to submit apps to the Windows Phone Store, a license to Telerik RadControls for Windows Phone, 1 million API calls a month with Buddy’s cloud API offering and two Nokia tech support tickets.
Developer have been reportedly optimistic about the chances of Nokia and Microsoft succeeding with Windows Phone 8, which launched in the UK last Friday, but it remains to be seen what impact, if any, that the changes to these programmes will have on that outlook.
How much do you know about smartphones? Take our quiz!
Boeing Starliner space capsule set for first crewed flight into orbit after years of delays,…
Google clashes with US Justice Department in closing arguments as government argues Google used illegal…
Prominent Stanford University AI scientist Fei-Fei Li reportedly completes funding round for start-up based on…
Apple shares surge on optimism that new AI-focused hardware launches will drive renewed sales, starting…
Biden vetoes Republican-backed measure amidst dispute over 'joint employer' status for contract workers, affecting tech…
Lawyers in US social media addiction action say strict controls on Douyin in China show…
View Comments
Only a failing company could come up with such a dumb idea - you need developers for your phone apps. No apps no ecosystem, so let's encourage developers to write for it by charging them more - sure that makes sense!