Browsing by Subject "app"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item Essays on the economics of the Smartphone and application industry(2013-09) Kim, Min JungThis dissertation is in two parts. In Chapter 1, I empirically quantify the consumer welfare gains created by free smartphone apps that have recently emerged as one of the most used digital goods. I use a unique dataset of smartphone apps and transform sales ranks into quantities to overcome a lack of data on quantity. In the process, I suggest a new methodology of utilizing Google search data, which can also be used in future research. The estimation results show that smartphone apps created $5.7~10.9 billion and $13.5~23.3 billion of annual consumer benefits in 2010 and 2011, respectively -- which can be translated into $134~260 in 2010 and $157~271 in 2011 per smartphone user on average -- and more than 90% of the welfare gain is from free apps. In Chapter 2, I examine how the contributing effects of mobile applications on smartphone adoption differ across smartphone operating systems and the extent to which this difference is explained by the role of platforms, focusing on the case of Apple vs. Google. I estimate a model of consumer demand for both smartphones and compatible apps where I specify the benefit provided by apps as the sum of individual app utilities. It is first shown that the selection of different types of consumers onto platforms should be accounted for in estimating app demand and thereby measuring the complementary effects. I take a novel approach to constructing geographically disaggregated sales panel by using Google web search data, as a way of addressing the selection issue. After controlling for the user heterogeneity, the results still suggest that Apple provided more app benefits to users and Android's stronger sales over the sample period come entirely from advantages in the price-adjusted quality of hardware. The overall quality of apps in Google Play was not inferior to that of the App Store, but Google is estimated to have delivered lower utility for a given set of apps possibly due to its open strategy.Item Improving geoscience data access and interoperability through the Flyover Country mobile app(2018-05) Loeffler, ShaneThe Flyover Country mobile app displays geospatial geoscience data on a map-based user interface for use in understanding landscape features from the vantage point of the airplane window seat, hiking trail vista, or remote field research location. These uses require a complex set of features, visualization strategies, and app workflows. In 2017, the app was redesigned from the ground up to incorporate many lessons learned, usability improvements, and a more sustainable and expandable codebase based on two years of feedback and observations from the first version of the app. This thesis outlines lessons learned and a use-case scenario demonstrating the benefits of our new design choices. The app’s effects on increasing interoperability of data in the broader geoscience data community are demonstrated, alongside as recommendations for serving geoscience data for use in mobile apps.