Palm now waiving the $99 annual fee for webOS development

Greg Kumparak

Greg Kumparak is the Mobile Editor at Techcrunch. Greg has been writing for the TechCrunch network since May of 2008. Greg was born just outside of San Jose, and now lives in the East Bay of California. → Learn More

Monday, April 19th, 2010

It’s no secret: Palm’s webOS needs apps. The iPhone has over 180,000. Android has over 68,000. webOS has, as of right this second, 1,812. Quantity by no means equals quality — but when the difference we’re talking about is that huge, it gets harder and harder to pitch that angle with a straight face.

Looking to capture the hearts and minds of developers everywhere who might not otherwise give webOS a chance, Palm is now waiving the $99 dollar fee associated with publishing apps on the platform.

The catch: Palm says it’s only for a limited time. In other words, its almost certainly a test run. If their development numbers spike, they’ll probably keep it free; if there’s not much of a change, it’s not worth giving away something they could be selling.

It’ll be interesting to see how this pans out for Palm. The SDK itself — the bit needed to actually start developing — has always been free. Only once a developer wanted to push their app to the App Catalog were they required to cough up the $99 bucks.

Was that entry fee holding back a massive crowd of dirt-broke developers? Probably not. But each new developer that comes on board could potentially build something amazing — and if all a great, platform-defining App costs Palm is a Franklin, it’s probably worth it.

Ready to get your fee-less development on? Check out their registration page here while the gettin’ is good.

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