Now You, Too, Can Build an App Marketplace
    		Application stores and marketplaces are becoming a popular  means of distributing software and cloud-based apps for PCs and mobile devices.
		Made popular by Apple with the iTunes App Store, now it  seems every major software and cloud provider has released one or has one in  the works. App stores and marketplaces will be among the top 10 strategic  technologies for enterprises next year, according to a forecast released by  Gartner last week.
		The market researcher is predicting that app stores will  facilitate 70 billion downloads of mobile apps per year by 2014. While it is  primarily consumer-driven today, it will gain momentum for enterprise apps as  well, according to Gartner. 
		"With enterprise app stores, the role of IT shifts from  that of a centralized planner to a market manager providing governance and  brokerage services to users and potentially an ecosystem to support  entrepreneurs," according to the Gartner report. "Enterprises should  use a managed diversity approach to focus on app store efforts and segment apps  by risk and value."
		Looking to capitalize on that trend, FullArmor on Wednesday  launched the AppPortal Marketplace, which allows enterprises, ISVs, solution  providers, distributors and bandwidth providers such as telcos to create their  own application stores. It is a cloud-based service that lets those who want to  create their own app stores to provision and host them. 
		It provides the functions needed to create an app store or  marketplace, including setup of storefronts and catalogs, checkout and billing,  explained FullArmor CEO Rich Farrell. "It's a turnkey system," he  said. 
		For enterprises, it provides a form of governance over the  use of applications that can be procured through third-party app marketplaces,  Farrell said. IT organizations have lost control over the procurement of such  applications since many are free or low-cost, allowing end users to bypass IT. 
		That creates all sorts of issues ranging from system  configuration management, security and licensing. The AppPortal Marketplace  creates an app store that IT can configure themselves for employees to use,  while providing a chargeback and tracking mechanism, according to Farrell.
		For ISVs, resellers, distributors and telcos, the  marketplace allows them to host their own stores or create them for their  customers. The starting price is $50,000 but costs are determined based on the  number of apps that are in the marketplace and how many systems need to be  integrated. 
		AppPortal Marketplace is currently hosted on Microsoft's  Windows Azure platform, though FullArmor plans to support other cloud services,  including those provided by Amazon, VMware and others, Farrell said.
		It is likely FullArmor will aim to sell this platform to a  larger vendor. The company's business model is that of an incubator. Among the  technologies it has developed and sold off are Group Policy Administrator,  acquired by NetIQ; Workflow Studio, an IT automation tool that Citrix bought;  and Mail Portal Migrator, a tool for moving in-house Exchange-based systems to  the cloud, which Quest Software picked up last year. 
 
	Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on October 27, 2011