“V CAST Apps is now accepting applications for Android. If you’re one of the thousands of Android developers worldwide, this is your opportunity to share your applications with America’s largest wireless network,” Verizon wrote on its developer’s page.
The V CAST app store — which currently only sells BlackBerry apps — will work on all Verizon phones running Android 2.2, such as the Incredible, Droid 1, Droid 2, and Droid X.
Android and Me lists some other benefits to collaborating with the V CAST app store: Verizon will release your approved app within 14 days, give developers a 70 percent cut of profits, and allow a customer’s purchase to be added directly to their monthly bill.
While Verizon and Google have shared an illustrious partnership thus far, siding with each other on the net neutrality issue, the wireless carrier has also been distancing itself from Google. Verizon recently ditched Google as the default search engine on some of its phones, siding instead with Microsoft’s Bing — a sign that the two companies’ relationship may be deteriorating.
Will the V CAST app store be a successful alternative to the Android marketplace? Or will this be an embarrassing failure for the nation’s largest wireless carrier — a lesson that one shouldn’t mess with Google?