Over 31 percent of mobile developers today are supporting Near Field Communications (NFC) in their mobile apps, but an additional 45 percent plan to support this technology in the next 12 months, according to Evans Data Corp's newly released Mobile Development Survey.
The survey, conducted in May 2013 with over 500 developers actively working on mobile apps, found that more developers have plans to support NFC in the near future than any of several other device features, including voice recognition, range finder, and device pairing.
The primary driver for NFC support is security and access (keycards and dongles, identity, entry and access, boarding passes and transponders). Other popular drivers for NFC support are social networking, Bluetooth and wi-fi connectivity, and commerce.
Janel Garvin, CEO of Evans Data Corp said, "NFC is the next evolutionary step in mobile computing."
"It's clear that it's going to change the way we perform everyday actions such as opening a locked door, getting on an airplane, or making a purchase at a store. But developers also have plans for the technology that include games, measurements, and connections to appliances, cars or other devices. The extent to which NFC will impact us is only constrained by the imagination of the developers," added Garvin.
Although NFC was the technology that the most developers plan to support in the next year, still image capture, video image capture, and GPS are the device features more developers are supporting today.
Device features are extremely important in determining how many will target their apps for a particular device. Over 70 percent say they optimize their apps to take advantage of particular device capabilities.
The Mobile Development Survey is conducted worldwide twice a year with developers actively working on apps for mobile devices, said Evans Data Corporation.
First published in CIOL