Laura Knotek
Retired Moderator
- Mar 31, 2012
- 29,451
- 63
- 48
That assumption doesn't make sense. Open your browser and navigate to the app marketplace for all three mobile platforms - iOS, Android, and Windows Phone.
Now, search for Shazam on all three. What kind of date is listed for the app? The date that the very first version of the app was released? Nope. It's the "last update" date. Why? Because that's what the average customer cares about. They want to know if the developer is continually making updates to the app or if they just slapped it up there a couple years ago and never looked back.
As for the Weather Channel example you mentioned, I would say it's more likely that Microsoft simply isn't updating the "Last update" field automatically/consistently. I'm pretty sure they know what "Last update" means.
In any event, it's pretty well known that the Windows Phone platform has a problem with many developers not continually supporting their apps. The point of my post is to see what is being done about it, not to debate whether the problem exists. It clearly does.
In your first paragraph you claim that dates listed are "last update".
However, you then state that Microsoft doesn't update "last update".
I offered concrete evidence that the Weather Channel app has indeed been updated, despite the fact that the date has not been changed in Marketplace.
What do you expect me to do: install every app you are interested in finding out if it were updated?
I do not use Shazam, so I do not know if it got any updates. However, it is unreasonable for you to expect posters here to download and install apps just to tell you when the apps get updated.
