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Study Says AWS Is Most 'Developer Friendly' Platform

Professional services company Accenture published a new developer ecosystem study that indicates Amazon Web Services Inc. (AWS) ranks highly for its friendliness to coders.

"Amazon Web Services (AWS) topped the list as being the most developer-friendly platform, with respondents citing how it keeps them informed and provides monetization opportunities," the company said about its Accenture 2018 Developer Ecosystem Survey. "Developers also see AWS as being the most future-looking platform."

Amazon's cloud rivals also scored some points among developers, who said "Google Cloud Platform is considered the most innovative and caring about the needs of professional developers." The study wasn't confined to cloud platforms, as other development platforms such as Android and iOS were among the 15 offerings compared.

Findings about other platforms include:

  • Microsoft Azure's developers are most satisfied with the platform's accuracy, currency, findability and readability of content. They also expressed satisfaction with the timeliness and technical background of the support they receive.
  • Android developers are most satisfied with the level of knowledgeable support they receive. Android also ranks high for personalized support.
  • iOS has the most credibility among hard-core developers.

In the report published earlier this month, factors that developers value most are:

  • Platform market position (cited by 90 percent of the professional developers surveyed)
  • Technically accurate content (82 percent)
  • Timely support (81 percent)
  • Learning new skills and improving skills (78 percent)
  • Integration with other leading platforms (76 percent)

Developers also weighed in with thoughts about how the various platforms could differentiate themselves, including:

  • Continually push technology boundaries, and expand developers' opportunities to innovate
  • Open source their code and grant access to their libraries and repositories
  • Provide relevant and perpetually up-to-date information written exactly as developers need it
  • Be there when needed most, in the ways that each developer group needs them to be
  • Understand what developers need to be successful and enable mutually valuable relationships to grow
  • Recognize the value developers provide, the knowledge they possess and that their collective success is intertwined
What Developers Want
[Click on image for larger view.] What Developers Want from an Ecosystem (source: Accenture).

Overall, Accenture concluded that when judging development ecosystems, the opportunity for education trumps monetization possibilities.

"Nearly three-quarters of survey respondents want to learn new skills, or improve current skills, when engaging with a developer ecosystem," the report says. "Learning is particularly important to professional developers (78 percent agree) and to those working in medium-sized organizations and enterprises. The desire for education spans generations, as all age groups are equally interested in keeping their skills current."

The report is based on proprietary research with more than 750 U.S.-based developers.

About the Author

David Ramel is an editor and writer for Converge360.

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