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Apple has been issuing checks to developers, and the 2012 figures indicate that it has so far been
to the tune of $5 billion. In the past, it used to be desktops with Microsoft-based products that were
raking in money for developers, with Visual Basic, or earlier with database products such as dBase
and FoxPro. While the major share of this revenue goes to larger companies such as EA, Chillingo,
Gameloft, Rovio and even Disney, a lot of indie developers and smaller companies vie for a share of
that big pie. Who knows what idea might just become the money-spinner for a developer. Robert Nay,
a 14-year-old, made the game Bubble Ball while he was learning to code, and it went viral, with over
8 million downloads. And no one knows what the next top game will be.
As a person that has an interest in development, you have made the first step in this journey. You
could be a student that has never developed before, or you could be a guru developer who can
whip up an enterprise app in minutes. The point is that whatever your background, you are for some
reason drawn to this strange-sounding language, Lua (pronounced LOO-ah.). |