top | item 3888837

WWDC 2012 (June 11 - 15)

109 points| jimmyhwang | 14 years ago |developer.apple.com

59 comments

order

athst|14 years ago

Seems cruel to release it so early PST... how many people are going to wake up this morning having missed the opportunity to buy tickets? :)

robterrell|14 years ago

I think PST got the early jump last year, so fair's fair.

gonzo|14 years ago

PST??? Until this year, I was in HST!

zdw|14 years ago

Tickets are now limited to 1 per person, or 5 per organization, which should help with scalping problems from previous years:

https://developer.apple.com/wwdc/tickets/

It's going to be a tight squeeze - most of the hotel space is already filled in the city due to the US Open taking place over a superset of these dates.

arn|14 years ago

Not only that, but you have to be a registered Paid developer to buy your ticket. And no transfers.

Should eliminate most scalping issues.

0x0|14 years ago

......aaaaaaand sold out. In 2 hours. Wow!

kmfrk|14 years ago

Time for Airbnb to roll out their campaign.

ajg1977|14 years ago

Putting tickets on sale at 5:30am west coast time was a pretty dick move.

k-mcgrady|14 years ago

The tickets are always going to be on sale at a bad time somewhere in the world.

ghshephard|14 years ago

Alternatively - this ensured everyone in the community got a ticket, because everyone was calling everyone to let them know that tickets were on sale. Not great for the isolated developer - but, with only 4500 or so seats available - somebody is going to be left out.

Edit: Okay - perhaps "everyone" is a bit of a reach. Let's just say there was a _bias_ towards people in the community, as their friends and colleagues started SMSing them and calling them to purchase tickets. Though, there will clearly be an east coast / european bias this year - perhaps that was deliberate?

hej|14 years ago

They picked the time in a way that it was night across the Pacific (where nearly no one lives). That way it was a bit late in Japan and a bit early on the West Coast.

The world doesn't start and end with the West Coast, especially not for Apple (and those on the West Coast are the best connected anyway, the most likely to learn quickly about the WWDC).

tolmasky|14 years ago

I don't understand why they don't offer a second class of "virtual tickets" where you get the same access to prerelease software and live streaming of sessions. As far as I can tell there are 3 "decoupled" reasons to attend wwdc: 1. Sessions and info, 2. Asking real apple employees questions, and 3. Meeting other devs/socializing.

I know lots of people that currently just do #3 without a ticket. Similarly #1 becomes possible for everyone after they release the videos. So really the only genuine reason to attend is #2 -- real deal access to apple devs. Under this perspective it seems less likely there would be such frenzied demand if everyone had a shot of viewing the sessions and getting the redacted info at the same time. It would also save a lot of people the need to buy a plane ticket and hotel on top of this already expensive endeavor, if all they want is to see sessions.

So basically, imagine something like a $500 virtual wwdc pass where you get a live stream, and a $1600 "Pro" pass where you get the perks of being there in person.

saturdaysaint|14 years ago

iOS6 should be quite an event - assuming everyone on iOS5 does the simple OTA update, it will be one of the biggest and fastest adoptions of a new OS ever.

I'm really interested in what new features might leverage that. To some extent, iMessage is the best example so far, instantly adding features to text conversations between iOS users.

akashshah|14 years ago

The logo look like it's made of Apple TVs :)

frankus|14 years ago

Apple's event invites are geeky Rorschach tests. You see what you want to see.

hswolff|14 years ago

It does look like Apple TVs.

It also looks like multi-colored and multi-sized iPhone home buttons.

But that might just be me projecting my own desires. ;)

latch|14 years ago

I see CPUs..maybe the new macbooks will ditch Intel for a home-grown solution...ya right.

TazeTSchnitzel|14 years ago

Now you can play Angry Birds on the big screen!

Aloisius|14 years ago

I really wish Apple would do product announcements prior to WWDC to segment the press/bloggers/fanboys/etc from the actual developers.

Skroob|14 years ago

Press can get (or at least request) a press badge that is keynote only. For those who can't get one, is there really $1600 plus expenses worth of value in blogging the event? Especially when all the usual suspects are live-blogging, the news comes out instantly, and the video is posted within a day?

SeoxyS|14 years ago

Opening tickets at 5:30 PST is a huge dick move. I woke up to 3 text messages about WWDC tickets, jumped on my computer and found them all sold out. Now I'm probably going to have to spend twice as much for a ticket.

allwein|14 years ago

You're not going to be able to buy a ticket at all. For the first time, tickets aren't transferable.

pazimzadeh|14 years ago

The logo hints at differently sized apps or elements - I'm thinking of something retina/resolution independence related.

Retina display MacBooks and iMacs, for example.

switch007|14 years ago

$1,599? Understandable that they need the ~$7m in ticket sales, given that they just posted ~$11bn quarterly profits. ;)

m0nastic|14 years ago

Based on some completely suspect math, having 1000 engineers available for the length of the conference "costs" apple ~40 million dollars in productivity:

num_engineers * total_session_hours * (revenue_per_emp / 2000)

where num_engineers = 1000, total_session_hours = 40, and revenue_per_emp = 2020000‡

http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=apple%20revenue%20per%2...

davidwhodge|14 years ago

I hear they made a rule internally that WWDC is supposed to pay it's own way. I certainly agree that it doesn't need to, but just thought you might find that interesting.

teoruiz|14 years ago

Any guesses about an iPhone 5 being released there?

rkudeshi|14 years ago

I think it's safe to say that the LACK of perennial rumors and leaked parts means last year's fall release is now a tradition and not just a one-time-thing.

judofyr|14 years ago

I think (with iPhone 4S) they're moving the release schedule to the autumn.

hej|14 years ago

If anything at all there will be new Macs, coinciding with Mountain Lion and Intel's release of low-power Ivy Bridge CPUs (though Macs might be a bit too unimportant to warrant the big stage and Intel might not deliver on time or Mountain Lion may not be finished). The iPhone was moved to autumn.

It's possible that there are no new hardware products at all in the keynote (though maybe not likely), only a review of what Mountain Lion brings, maybe incldluding some new software (the aging iWork is desperate for an update) and a preview of iOS6. Remember: Apple used to have preview events for the next iOS early in the year. That did not happen this year, so they have to preview iOS6 at some point before they release it, likely together with a new iPhone.

tjogin|14 years ago

An iPhone has never been released at a WWDC before. So no.

The WWDC (World Wide Developer Conference) is aimed at developers, so it's not the right forum for major hardware releases. I'm pretty sure the mainstream media won't be present.

fumar|14 years ago

The next gen of iBooks will be unveiled...

varunsaini|14 years ago

So we will see new MBP in June then.

meta8609|14 years ago

I think they'll be announced within 2 weeks.

znq|14 years ago

[deleted]