Last year over 5,000 persons attended WWDC. At the time it represented a new record for the annual Apple developer event. The result was fueled by the imminent launch Mac OS X Leopard. This year, with 25 days to go before Steve Jobs addresses developers at the keynote speech, Apple has announced that for the first time ever, the conference has sold out.
I am sure that most do not realize the significance of this announcement. In the past, Apple has used many dirty tricks to artificially increase the number of attendants to WWDC. For example, there used to be a separate conference for Quicktime content creators. I believe that Apple cancelled that event two years ago and folded it within WWDC. Last year there was a session track for web developers, presumably to pave the way for new web applications targeting iPhone users. The result was that if you engaged in conversation with people you didn’t know you were likely to find out that they had absolutely no clue about Objective-C or Xcode.
This year things are likely to be quite different. Apple no longer needs tricks to fill Moscone West up. Gone are the tracks for web developers and video content creators. There still is a track for System Administrators but the rest of the sessions are designed exclusively for developers. This means that even if attendance only grows to six thousand (the Convention Center was already packed last year), this will still represent a very significant increase in the number of real programmers attending the event. It is a clear sign that many of those 200,000 persons who downloaded the iPhone SDK are actually using it and want to be prepared for the launch of the app store at the end of June. This is going to be the best WWDC ever!
May 18th, 2008 at 4:53 am
Why would you say that apple is using “dirty Tricks” is all they did was put two conferences together? why hpay for two conference halls and have two lectures if you can combine the whole, save resources and the planet
May 19th, 2008 at 4:57 pm
Quite simple, Apple always equals attendants to developers. This is not the case. Last year for example, Steve Jobs said that more than 5,000 developers had registered for WWDC. That was not true. More than a third of those attending the event where either sysadmins or web designers and Apple knew that. However, in order to try to demonstrate momentum for the Mac platform to investors, the press and analysts, they cooked the numbers.