Apple announced on Wednesday that it will hold its 34th annual Worldwide Developers Conference at its headquarters in Cupertino, California, from Monday, June 5 to Friday, June 9.
The usual keynote speech and platform State of the Union talks will be part of “a special all-day event” that will kick off the conference. The language on Apple’s site recommends that like last year, some or those will be introduced in prerecorded video structure as opposed to as a live in front of an audience show.
After that first day, Apple will probably hold a number of panels about how developers can use the developer toolkits and APIs of the company to support both new and old features on all of the Apple platforms.
Because the event is unable to accommodate enough attendees in person to meet demand, developers who wish to attend sign up for a lottery to see if they are selected. However, developers will also have access to the entire conference online. The conference is free in either case.
The primary reason for the WWDC feature every year is for the most part to report and make sense of new elements coming to the following adaptations of Macintosh’s different stage working frameworks — for this situation, iOS 17, iPadOS 17, tvOS 17, watchOS 10, and macOS 14.
That will almost certainly also be the case this year. At WWDC, Apple occasionally also makes announcements regarding brand-new consumer services or hardware.
Over the course of the past few months, numerous credible reports have suggested that Apple intends to present a first look at its long-delayed mixed-reality headset and software at this year’s WWDC. If that is the case, we anticipate that will be a significant component of the keynote.
Even if that is the case, it is likely that the headset won’t be available until June. In order for developers to begin creating applications, games, and experiences for the new platform, it is much more likely that Apple will outline what to expect from a release that is much further down the road (possibly in September alongside the new flagship iPhones, but possibly even later).
WWDC likewise concurs with Apple’s Quick Understudy Challenge, a coding rivalry for understudies. The application period for that challenge ends on April 19.
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