Apple has confirmed that CEO Steve Jobs, backed by his team of execs, will headline the keynote speech at WWDC this year.
Opening to the tones of “What a Wonderful World” Steve Jobs opened today’s WWDC keynote address with an apology for all those who couldn’t be there today. While he said that it was the biggest place that Apple could get, it was more likely a dig at Gizmodo - the tech news site that spilled the beans on the next iPhone.
There is not much that can be said about Apple and Steve Jobs that has not already been said. Jobs is Apple; no, Apple, with its superlative developers, is much more than Jobs; Jobs is merely human and just a good salesman. The reality is, however, Apple and Jobs are inseparable because Apple is Steve Job's dream. And that's why it will not survive after he goes.
There is not much that can be said about Apple and Steve Jobs that has not already been said. Jobs is Apple; no, Apple, with its superlative developers, is much more than Jobs; Jobs is merely human and just a good salesman. The reality is, however, Apple and Jobs are inseparable because Apple is Steve Job's dream. And that's why it will not survive after he goes.
Last night I watched the stream of Apple’s 2012 WWDC keynote, and despite there being a zillion “live blogs” of the event, there’s nothing like sitting back and watching the whole spectacular event unfold.
{loadposition alex08}Apple’s 2012 WWDC keynote video – it’s definitely worth watching, whether as a stream, or, after a day’s wait, finally as downloadable keynote video through iTunes in SD an
Apple's World Wide Developer Conference 2010 kicks off Monday, and Steve Jobs and the crew will use the keynote speech to unveil products and services to tempt you to part with your cash.
I don't know if this is fact, fiction or just plain wishful thinking, but there's a report out that Apple CEO Steve Jobs may share a little stage time with Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer at this year's Worldwide Developers Conference.
During his WWDC 2010 keynote address, Apple CEO Steve Jobs boasted that the iPhone was currently number two behind RIM in smartphone sales. He quoted a Nielsen survey but there was a noticeable absentee in Apple’s stats - Symbian. So what’s the truth?
A myriad articles have appeared since Apple’s CEO, Steve Jobs, announced the end of his iCEO-ship and the start of his spot in Apple’s iChair, and while some think Apple’s future is crunchily sweet, others think that an Apple without Jobs will one day leave Apple’s employees without jobs.