Apple's WWDC
Announcments
June 11, 2007 04:58 PM Filed in:
News
Leopard
Apple unveiled a near final version
of Mac OS X Leopard, which is scheduled to ship in
October for $129. According to Apple, Leopard will
introduce over 300 new features. Leopard includes a
new Dock featuring Stacks, which can help manage a
user’s desktop clutter by allowing users to
instantly fan out the contents of a stack to see each
item. Leopard’s Finder has been redesigned,
adding with a similar look to iTunes, including the
integration of Cover Flow to quickly browse and
locate files and applications. Subscribers to .Mac
can use the “Back to my Mac" feature to browse
and access files on their remote Macs over the
Internet. Also new in Leopard is Quick Look, way for
users to instantly preview almost any file, and play
media files, without opening an application.
Leopard also includes three new technologies that
take full advantage of the latest developments in
processor hardware: full native 64-bit support to
enable applications to take complete advantage of
64-bit processing while still running side by side
with existing 32-bit Mac OS X applications and
drivers; easy multi-core optimization and scheduling
to take advantage of the latest Intel hardware; and
Core Animation, helping developers easily create
animated user experiences.
Safari 3.0 Beta for Mac and Windows
Apple has
released a public beta of the new Safari 3.0, and in
a surprise announcement, is also expanding Safari
over to the PC. Apple claims Safari is the fastest
browser running on Windows rendering web pages up to
twice as fast as IE 7 and up to 1.6 times faster than
Firefox 2.
The free public beta of Safari 3 is available
immediately as a download at
www.apple.com/safari, and is
preview software licensed for use on a trial
basis for a limited time. The final version of
Safari 3 will be available as a feature in the
upcoming Mac OS X version 10.5 Leopard, and will
be available as a free download to Mac OS X
Tiger and Windows users in October.
iPhone to Support 3rd Party Applications using
Web 2.0 Standard
While probably not the SDK kit
that developers were looking for, Apple announced
that its iPhone will run applications created with
Web 2.0 Internet standards when it begins shipping on
June 29. Developers can create Web 2.0 applications
which look and behave just like the applications
built into iPhone, and which can seamlessly access
iPhone’s services, including making a phone
call, sending an email and displaying a location in
Google Maps. Third-party applications created using
Web 2.0 standards can extend iPhone’s
capabilities without compromising its reliability or
security.
A quicktime stream of the event can be found here:
http://events.apple.com.edgesuite.net/d7625zs/event/
Programing Note: We will record a special
WWDC wrap-up with all the news from the Keynote
presentation. Look for this special edition of The
MacCore to be released late the evening June 11th or
in the very early morning hours of June
12th.