Tickets no longer available for Apple's annual developer conference

Apr 29, 2009 07:49 GMT  ·  By

Apple has announced that tickets to its Worldwide Developers Conference have sold out again, this time even faster. Session videos will be available to purchase shortly after the event, while the company will be providing more details soon.

“The Apple Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) provides developers and IT professionals with in-depth technical information and hands-on learning about the powerful technologies in iPhone OS and Mac OS X from the Apple engineers who created them,” Apple says on its Developer Connection page.

“You’ll learn how to harness the power of iPhone OS, Mac OS X Snow Leopard, and Mac OS X Server Snow Leopard in the most efficient and sophisticated way possible – saving you time and accelerating your development. Bring your MacBook and your imagination, and prepare to make your ideas happen,” Apple continues.

“The groundbreaking innovations in Mac OS X provide developers with exciting new ways to build applications that are optimized, fully integrated, and offer an amazing user experience,” the company explains, specifically talking about Mac OS X Snow Leopard. “Dive deep into the rich development tools, powerful technologies, and programming techniques that will help you deliver incredible applications on Mac OS X Snow Leopard – the next generation of the world’s most advanced operating system.”

Attending developers will be able to explore what's new in Mac OS X Snow Leopard, going over three major topics: optimization for the 64-Bit architecture, tapping the power of multicore and GPU computing by using the new performance-oriented frameworks, Grand Central Dispatch and OpenCL, and learning how to transition an application, plug-in, codec, or hardware device from traditional QuickTime APIs to QuickTime X.

Apple is set to make a new introduction of Snow Leopard at this year's conference, presenting WWDC attendees with a more polished-up OS, following an entire year worth of testing and development.