6:00 AM Wake up. Ouch
7:00 AM We are on our way to Moscone West and arrive to see the line heading off down the alley from around the building

8:00 AM We are standing in the “holding pen” on the first floor

9:00 AM Stand in line beside gay programmer from law firm in NY that have no Macs. Nice enough guy, but clearly at WWDC for the boondoggle. We make jokes about very large man in green shirt behind us, hoping he does not hear. He must be 6′8″.
9:30 AM We are let up the escalators to run around finding good chairs in the auditorium that already is half full with media and VIPs.


10:10 AM obligatory screen telling us that we can’t record the talk. I have my Sony DSLR and am happily shooting photos like lots of other people.

10:30 AM Steve comes on stage. I have been awake for 4.5 hours already and only had a juice. Ready for exciting news!
To see photos of keynote (you can skip the ones above, go here.
Summary:
- Apple has more fun with the PC guy. (this is starting to get old)
- There are lots of developers writings apps of some kind for OS X.
- Steve likes Paul Otellini from Intel.
- EA and id are writing games for OS X.
- Leopard has a number of cool usability, performance and experience features.
- Apple wrote a version of Safari that runs on Windows
- Developing an app for iPhone means writing a web application.
- iPhone will not support Flash or Java.
11:45 AM I walk out of Keynote underwelmed. Jobs ends Keynote on a low note. Developers are not excited about either iPhone development or Safari. Developers don’t get early access or preferred access to iPhone. Apple is rolling out a new platform, but only they can do the power features. A big let down for a developer conference.
2:00 PM I attend State of the Union talk about OS X. We are reminded that this material is under non-disclosure. I am hopeful that my pilgrimage will prove fruitful after all. Some cool Leopard tech is discussed. Nothing shocking. It will run faster. Not exactly a surprise. Some of the address is just the same material that Jobs reviewed. Yawn.
4:00 PM I am determined to get my money’s worth. I go to the OS X labs to find out if Safari 3 will support extensions so that we can get a version of Sxipper for Safari. Hey, it would now run on a PC and on iPhone! Unfortunately, no, Apple has not seen the value of the addon market that Firefox and IE have. Apple plans to increase their browser share because their app is 2X faster. Wow. 2X faster then instantaneous is irrelevant. Pages are slow because of the connection, not because the browser is slower. We have people switching to Firefox from IE or Safari because they want Sxipper. I just don’t see why people will switch because ti is faster. I do learn the name of the guy in charge of Apple web tech and that there is a Webkit party later on.
7:00 PM I visit the Apple store that is over on Stockton to see what it will take to get an iPhone. They are selling them at 6PM on Friday the 29th. Might as well be Friday the 13th for how crazy it will be. No love from Apple here either.
8:00 PM I go to the Thirsty Bear for the Webkit party. Usual crowd of open source geeks. I collect a Safari sticker and find the man in charge. I ask about extension support. After 10 minutes he finally understands what I want and defers me to someone else. I walk away feeling I have cast my one little vote for a feature request. I talk to some other developers and get the same sense that Apple is not really listening. Too bad. Was hoping we could get Sxipper on an iPhone. Likely not for a while.
Summary:
This was the most attended and least interesting WWDC that I have been to. No iPhone love. Leopard is cool but late. Games are nice, but most of what was shown has been already seen. Given that one can watch a video of the Keynote already from Apple’s site, I don’t know if I will make this annual pilgrimage next year. Will I buy an iPhone. For sure. Will I get Leopard and continue to use Apple gear. Definitely. Am I an Apple fan. Not really.