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At Apple Computer's Worldwide Developers Conference 2006 in San Francisco, Scott Forstall, the company's vice president of platform experience, demonstrates the power of Core Animation, which will be part of the updated Mac OS X. The developer tool can be used to create motion graphics with little coding.
The Leopard with a Time Machine
Apple Computer's vice president of platform experience, Scott Forstall, demonstrates the company's new application "Time Machine." Users can travel through time by scrolling through different windows that represent days, looking for the file they need. The keynote took place Monday at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference 2006 in San Francisco.
At long last, iPhone users will soon be able to copy and paste text and images. Apple's senior vice president of iPhone software, Scott Forstall, demonstrates the new tap-and-drag feature.
Scott Forstall, Apple's senior vice president of iPhone software, shows off a new feature that will allow users to search for specific e-mail messages, applications, contacts, and other data.
iPhone OS 3.0: Peer-to-peer networking
Play multiplayer games and share data with the iPhone user next to you. Apple iPhone software guru Scott Forstall demonstrates.
Apple senior vice president of iPhone software Scott Forstall explains how iPhone users can buy new game levels, subscription content, and more from within an iPhone application.
Microsoft's four-year brainchild: Wallop
What happens when Microsoft brings in psychologists and Web developers to create a social-networking site? You get Wallop, which lets Flash developers build personalization widgets that could cost users a buck or two. CNET's Rafe Needleman speaks with Wallop CEO Karl Jacob at DemoFall 2006.
Apple Computer CEO Steve Jobs shows off the latest iteration of iChat at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference 2006 in San Francisco. The application now offer users Photo Booth features for their video conferencing and the ability to add backdrops.
Apple unveils MobileMe at WWDC
Philip Schiller, senior vice president of worldwide marketing at Apple, unveils MobileMe, the company's new cloud computing service, at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco. The new service will connect all of your devices and push information up and down to keep everything up to date. It's also designed to be native with the Mac and PC to keep calendars, mail, and documents in sync.
iPhone users rock out with Band
At the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco, Mark Terry of Moo Cow Music demonstrates a new music application that enables users to create tunes using various instruments and the phone's touch-screen pad. In the demo, Terry shows how a user can create a few riffs from Pink Floyd's 'Money' with the music app.
Related links
- Monday, August 7, Apple blog: Jobs' speech
- Apple developers meet in San Francisco
- CNET's complete Apple WWDC coverage
- Video: New Mac Pro with dual processors
- Video: The Leopard with a Time Machine
- Video: Apple offers "Spaces" for virtual desktops
- Video: Improved iChat for Leopard
- Video: Eyeing Apple's Core Animation