WWDC in jeopardy as Santa Clara issues new coronavirus guidance for tech giants
The County of Santa Clara on Thursday issued guidance in the wake of newly discovered COVID-19 cases, urging employers in the region, including tech giants Apple and Google, to postpone or cancel mass gatherings.
Apple's WWDC 2019 drew thousands of developers from around the world.
Santa Clara's public health department in a press release announced six new confirmed cases of the virus, brining the county total up to 20 people. In an attempt to prevent the spread of COVID-19, new guidance lists a number of recommendations for residents and employers living and working in the county's cities, including Cupertino, Mountain View, Palo Alto, San Jose and Sunnyvale.
Specifically, companies operating in the county are asked to suspend nonessential employee travel, minimize close employee contact at work, cancel large meetings and conferences, and urge employees to stay home when they are sick, among other measures.
Further, the department recommends postponing or canceling mass gatherings and large community events "where large numbers of people are within arm's length of one another." If a large gathering cannot be avoided, guidance calls on event planners to urge the sick or those at high risk for serious illness not to attend, find ways to provide visitors with ample physical space to avoid close contact, endorse "increased" hygiene, and keep public surfaces clean.
"We are making these recommendations to protect the most vulnerable members of our community from the virus, and slow its spread," said Dr. Sara Cody, Santa Clara's Public Health Officer. "We are continuously monitoring this evolving situation, and will issue new guidance if and when that is warranted."
The guidance arrives as Apple is expected to announce plans for this year's Worldwide Developers Conference. Traditionally held in June in and around the Bay Area of San Francisco, the annual convention typically involves keynotes, special events, technical sessions and other in-person happenings, and is attended by thousands of developers from around the world.
The Verge reported on Santa Clara's guidance earlier today.
A number of major international events have been canceled due to concerns surrounding the spread of COVID-19. Facebook in February nixed live portions of its annual F8 conference, GSMA canceled the Mobile World Conference in Barcelona, and Informa called off the 2020 Game Developers Conference in San Francisco. On Monday, Google and Adobe canceled in-person segments of Google Cloud Next 2020 and the Adobe Summit, while Google a day later scrubbed the live portion of Google I/O.
Apple is also taking steps to curb potential COVID-19 fallout and this week restricted employee travel to Italy and South Korea. The company also withdrew from SXSW 2020, where it planned to premiere three Apple TV+ originals.
Apple's WWDC 2019 drew thousands of developers from around the world.
Santa Clara's public health department in a press release announced six new confirmed cases of the virus, brining the county total up to 20 people. In an attempt to prevent the spread of COVID-19, new guidance lists a number of recommendations for residents and employers living and working in the county's cities, including Cupertino, Mountain View, Palo Alto, San Jose and Sunnyvale.
Specifically, companies operating in the county are asked to suspend nonessential employee travel, minimize close employee contact at work, cancel large meetings and conferences, and urge employees to stay home when they are sick, among other measures.
Further, the department recommends postponing or canceling mass gatherings and large community events "where large numbers of people are within arm's length of one another." If a large gathering cannot be avoided, guidance calls on event planners to urge the sick or those at high risk for serious illness not to attend, find ways to provide visitors with ample physical space to avoid close contact, endorse "increased" hygiene, and keep public surfaces clean.
"We are making these recommendations to protect the most vulnerable members of our community from the virus, and slow its spread," said Dr. Sara Cody, Santa Clara's Public Health Officer. "We are continuously monitoring this evolving situation, and will issue new guidance if and when that is warranted."
The guidance arrives as Apple is expected to announce plans for this year's Worldwide Developers Conference. Traditionally held in June in and around the Bay Area of San Francisco, the annual convention typically involves keynotes, special events, technical sessions and other in-person happenings, and is attended by thousands of developers from around the world.
The Verge reported on Santa Clara's guidance earlier today.
A number of major international events have been canceled due to concerns surrounding the spread of COVID-19. Facebook in February nixed live portions of its annual F8 conference, GSMA canceled the Mobile World Conference in Barcelona, and Informa called off the 2020 Game Developers Conference in San Francisco. On Monday, Google and Adobe canceled in-person segments of Google Cloud Next 2020 and the Adobe Summit, while Google a day later scrubbed the live portion of Google I/O.
Apple is also taking steps to curb potential COVID-19 fallout and this week restricted employee travel to Italy and South Korea. The company also withdrew from SXSW 2020, where it planned to premiere three Apple TV+ originals.
Comments
The root problem is the cost of logistics when faced with late cancellation. Most hope that May or June should see a natural reduction in risk but it isn't a guarantee, so erring on the side of caution is very much justified as is going ahead with the show. It is a tough call depending on how you look at it.
Personally, I think the middle ground would be to postpone the event and evaluate the situation in 6-8 weeks.
In the United States, there have been more than 225 confirmed cases with 14 deaths. 11 of those 14 deaths were in Washington. 8 of the 11 deaths in Washington have been linked to a nursing home, Life Care Center, in Kirkland, Washington. A majority of deaths in the United States have been immunocompromised individuals. These are the facts, draw your own conclusions.
With your posting history I'm gonna guess those are WWDC wannabes.
So far, no known health issues as a result of it going ahead.
I simply don't understand the 'WWDC wannabes' statement. WWDC is irrelevant in a health context. It could be any other international event and the considerations would be exactly the same. The final decision regarding the go ahead could swing either way depending on many factors. That is why I mentioned MWC and ISE.
Seattle is currently one of the small epicenters for the virus, and yet plans are still going forward for the Emerald City Comic-Con 2020:
https://www.seattletimes.com/entertainment/events/dark-horse-comics-penguin-random-house-pulling-out-of-emerald-city-comic-con/
Seems to be foolish...
Last flu season - 35 million cases, 34 thousand deaths in the United States. About 500 deaths children!
I bet most people just shrug when they hear these serious numbers.
It took about 5 to 6 weeks to for the number of new cases to level off in China, and they’ll recover and hopefully learn from their horrible mistakes. WWDC may not go on with a full audience, but we will come out fine. This is not the apocalypse.