Tickets to Apple's WWDC 2012 sell out in two hours
Tickets to this year's Worldwide Developers Conference, to be held from June 11 through 15 in San Francisco, sold out in just two hours Wednesday morning.
Apple announced the dates for WWDC and began selling tickets at 8:30 a.m. Eastern on Wednesday. But by 10:30 a.m., the official WWDC website was no longer accepting registrations.
"Sorry, tickets are sold out," the site reads. "We?ll be posting videos of all our sessions shortly after the conference, so everyone can take advantage of great WWDC content for free."
The two-hour sellout is the fastest ever for Apple's annual developers conference. Last year, WWDC sold out in a record 10 hours, while in 2010 it took Apple 8 days to sell all of the tickets.
The event will kick off on June 11 at San Francisco's Moscone West center, which can accommodate roughly 5,000 attendees. Apple has promised to show off the future of iOS and OS X at this year's conference.
Last year, Apple used WWDC to unveil iOS 5 and also to highlight features from OS X 10.7 Lion. It's presumed that this year will be a similarly software-focused event with the unveiling of iOS 6 and new details on OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, both of which are expected to become publicly available later this year.
Though the conference is officially sold out, Apple's website still offers the opportunity for students who build applications to apply for a WWDC 2012 Student Scholarship.
Apple announced the dates for WWDC and began selling tickets at 8:30 a.m. Eastern on Wednesday. But by 10:30 a.m., the official WWDC website was no longer accepting registrations.
"Sorry, tickets are sold out," the site reads. "We?ll be posting videos of all our sessions shortly after the conference, so everyone can take advantage of great WWDC content for free."
The two-hour sellout is the fastest ever for Apple's annual developers conference. Last year, WWDC sold out in a record 10 hours, while in 2010 it took Apple 8 days to sell all of the tickets.
The event will kick off on June 11 at San Francisco's Moscone West center, which can accommodate roughly 5,000 attendees. Apple has promised to show off the future of iOS and OS X at this year's conference.
Last year, Apple used WWDC to unveil iOS 5 and also to highlight features from OS X 10.7 Lion. It's presumed that this year will be a similarly software-focused event with the unveiling of iOS 6 and new details on OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, both of which are expected to become publicly available later this year.
Though the conference is officially sold out, Apple's website still offers the opportunity for students who build applications to apply for a WWDC 2012 Student Scholarship.
Comments
YET AGAIN! I miss it!
Poor Pacific coast-ers.
Hey. Apple.
This has happened, what, four years in a row?
RENT A STADIUM.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tallest Skil
Hey. Apple.
This has happened, what, four years in a row?
RENT A STADIUM.
Perhaps Apple will host events like the TED2023 conference some day.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tallest Skil
Hey. Apple.
This has happened, what, four years in a row?
RENT A STADIUM.
No, that wouldn't do at all. The whole point of being there is not to attend announcements, but to spend time with the 1,000 Apple engineers that are present to discuss development one-on-one. Too many people in attendance reduces your access to these engineers.
It would make more sense for Apple to hold a pair of events to keep the ratio of attendees to engineers good while allowing access to more people.
Quote:
Originally Posted by EricTheHalfBee
It would make more sense for Apple to hold a pair of events to keep the ratio of attendees to engineers good while allowing access to more people.
So how do you stop the devs from the first event from coming to the second one?
It was less than 30 minutes from the time they sent the email to the time they were sold out.
Email: 7.01am PST
Sold out: 7:27am PST
Got mine, though
Quote:
It would make more sense for Apple to hold a pair of events to keep the ratio of attendees to engineers good while allowing access to more people.
Taking their engineers off of their development duties for one week is bad enough. They aren't going to do it for two.
What they should do is move the keynote to Main Moscone and make it a separate event, free for everyone. Then people aren't buying up tickets just to watch the keynote. Press should also be free to attend WWDC, but they are last in line to get into sessions.
You simply offer the purchases of one (and only one) ticket, give the developer a choice of time, if both are still open, and do not allow them to purchase any more tickets. You couldn't do it by Apple ID, since anyone can have as many of those as they want, but the logistics wouldn't be all that hard to take care of.
I received the notice in time, but opted not to buy. They did away with the IT track last year and didn't bring it back this year. So I'll go to other conferences that cater more to IT pros. A true developer can make better use of the spot I would have taken up at WWDC. It's a great event, and I'm sorry to miss it, but I simply can't justify going to it anymore.
You set a condition saying if you attended the "first" WWDC you can't come to the "second" one to give as many developers an opportunity. That's the only way I can think of anyway. But it would be a good idea to have two I think. What will happen next year, the sell out in 30 minutes?
How much were the tickets?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shameer Mulji
You set a condition saying if you attended the "first" WWDC you can't come to the "second" one to give as many developers an opportunity.
Yes, but that's completely unenforceable.
Oh! What am I thinking… Just have two events, a month apart, the same content in each. You'll still have tens of thousands of developers unable to attend, but you'll have more than now.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tallest Skil
So how do you stop the devs from the first event from coming to the second one?
I personally think Apple should extend WWDC to two weeks. One week for OS X and the other for iOS. Developers can then buy tickets for one or both. Something like that would work better than squeezing everything in 5 days.
I guess people didn't heed David Morgenstern (ZDNet) when he wrote his opus, "To WWDC or not to WWDC, that is the question"
Quote:
Originally Posted by NasserAE
I personally think Apple should extend WWDC to two weeks. One week for OS X and the other for iOS. Developers can then buy tickets for one or both. Something like that would work better than squeezing everything in 5 days.
That's what I was thinking. Combine that with the suggestion elsewhere that the keynote be an open-for-all event and separate press from developers better, and I think you'd have a lot more happy, productive developers-- both on the attendee and presenter sides.
I'd also suggest that Apple announce when tickets would go on sale ahead of time to give people in every time zone time to plan and decide.
Quote:
Originally Posted by LighteningKid
Poor Pacific coast-ers.
I got my ticket and am in Oregon ... I had text alerts, email alerts all set up... I was one it lol
The WWDC 2012 needs to become The Apple WWDC Tour 2012. Clearly.
Quote:
Originally Posted by LighteningKid
Poor Pacific coast-ers.
Tell me about it. :-(