I seem to recall that wwdc videos were a for pay feature in previous years (I was at wwdc 07, 09). But what's interesting about this is that this year I went to google I/o which is in it's 3rd year, had 5k+ attendees and it goes without saying that google would release all the videos for free.
Apple would do well to drop the $99/year dev tax as well (I'd consider paying to be in their market, but paying to just developer for my own hardware seems off).
Overwhelmed by traffic now. I don't think Apple has yet absorbed just how big it is: the iPod explosion didn't affect the dev side of the company, which subconsciously still has Mac assumptions in place.
This isn't "102: Moving from CodeWarrior to Project Builder" any more, Toto.
Funny, they actually timeout your authorization after a fairly short time. I downloaded a bunch when this was first posted, then went back to grab one more and got redirected to the sign-in page, then got rejected due to heavy traffic.
If you don't assume that he's talking about Apple (or, for that matter, Google), which is implied in neither his, nor the parent post, then he's entirely correct and the downvotes are totally unwarranted.
People are talking about corporate rivalries as a special case of free market competition. Price wars and innovation races benefit the consumer in these cases.
In the case of a monopoly a potential corporate rival gets bought and shut down, or locked out of a market, or has their price undercut until they go out of business and then the price goes back up even further to compensate. Basically the consumer loses.
So corporate rivalry, no matter how fierce, is great for the consumer as long as both are forced to fight fair.
Uhm, yeah, but the consumer doesn’t lose, either? Either way, it’s a idle fact with no relation to the discussion, except if you wanted to suggest that either Google or Apple have a monopoly. Which is obviously bullshit.
Are you arguing that monopolies don't hurt consumers? There's valid arguments that could be advanced in that direction but since we live in a world where the common understanding is that monopolies are bad for consumers, it would be helpful if you were less oblique about your meaning.
Mentioning monopolies in the context of the benefits of competition doesn't seem irrelevant to me, quite the opposite, and perhaps as a result I didn't immediately jump to the conclusion that it was an attack on Apple or Google or anyone else.
I think it's the monopolist "competing" against the other companies that we're worried about. Where by competing I mean doing all those things I listed a few posts back that reduce consumer choice and competition in the marketplace.
Sure, but that’s not surprising. Isn’t it obvious that the concept of “competition” doesn’t make much sense when talking about a monopolist? And it’s also obvious that it would be stupid if the monopolist didn’t try to crush any possible emerging competition. It’s logical, it’s obvious, it’s not worth mentioning.
It was a serious, honest answer to a question that was in hindsight probably not a serious, honest question. (Certainly the pattern of votes indicates that it was not interpreted as such.) ZeroGravitas has done a fine job of explaining the reasoning behind my answer.
FYI, the videos are generally the video-out of the Keynote presentations with a voiceover. So the HD versions are not particularly worthwhile IMO, and the files are really pretty small. Random ones include video of the stage though, so those are massively larger.
The sessions are under NDA until such a time as Apple decides to release their content - this is mostly a formality, so that they can have their preview, but still have an official release later. This is what happened with both Safari5 and Xcode 4 after the presentations.
From the link:
"Reminder: The content presented within the WWDC 2010 session videos and slides is Apple Confidential Information and is subject to the Registered Apple Developer Agreement."
Yeah, I guess this is "information disclosed in connection with Apple Events" which makes it "Apple Confidential Information". Since you need a developer account to access it, it is not available to the public which would remove the Confidential part.
Apple is feeling the pressure of competition.