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posted by takyon on Tuesday June 09 2015, @01:00PM   Printer-friendly
from the green-apple dept.

Apple announced several products and updates Monday at its World Wide Developer Conference (WWDC).

An Anonymous Coward wrote in with news of Apple's OS X 10.11 "El Capitan":

The next version of OS X, Apple's laptop and desktop operating system, has been announced at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference! Its version number is 10.11, and its moniker is "El Capitan," in reference to the superb and truly American El Capitan rock formation at America's premiere national park, the Yosemite National Park.

Details are still coming in, but it's expected to include updates to Safari, Mail and Spotlight. Metal for Mac will combine the "computing power of OpenCL and graphics power of OpenGL into a new API that does both." It's expected to be available in public beta starting this July, with the final public release coming in the fall. This is an important release of OS X that Mac users worldwide are looking forward to.


ghost sent in two submissions to tell us that Apple will open source the Swift programming language:

In today's WWDC keynote, Apple announced that Swift (the programming language from last year's WWDC) will be open sourced sometime later this year. They specifically noted Linux support but neglected to mention *BSD or Windows. (LLVM, the back-end behind Swift and clang, supports *BSD and Windows). Reactions from Open Source advocates were tempered, as they noted the source code has not yet been released, nor has the license been announced.

The Swift Blog has been updated with information about new features and the open source efforts: Swift source code will be released under an OSI-approved permissive license. Contributions from the community will be accepted — and encouraged. At launch Apple intends to contribute ports for OS X, iOS, and Linux. Source code will include the Swift compiler and standard library. Apple thinks "it would be amazing for Swift to be on all your favorite platforms".


One of our editors, takyon, scoured the web to provide us with this compendium:

Apple has announced Apple Music, a Spotify clone, that replaces its existing iTunes Radio service. It will offer: a free tier similar to what iTunes Radio provided, unlimited streaming music for $9.99/month, or $14.99/month for a six-person "family plan". The service includes human-curated playlists and a 24/7 "Beats 1" radio channel featuring popular music and interviews. It will be released June 30th on OS X, iOS, and Windows, and will come to Android in the fall. Apple is offering the first 3 months of the paid service for free.

Apple announced iOS 9 for iPhones, iPods and iPads. It will include: a revamped "Spotlight Search" with features that compete with Google Now; transit routes for Apple Maps in major cities, as well as 300 cities in China; and an improved native news application. iPads will receive "Split View" and "Slide Over" multitasking features. A "Move to iOS" app will facilitate wireless migration from Android to iPhone.

WatchOS 2 for Apple Watch will add: new watch faces; a "Time Travel" feature using the digital crown to view information and events from the past or future; FaceTime Audio support so you can call other people with Macs, iPhones, iPads, and Apple Watches; email voice dictation; and an alarm clock mode for when the Watch is laying on its side and charging. Various iOS 9 improvements to Apple Pay and Maps will also come to the Watch. Finally, developers will be able to make native apps for the Watch that don't require them to run on the iPhone.

Apple Pay is coming to the United Kingdom in July.

Roundups at Tom's and El Reg.


Original Submissions: One, Two, and Three.

 
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  • (Score: 2) by dyingtolive on Tuesday June 09 2015, @06:07PM

    by dyingtolive (952) on Tuesday June 09 2015, @06:07PM (#194150)

    I'm not the least bit worried about the world, really. It's more that I want to use it and it's dead. Generally for time or maps. It's important to know when to turn back on your hike or how long you have before the outfitter's pickup bus packs it in and you're walking home. If you know what time it is and can't gauge 15 minutes while you're deliberately waiting, there's neat tricks to using a stick as a compass and stuff like that too. My most frequent stomping ground, Southern Missouri, generally has nothing for cell service once you're there anyway, so it's airplane mode for me once I turn off the interstate.

    That sounds like a pretty impressive GPS. I should look into getting one of those to solve most of my edge cases. You use a Garmin?

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  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Tuesday June 09 2015, @07:59PM

    by VLM (445) on Tuesday June 09 2015, @07:59PM (#194232)

    You use a Garmin?

    LOL it floats, its indestructible, its easy to use and runs forever on a set of batteries, obviously its a Garmin.

    Yeah a 76CS from like 15 years ago, or maybe only 10. It just does its thing, really well.