Reporter's Notebook - Days 3,4 in WWDCville
by , 7:30 PM EDT, June 12th, 2008
Now we're getting down to the nitty-gritty. Code, code and more code. WWDC attendees are learning how to implement what Steve Jobs talked about on Monday.
Okay, this is just too good to be true. Another day of cloudless blue sky and high 70s. One could actually grow fond of this place, assuming one could afford to live here.
While at WWDC, I've been keeping track of the percentage of women at WWDC. I have a particular interest in that because I'm married to a Ph.D. programmer (Java, C++). Over several days, I've done some head counts, and I estimate that there are no more than 2% women at WWDC. Worse, as the number of attendees over the years has gone up, it seems that the percentage of women has gone down.
About a third of the women, I estimate are Asian, about a third (East) Indian and the rest Caucasian. This doesn't bode well for American technology. In my experience, and based on demographic data, women constitute a much larger percentage of the technical work force. Some reasons for this low percentage might be:
- Managers tend to subconsciously send young men rather than women to conferences.
- Women are smarter than men and instinctively steer away from Objective-C as career limiting and stick with C++ and Java.
- There is something about the Apple culture and marketing that appeals to men and not so much women.
I'm certain the readers will have additional enlightenment on this.
In addition to the feeing I got that developers better start thinking about ways to get into iPhone development, I also saw several other effects. First, Apple, as always, focuses on the technologies that are going to advance their cause. While there may be scientists who want Apple to fully support, say, technology X,Y and Z, Apple will decide that only Z moves their technology forward and integrates into what they already have. It's nothing callous, mind you. It's just what Leander Kahney refers to as "burning your bridges." That is, if you don't burn the bridge behind you, there's nothing else to do but stand and fight. It's a healthy approach.
A second trend I saw is that emerging hardware is enabling a new class of applications. For example, a modern graphics processor (GPU) in a Mac Pro is capable of nearly a half teraflop. For those developers who are astute enough to invoke this kind of speed, users will be seeing some jaw dropping apps. It's all part of that focusing and leveraging that Apple is so good at.
I also noticed that presenters are leaving their bio slides up on the screen long enough now to actually type the name into the computer. Interacting with technology evangelists at Apple is vital, and when developers pay a lot of money to attend WWDC, they need to know who they met. This something I complained about last year. Thanks Apple for fixing that.
By Thursday, the developers get pretty fried, but the introductory sessions are long gone. So now it's down to the business of going into the lab, debugging code, and sitting in on code sessions that can boggle the mind unless one has prepared with healthy doses of caffeine.
Then, exhausted, the developers will fly home on Friday full of new ideas and ambitions for fabulous new projects.
Observer Comments
re: "About a third of the women, I estimate are Asian, about a third (East) Indian and the rest Caucasian. This doesn't bode well for American technology."
Don't you mean to say this doesn't bode well for Caucasian women in American technology? ... how many of those Asian and Indian women showed you their passports?
Fri Jun 13, 2008 9:22 am Subject: Re: Two Bridges
Minority Opinion (read with extreme caution):
While Mac fans everywhere watched, Apple morphed the Macintosh into the Apple PC. Apple really doesn't care which OS (Windows, Mac, Linux) or applications we use as long as we buy an Apple branded box/laptop. Superb so far. Can Apple muscle 1/3 the PC market from HP and Dell?
Two challenges: HP and Dell have recently embraced Apple's exclusive Fashion PC lines. Below $1000, ePC's are exploding where Apple doesn't like to play. Will Apple soon abandon computers altogether in favor of iGagets?
What I really regret is seeing talented 20+ year Mac veterans throwing in the towel after too many Apple zigs-and-zags. Now, Apple has abandoned conventional programming (Carbon) in favor of trendy object programming (Cocoa). The trail of old Mac programming languages looks like a graveyard.
Anyway, out with the old -- in with the new. Keep your fresh eyes open! Cheers.
QuoteGuest wrote:
While Mac fans everywhere watched, Apple morphed the Macintosh into the Apple PC. Apple really doesn't care which OS (Windows, Mac, Linux) or applications we use as long as we buy an Apple branded box/laptop.
IMO that overstates the case more than a little bit. If Apple didn't care they would sell you a Mac with Windows installed as the only OS. Allowing compatibility doesn't mean they are abandoning OS-X.
QuoteWill Apple soon abandon computers altogether in favor of iGagets?
That is a concern, albeit a minor one. I suspect Apple will be building computers for a long time to come, though I expect them to always have their own form factor. In about 10 years I may have to buy something like an iPhone as my primary system. I'm confident though that it will do what I need. The same cannot be said for any Dell or HP.
QuoteWhat I really regret is seeing talented 20+ year Mac veterans throwing in the towel after too many Apple zigs-and-zags.
I find that an odd statement. Among the large number of IT professionals I know I find the number of Macs increasing. It used to be unusual to see a Mac laptop at a conference, at one point there were more Linux systems than Macs among the people I know. Now the opposite is true. I suspect that growth is DUE to the ability to run just about anything on Mac hardware. If you see someone using Windows on a Mac it's likely because they need to use Windows but want to do it within a secure and stable *NIX shell rather than an erstwhile desire to run Windows instead of OS-X.
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